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AI Definitions

AI Definitions. Thinking machines or machine intelligence Studying cognitive faculties Problem Solving and CS. The study of how to make programs/computers do things that people do better The study of how to make computers solve problems which require knowledge and intelligence

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AI Definitions

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  1. AI Definitions Thinking machines or machine intelligence Studying cognitive faculties Problem Solving and CS • The study of how to make programs/computers do things that people do better • The study of how to make computers solve problems which require knowledge and intelligence • The exciting new effort to make computers think … machines with minds • The automation of activities that we associate with human thinking (e.g., decision-making, learning…) • The art of creating machines that perform functions that require intelligence when performed by people • The study of mental faculties through the use of computational models • A field of study that seeks to explain and emulate intelligent behavior in terms of computational processes • The branch of computer science that is concerned with the automation of intelligent behavior

  2. What is Intelligence? • Is there a “holistic” definition for intelligence? • Here are some definitions: • the ability to comprehend; to understand and profit from experience • a general mental capability that involves the ability to reason, plan, solve problems, think abstractly, comprehend ideas and language, and learn • is effectively perceiving, interpreting and responding to the environment • None of these tells us what intelligence is but we can enumerate a list of elements that intelligence must perform • perceive, reason, solve problems, learn/adapt, common sense, analogy, recall, intuition, emotional states, achieve self-awareness • Which of these are necessary for intelligence? Which are sufficient? • Artificial Intelligence – should we define this in terms of human intelligence?

  3. Physical Symbol System Hypothesis • A physical symbol system (PSS) • consists of symbols (patterns) which are combinable into expressions • there are processes which operate on these symbols to create new symbols and expressions • English is a physical symbol system: symbols are the alphabet, expressions are words and sentences • The PSS Hypothesis states that a PSS has the necessary and sufficient means for intelligent action • a computer is a PSS • if the PSS Hypothesis is true, then it should be possible to program a computer to produce intelligent actions • this is the (or a) goal of AI • if the PSS Hypothesis is not true, what are the consequences for AI?

  4. 1950 – Alan Turing devised a test for intelligence called the Imitation Game Ask questions of two entities, receive answers from both If you can’t tell which of the entities is human and which is a computer program, then you are fooled and we should therefore consider the computer to be intelligent The Turing Test Questions Answers Answers Which is the person? Which is the computer?

  5. Created by Joseph Weizenbaum This system would act like a Rogerian psychoanalyst by holding a dialog with a person the dialog would be consist of the doctor (Eliza) asking questions, the human responding, and the doctor using the response to ask another question Weizenbaum wrote the program so that it would generate an English response/question based on a group of patterns If the user sentence matched a pattern, this pattern would be used to generate the next sentence/question A more recent, and much superior version is called A.L.I.C.E, Solving the Turing Test: Eliza

  6. H: Men are all alike • E: In what way? • H: They’re always bugging us about something or another. • E: Can you be more specific? • H: Well, my boyfriend made me come here. • E: Your boyfriend made you come here? • H: He says I’m depressed much of the time. • E: I am sorry to hear you are depressed. • H: It’s true. I am unhappy. • E: Do you think coming here will help you not to be unhappy? • H: I need some help, that much seems certain. • E: What would it mean to you if you got some help? • H: Perhaps I could learn to get along with my mother. • E: Tell me more about your family Example Eliza Dialog

  7. (?* ?x) hello (?* ?y)  (How do you do. Please state your problem.) (?* ?x) I want (?* ?y)  (What would it mean if you got ?y) (Why do you want ?y) (Suppose you got ?y soon) (?* ?x) if (?* ?y)  (Do you really think its likely that ?y) (Do you wish that ?y) (What do you think about ?y) (Really-- if ?y) (?* ?x) no (?* ?y)  (Why not?) (You are being a bit negative) (Are you saying "NO" just to be negative?) (?* ?x) I was (?* ?y)  (Were you really?) (Perhaps I already knew you were ?y) (Why do you tell me you were ?y now?) (?* ?x) I feel (?* ?y)  (Do you often feel ?y ?) (?* ?x) I felt (?* ?y)  (What other feelings do you have?) Eliza Rules Eliza also has a rule to swap ‘I’ and ‘my’ to ‘you’ and ‘your’

