Frame problem In artificial intelligence, the frame problem has a number of possible formulations. One of the most common is that it is the question of how to determine efficiently which things remain the same in a changing world.
The frame problem occurs even in very simple domains. A scenario with a door, which can be open or closed, and a light, which can be on or off, is statically represented by two propositions open and on.
frame problem the problem of efficiently maintaining a correct and consistent world model as some aspects of the world are changed by operators (but most aspects remain the same).
The Frame Problem A serious problem with physical symbol systems was pointed out by McCarthy and Hayes [6], which was termed the frame problem: How does one keep track of the frame of reference of an operation (transformation)?
^ a b Representing events and time: Situation calculus, event calculus, fluent calculus (including solving the frame problem): Russell & Norvig 2003, pp. 328-341, Poole, Mackworth & Goebel 1998, pp. 281-298, Nilsson 1998, chpt. 18.2 ...
Default Reasoning, Nonmonotonic Logics, and the Frame Problem. "Nonmonotonic formal systems have been proposed as an extension to classical first-order logic that will capture the process of human "default reasoning" or "plausible inference" through ...
One is the "frame problem," that of managing all that is going on around the central actors, a task that creates a heavy computational burden.
Sha97 Murray Shanahan. Solving the Frame Problem, a mathematical investigation of the common sense law of inertia. M.I.T. Press, 1997.
The interesting part is the discussion of the frame problem, mentioning how deliberative thought can have its draw-backs. The conciousness of A.I.
See also: Artificial intelligence, Knowledge, AI, Robotics, Percept
 
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