Research
Doyle's research interests include artificial
intelligence, rational psychology, logic, the theory of computation,
and economics. His work has ranged from development of RMS, the
reason maintenance system, and non-monotonic logic, to the study of
deliberative decision-making, planning, and mathematical
investigations of knowledge representation, expert systems, and other
artificial intelligence subjects. For further details, see
Publications
- Publications archive
- Strategic directions in artificial
intelligence (with T. L. Dean), ACM
Computing Surveys, Vol. 28 (December
1996), 653-670.
- Background to
qualitative decision theory (with
R. H. Thomason), AI Magazine,
Vol. 20, No. 2 (Summer 1999), 55-68.
- Readers of the April 1999 Scientific
American article on Alan Turing, which mentioned Doyle's thoughts
on computability, can find more details in What is Church's Thesis? and The Foundations of Psychology, with
investigations of artificial intelligence sans computability
hypotheses discussed and exemplified in What is Rational Psychology? and Some Theories of Reasoned Assumptions.
Projects
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