  8. Eliza Pattern Syntax pat  var match any one expression to a variable constant or to a constant (see below) segment-pat match against a sequence single-pat match against one expression (pat . pat) match the first and the rest of a list single-pat  (?is var predicate) test predicate on one expression (?or pat1 pat2 …) match on any of the patterns (?and pat1 pat2 …) match on every of the expressions (?not pat) match if expression does not match segment-pat  ((?* var) …) match on zero or more expressions ((?+ var) …) match on one or more expressions ((?? var) …) match zero or one expression ((?if expr) …) test if expression is true var  ?chars variables of the form ?name constant  atom symbols, numbers, chars

  9. ALICE Demo Jerry: my name is jerry. ALICE: Hey jerry. Jerry: do you know Turing? ALICE: A brilliant and tragic figure in the history of computer science. Jerry: who else do you know? ALICE: Hugh Loebner, Robby Garner, and Steven Spielberg Jerry: which film do you like? ALICE: My favorite movie is Teknolust. Have you seen it? Jerry: no. ALICE: I would recommend you check it out. Jerry: what is it about? ALICE: Science fiction. Jerry: do you remember my name? ALICE: Your name is jerry, seeker. Notice unlike Eliza, ALICE has a memory, can handle references (have you seen it? no. I would recommend it.)

  10. ALICE vs. Eliza ALICE talking to ELIZA ELIZA: I am ELIZA. ALICE: I am very pleased to meet you ELIZA. ELIZA: How can I help you? ALICE: Just keep talking to me as long as you can. ELIZA: Do you wish to as long as me? ALICE: OK, I will as long as you. ELIZA: Do you wish to will as long as me? ALICE: OK, I will will as long as you. ELIZA: Do you wish to will will as long as me? ALICE: OK, I will will will as long as you. ELIZA: Do you wish to will will will as long as me? ALICE: OK, I will will will will as long as you. ELIZA: Do you wish to will will will will as long as me? ALICE: OK, I will will will will will as long as you. ELIZA: Do you wish to will will will will will as long as me? … Eliza gets stuck on the phrase “I will” and then ALICE gets stuck on the same phrase

  11. How Useful is the Turing Test? • With Eliza or Alice like rules, we can eventually solve the Turing Test – it just takes writing enough rules • Does the system understand what it is responding to? • No, neither Eliza nor Alice understand the text, its just that Alice has better, more in depth and wider ranging rules • We could build a representation that models some real-world domain and knowledge base • The system can fill in information from the conversation • Questions can be responded to by looking up the stored data • In this way, the system is responding, not based merely on “canned” knowledge, but on knowledge that it has “learned” • Does this imply that the system knows what it is discussing? • What does it mean to know something?

  12. Table-Lookup vs. Reasoning • Consider two approaches to programming a Tic-Tac-Toe player • Solution 1: pre-enumerated list of best moves given board configuration • Solution 2: rules to evaluate board configuration and generate best move • Solution 1 is similar to how Eliza works • This is not practical for most types of problems • Solution 2 will reason out the best move • Such a player might even be able to “explain” why it chose the move it did • We can (potentially) build a program that can pass the Turing Test using table-lookup even though it would be a large undertaking

  13. Answer (Chinese) Question (Chinese) Book of Chinese Symbols Storage You The Chinese Room Problem • From John Searle, Philosopher, in an attempt to demonstrate that computers cannot be intelligent • The room consists of you, a book, a storage area (optional), and a mechanism for moving information to and from the room to the outside • a Chinese speaking individual provides a question for you in writing • you are able to find a matching set of symbols in the book (and storage) and write a response, also in Chinese

  14. User Input I/O pathway (bus) Output Chinese Room: An Analogy for a Computer Memory Program/Data (Script) CPU (SAM)

  15. You were able to solve the problem of communicating with the person/user and thus you/the room passes the Turing Test But did you understand the Chinese messages being communicated? since you do not speak Chinese, you did not understand the symbols in the question, the answer, or the storage can we say that you actually used any intelligence? By analogy, since you did not understand the symbols that you interacted with, neither does the computer understand the symbols that it interacts with (input, output, program code, data) He defines to categories of AI: strong AI – the pursuit of machine intelligence weak AI – the pursuit of machines solving problems in an intelligent way Searle’s Question

