In 1979/80 as visiting researcher at the University of Edinburgh, Zdenek Zdrahal worked with Ivan Bratko and Alen Shapiro on Pattern Recognition applied to Chess. In fact they used Bitboards, called cellular 8x8 arrays, to implement their Cellular logic processing emulator for chess (CLESS) [4] . CLESS used three kinds of instructions to recognize simple and more complex chess patterns:
Vladimír Marík, Olga Štěpánková, Zdenek Zdrahal (1990). Artificial Intelligence in Higher Education, CEPES-UNESCO International Symposium, Prague, CSFR, October 23-25, 1989, Proceedings Springer 1990
a Czech British electrical engineer, computer scientist and Senior Research fellow at Knowledge Media Institute [1] , The Open University, Milton Keynes, South East England. His earlier research affiliations include the Czech Technical University in Prague, Czech Republic, until 1992 Czechoslovakia, the University of Edinburgh, Center for Research and Advanced Studies of the National Polytechnic Institute and Ensenada Center for Scientific Research and Higher Education (CICESE) in Mexico [2].
Zdenek Zdrahal research interests include the application of Artificial Intelligence in design, case-based reasoning and knowledge sharing.
Table of Contents
CLESS
In 1979/80 as visiting researcher at the University of Edinburgh, Zdenek Zdrahal worked with Ivan Bratko and Alen Shapiro on Pattern Recognition applied to Chess. In fact they used Bitboards, called cellular 8x8 arrays, to implement their Cellular logic processing emulator for chess (CLESS) [4] . CLESS used three kinds of instructions to recognize simple and more complex chess patterns:Selected Publications
[5] [6] [7]External Links
References
What links here?
Up one level