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Description and Theoretical Analysis (Using Schemata) of Planner: A Language for Proving Theorems and Manipulating Models in a Robot

Carl Hewitt

Year
1972
Citations
318

Abstract

PLANNER is a formalism for proving theorems and manipulating models in a robot. The formalism is built out of a number of problem-solving primitives together with a hierarchical multiprocess backtrack control structure. Statements can be asserted and perhaps later withdrawn as the state of the world changes. Under BACKTRACK control structure, the hierarchy of activations of functions previously executed is maintained so that it is possible to revert to any previous state. Thus programs can easily manipulate elaborate hypothetical tentative states. In addition PLANNER uses multiprocessing so that there can be multiple loci of control over the problem-solving.

Keywords

PlannerFormalism (music)Computer scienceHierarchyRobotTheoretical computer scienceMultiprocessingProgramming languageArtificial intelligenceParallel computing

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