  16. Where is the Intelligence Coming From? • The System’s Response: • the hardware by itself is not intelligent, but a combination of the hardware, software and storage is intelligent • in a similar vein, we might say that a human brain that has had no opportunity to learn anything cannot be intelligent, it is just the hardware • The Robot Response: • a computer is void of senses and therefore symbols are meaningless to it, but a robot with sensors can tie its symbols to its senses and thus understand symbols • The Brain Simulator Response: • if we program a computer to mimic the brain (e.g., with a neural network) then the computer will have the same ability to understand as a human brain

  17. Two AI Assumptions • We can understand and model cognition without understanding the underlying mechanism • it is the model of cognition that is important not the physical mechanism that implements it • if true, we should be able to create cognition (mind) out of a computer or a brain or other devices such as mechanical devices • this is the assumption made by symbolic AI researchers • Cognition will emerge from the proper mechanism • the right device, fed with the right inputs, can learn and perform the problem solving that we, as observers, call intelligence • cognition will arise as the result (or side effect) of the hardware • this is the assumption made by connectionist AI researchers • Notice that while the two assumptions differ, neither is necessarily mutually exclusive and both support the idea that cognition is computational

  18. A Brief History of AI: 1950s • Computers were thought of as an electronic brains • Term “Artificial Intelligence” coined by John McCarthy • John McCarthy also created Lisp in the late 1950s • Alan Turing defines intelligence as passing the Imitation Game (Turing Test) • AI research largely revolves around toy domains • Computers of the era didn’t have enough power or memory to solve useful problems • Problems being researched include • games (e.g., checkers) • primitive machine translation • blocks world (planning and natural language understanding within the toy domain) • early neural networks researched: the perceptron • automated theorem proving and mathematics problem solving

  19. The 1960s • AI attempts to move beyond toy domains • Syntactic knowledge alone does not work, domain knowledge required • Early machine translation could translate English to Russian (“the spirit is willing but the flesh is weak” becomes “the vodka is good but the meat is spoiled”) • Earliest expert system created: Dendral • Perceptron research comes to a grinding halt when it is proved that a perceptron cannot learn the XOR operator • US sponsored research into AI targets specific areas – not including machine translation • Weizenbaum creates Eliza to demonstrate the futility of AI

  20. 1970s • AI researchers address real-world problems and solutions through expert (knowledge-based) systems • Medical diagnosis • Speech recognition • Planning • Design • Uncertainty handling implemented • Fuzzy logic • Certainty factors • Bayesian probabilities • AI begins to get noticed due to these successes • AI research increased • AI labs sprouting up everywhere • AI shells (tools) created • AI machines available for Lisp programming • Criticism: AI systems are too brittle, AI systems take too much time and effort to create, AI systems do not learn

  21. 1980s: AI Winter • Funding dries up leading to the AI Winter • Too many expectations were not met • Expert systems took too long to develop, too much money to invest, the results did not pay off • Neural Networks to the rescue! • Expert systems took programming, and took dozens of man-years of efforts to develop, but if we could get the computer to learn how to solve the problem… • Multi-layered back-propagation networks got around the problems of perceptrons • Neural network research heavily funded because it promised to solve the problems that symbolic AI could not • By 1990, funding for neural network research was slowly disappearing as well • Neural networks had their own problems and largely could not solve a majority of the AI problems being investigated • Panic! How can AI continue without funding?

  22. 1990s: ALife • The dumbest smart thing you can do is staying alive • We start over – lets not create intelligence, lets just create “life” and slowly build towards intelligence • Alife is the lower bound of AI • Alife includes • evolutionary learning techniques (genetic algorithms) • artificial neural networks for additional forms of learning • perception, motor control and adaptive systems • modeling the environment • Problems: genetic algorithms are useful in solving some optimization problems and some search-based problems, but not very useful for expert problems • Perceptual problems are among the most difficult being solved, very slow progress

  23. Today: The New (Old) AI • AI researchers today are not doing “AI”, they are doing • Intelligent agents, multi-agent systems/collaboration, ontologies • Machine learning and data mining • Adaptive and perceptual systems • Robotics, path planning • Search engines, filtering, recommendation systems • Areas of current research interest • NLU/Information Retrieval, Speech Recognition • Planning/Design, Diagnosis/Interpretation • Sensor Interpretation, Perception, Visual Understanding • Robotics • Approaches • Knowledge-based • Ontologies • Probabilistic (HMM, Bayesian Nets) • Neural Networks, Fuzzy Logic, Genetic Algorithms

