The one field of study that seems to always be omitted when the subject of artificial intelligence comes up is psychology.
Let us look at this logically. "Artificial" means man made. That is pretty simple and straight forward. "Intelligence?" That sounds like a psychological issue to me.
Another term for artificial intelligence is "Machine Learning." Would that not imply a study of the process of learning? How do we learn? What stages are there to the education process? These are questions for a person that studies psychology.
The study of artificial intelligence should bring all of the areas listed in the other answers and psychology together. Using the fields listed in the other answers to recreate the processes used in the psyche, and you will have artificial intelligence. Right?
2006-08-24 15:31:17
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answer #1
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answered by CoveEnt 4
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Earn degrees in electronics, computer electronics, computer programming, structural and hydraulic engineering, physical physics (now isn't that an oxymoron...lol)....you get the idea.
Oh....the more PhDs you earn in these fields...the better. So bone up on your advance math courses.
2006-08-21 22:29:42
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answer #2
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answered by Hard Rocker 4
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Look at a institute and do the research yourself. Just google the university or technical school you want to do and contact them.
2006-08-21 22:30:01
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answer #3
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answered by John R 4
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If I were you I'd study lots of quantum and optical mechanics.
2006-08-21 22:30:37
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answer #4
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answered by Julian 6
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