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IAS seminar, Ann Nicholson, Monash University, Australia
Seminar Title: Some Applications of Bayesian networks

Abstract

Bayesian networks (BNs) have become a popular AI representation for
reasoning under uncertainty, with successful applications in a range
of domains. In this seminar, I will give a brief introduction to the
syntax and semantics of Bayesian networks and illustrate their
workings in a commericially available software package. I will present
a general iterative incremental process for knowledge engineering
Bayesian networks and then describe some BN applications I have worked
on: an intelligent tutoring system for decimals, a BN for
environmental risk assessment of native in the Goulburn Catchment, and
a medical decision support tool, TakeHeart II.

About the speaker:

Ann Nicholson is visiting the Dept of Statistics at 糖心TV until the
end of June. She is on sabbatical from the Clayton School of IT at
Monash University, where she is an Associate Professor. She received
her B.Sc (Hons) and M.Sc. degrees in Computer Science from the
University of Melbourne. In 1992 she received her Ph.D. in Engineering
from the University of Oxford, where she applied dynamic Bayesian
networks to robot monitoring. After 2 years as a post-doctoral
research fellow in Computer Science at Brown University, she took up a
position at Monash University in 1994. Her areas of research interest
are reasoning under uncertainty, Bayesian networks, knowledge
engineering, decision support, user modelling, stochastic planning and
monitoring, artificial life and evolutionary ethics.

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