  24. So What Does AI Do? • Most AI research has fallen into one of two categories • Select a specific problem to solve • study the problem (perhaps how humans solve it) • come up with the proper representation for any knowledge needed to solve the problem • acquire and codify that knowledge • build a problem solving system • Select a category of problem or cognitive activity (e.g., learning, natural language understanding) • theorize a way to solve the given problem • build systems based on the model behind your theory as experiments • modify as needed • Both approaches require • one or more representational forms for the knowledge • some way to select proper knowledge, that is, search

  25. Knowledge Representations • One large distinction between an AI system and a normal piece of software is that an AI system must reason using worldly knowledge • What types of knowledge? • Facts • Axioms • Statements (which may or may not be true) • Rules • Cases • Experiences • Associations (which may not be truth preserving) • Descriptions • Probabilities and Statistics

  26. Types of Representations • Early systems used either • semantic networks or predicate calculus to represent knowledge • or used simple search spaces if the domain/problem had very limited amounts of knowledge (e.g., simple planning as in blocks world) • With the early expert systems in the 70s, a significant shift took place to production systems, which combined representation and process (chaining) and even uncertainty handling (certainty factors) • later, frames (an early version of OOP) were introduced • Problem-specific approaches were introduced such as scripts and CDs for language representation • In the 1980s, there was a shift from rules to model-based approaches • Since the 1990s, Bayesian networks and hidden Markov Models have become popular • First, we will take a brief look at some of the representations

  27. Search Spaces • Given a problem expressed as a state space (whether explicitly or implicitly) • Formally, we define a search space as [N, A, S, GD] • N = set of nodes or states of a graph • A = set of arcs (edges) between nodes that correspond to the steps in the problem (the legal actions or operators) • S = a nonempty subset of N that represents start states • GD = a nonempty subset of N that represents goal states • Our problem becomes one of traversing the graph from a node in S to a node in GD • Example: • 3 missionaries and 3 cannibals are on one side of the river with a boat that can take exactly 2 people across the river • how can we move the 3 missionaries and 3 cannibals across the river such that the cannibals never outnumber the missionaries on either side of the river (lest the cannibals start eating the missionaries!)

  28. M/C Solution • We can represent a state as a 6-item tuple: (a, b, c, d, e, f) • a/b = number of missionaries/cannibals on left shore • c/d = number of missionaries/cannibals in boat • e/f = number of missionaries/cannibals on right shore • where a + b + c + d + e + f = 6 • a >= b (unless a = 0), c >= d (unless c = 0), and e >= f (unless e = 0) • Legal operations (moves) are • 0, 1, 2 missionaries get into boat • 0, 1, 2 missionaries get out of boat • 0, 1, 2 cannibals get into boat • 0, 1, 2 missionaries get out of boat • boat sails from left shore to right shore • boat sails from right shore to left shore

  29. Search Spaces and Types of Search • The search space consists of all possible states of the problem as it is being solved • A search space is often viewed as a tree and can very well consist of an exponential number of nodes making the search process intractable • Search spaces might be pre-enumerated or generated during the search process • Some search algorithms may search the entire space until a solution is found, others will only search parts of the space, possibly selecting where to search through a heuristic • Search spaces include • Game trees like the tic-tac-toe game • Decision trees (see next slides) • Combinations of rules to select in a production system • Networks of various forms (see next slides) • Other types of spaces

  30. Search Algorithms and Representations • Breadth-first • Depth-first • Best-first (Heuristic Search) • A* • Hill Climbing • Limiting the number of Plies • Minimax • Alpha-Beta Pruning • Adding Constraints • Genetic Algorithms • Forward vs Backward Chaining • Production systems • If-then rules • Predicate calculus rules • Operators • Semantic networks • Frames • Scripts • Knowledge groups • Models, cases • Agents • Ontologies

  31. Relationships • We often know stuff about objects (whether physical or abstract) • These objects have attributes (components, values) and/or relationships with other things • One way to represent knowledge is to enumerate the objects and describe them through their attributes and relationships • Common forms of such relationship representations are • semantic networks – a network consists of nodes which are objects and values, and edges (links/arcs) which are annotated to include how the nodes are related • predicate calculus – predicates are often relationships and arguments for the predicates are objects • frames – in essence, objects (from object-oriented programming) where attributes are the data members and the values are the specific values stored in those members – in some cases, they are pointers to other objects

  32. Representations With Relationships Here, we see the same information being represented using two different representational techniques – a semantic network (above) and predicates (to the left)

  33. Another Example: Blocks World Here we see a real-world situation of three blocks and a predicate calculus representation for expressing this knowledge We equip our system with rules such as the below rule to reason over how to draw conclusions and manipulate this block’s world This rule says “if there does not exist a Y that is on X, then X is clear

  34. Collins and Quillian were the first to use semantic networks in AI by storing in the network the objects and their relationships their intention was to represent English sentences edges would typically be annotated with these descriptors or relations isa – class/subclass instance – the first object is an instance of the class has – contains or has this as a physical property can – has the ability to made of, color, texture, etc Semantic Networks A semantic network to represent the sentences “a canary can sing/fly”, “a canary is a bird/animal”, “a canary is a canary”, “a canary has skin”

  35. Frames • The semantic network requires a graph representation which may not be a very efficient use of memory • Another representation is the frame • the idea behind a frame was originally that it would represent a “frame of memory” – for instance, by capturing the objects and their attributes for a given situation or moment in time • a frame would contain slots where a slot could contain • identification information (including whether this frame is a subclass of another frame) • relationships to other frames • descriptors of this frame • procedural information on how to use this frame (code to be executed) • defaults for slots • instance information (or an identification of whether the frame represents a class or an instance)

  36. Frame Example Here is a partial frame representing a hotel room The room contains a chair, bed, and phone where the bed contains a mattress and a bed frame (not shown)

  37. Production Systems • A production system is • a set of rules (if-then or condition-action statements) • working memory • the current state of the problem solving, which includes new pieces of information created by previously applied rules • inference engine (the author calls this a “recognize-act” cycle) • forward-chaining, backward-chaining, a combination, or some other form of reasoning such as a sponsor-selector, or agenda-driven scheduler • conflict resolution strategy • when it comes to selecting a rule, there may be several applicable rules, which one should we select? the choice may be based on a conflict resolution strategy such as “first rule”, “most specific rule”, “most salient rule”, “rule with most actions”, “random”, etc

  38. Chaining • The idea behind a production system’s reasoning is that rules will describe steps in the problem solving space where a rule might • be an operation in a game like a chess move • translate a piece of input data into an intermediate conclusion • piece together several intermediate conclusions into a specific conclusion • translate a goal into substeps • So a solution using a production system is a collection of rules that are chained together • forward chaining – reasoning from data to conclusions where working memory is sought for conditions that match the left-hand side of the given rules • backward chaining – reasoning from goals to operations where an initial goal is unfolded into the steps needed to solve that goal, that is, the process is one of subgoaling

  39. Two Example Production Systems

  40. Example System: Water Jugs • Problem: given a 4-gallon jug (X) and a 3-gallon jug (Y), fill X with exactly 2 gallons of water • assume an infinite amount of water is available • Rules/operators • 1. If X = 0 then X = 4 (fill X) • 2. If Y = 0 then Y = 3 (fill Y) • 3. If X > 0 then X = 0 (empty X) • 4. If Y > 0 then Y = 0 (empty Y) • 5. If X + Y >= 3 and X > 0 then X = X – (3 – y) and Y = 3 (fill Y from X) • 6. If X + Y >= 4 and Y > 0 then X = 4 and Y = Y – (4 – X) (fill X from Y) • 7. If X + Y <= 3 and X > 0 then X = 0 and Y = X + Y (empty X into Y) • 8. If X + Y <= 4 and Y > 0 then X = X + Y and Y = 0 (empty Y into X) • rule numbers used on the next slide

  41. Conflict Resolution Strategies • In a production system, what happens when more than one rule matches? • a conflict resolution strategy dictates how to select from between multiple matching rules • Simple conflict resolution strategies include • random • first match • most/least recently matched rule • rule which has matched for the longest/shortest number of cycles (refractoriness) • most salient rule (each rule is given a salience before you run the production system) • More complex resolution strategies might • select the rule with the most/least number of conditions (specificity/generality) • or most/least number of actions (biggest/smallest change to the state)

  42. MYCIN • By the early 1970s, the production system approach was found to be more than adequate for constructing large scale expert systems • in 1971, researchers at Stanford began constructing MYCIN, a medical diagnostic system • it contained a very large rule base • it used backward chaining • to deal with the uncertainty of medical knowledge, it introduced certainty factors (sort of like probabilities) • in 1975, it was tested against medical experts and performed as well or better than the doctors it was compared to (defrule 52 if (site culture is blood) (gram organism is neg) (morphology organism is rod) (burn patient is serious) then .4 (identity organism is pseudomonas)) If the culture was taken from the patient’s blood and the gram of the organism is negative and the morphology of the organism is rods and the patient is a serious burn patient, then conclude that the identity of the organism is pseudomonas (.4 certainty)

  43. MYCIN in Operation • Mycin’s process starts with “diagnose-and-treat” • repeat • identify all rules that can provide the conclusion currently sought • match right hand sides (that is, search for rules whose right hand sides match anything in working memory) • use conflict resolution to identify a single rule • fire that rule • find and remove a piece of knowledge which is no longer needed • find and modify a piece of knowledge now that more specific information is known • add a new subgoal (left-hand side conditions that need to be proved) • until the action done is added to working memory • Mycin would first identify the illness, possibly ordering more tests to be performed, and then given the illness, generate a treatment • Mycin consisted of about 600 rules

  44. R1/XCON • Another success story is DEC’s R1 • later renamed XCON • This system would take customer orders and configure specific VAX computers for those orders including • completing the order if the order was incomplete • how the various components (drive and tape units, mother board(s), etc) would be placed inside the mainframe cabinet) • how the wiring would take place among the various components • R1 would perform forward chaining over about 10,000 rules • over a 6 year period, it configured some 80,000 orders with a 95-98% accuracy rating • ironically, whereas planning/design is viewed as a backward chaining task, R1 used forward chaining because, in this particular case, the problem is data driven, starting with user input of the computer system’s specifications • R1’s solutions were similar in quality to human solutions

  45. R1 Sample Rules • Constraint rules • if device requires battery then select battery for device • if select battery for device then pick battery with voltage(battery) = voltage(device) • Configuration rules • if we are in the floor plan stage and there is space for a power supply and there is no power supply available then add a power supply to the order • if step is configuring, propose alternatives and there is an unconfigured device and no container was chosen and no other device that can hold it was chosen and selecting a container wasn’t proposed yet and no problems for selecting containers were identified then propose selecting a container • if the step is distributing a massbus device and there is a single port disk drive that has not been assigned to a massbus and there are no unassigned dual port disk drives and the number of devices that each massbus should support is known and there is a massbus that has been assigned at least one disk drive and that should support additional disk drives and the type of cable needed to connect the disk drive is known, then assign the disk drive to this massbus

  46. Strong Slot-n-Filler Structures • To avoid the difficulties with Frames and Nets, Schank and Rieger offered two network-like representations that would have implied uses and built-in semantics: conceptual dependencies and scripts • the conceptual dependency was derived as a form of semantic network that would have specific types of links to be used for representing specific pieces of information in English sentences • the action of the sentence • the objects affected by the action or that brought about the action • modifiers of both actions and objects • they defined 11 primitive actions, called ACTs • every possible action can be categorized as one of these 11 • an ACT would form the center of the CD, with links attaching the objects and modifiers

  47. Example CD • The sentence is “John ate the egg” • The INGEST act means to ingest an object (eat, drink, swallow) • the P above the double arrow indicates past test • the INGEST action must have an object (the O indicates it was the object Egg) and a direction (the object went from John’s mouth to John’s insides) • we might infer that it was “an egg” instead of “the egg” as there is nothing specific to indicate which egg was eaten • we might also infer that John swallowed the egg whole as there is nothing to indicate that John chewed the egg!

  48. The CD Theory ACTs • Is this list complete? • what actions are missing? • Could we reduce this list to make it more concise? • other researchers have developed other lists of primitive actions including just 3 – physical actions, mental actions and abstract actions

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