From:: tar@medg.lcs.mit.edu (Thomas A. Russ)
Date: Tue, 19 Mar 91 14:50:59 EST
To: gsl@ai.mit.edu
Subject: Taste Bud Stimulation and Ingestibility of Chinese Cuisine
AI Revolting Seminar
Taste Bud Stimulation and Ingestibility of Chinese Cuisine
Joyce Chen
Yu Shiang University
Unlike linear and one-dimensional Western menus such as English and
French, Chinese menus are well known as two-dimensional and
non-linear. In fact, the typical chinese meal as experience by groups
of computer science graduate students exhibits a high degree of
parallelism during the entree phase (except for resource contention
centered around the rice bowl). Such properties make Chinese meal
arbitration by computers particulary difficult and challenging,
perhaps as most (Western) people think it is more difficult to learn,
understand and use chopsticks than knives and forks. Is it really so?
There are more than one billion Chinese people using such implements
and they have been used for several thousands years without the
Chinese population becoming extinct through inability to eat. How do
people handle that? How humans perceive, learn, understand and
practice their use? What kind of secrets and advantages that are
hidden in Chinese culinary culture that many people simply enjoy using
without knowing?
This talk intends to explore these problems and find some answers from
the AI point of view. Some intelligence aspects of Chinese meals are
investigated. Some basic concepts of two-dimensional buffet
representation and gossip networks, forward chaining, deduction and
the resolution principle are used to analyze and interpret the formal
structure, presentation, ordering and evolution of Chinese meals
shared by large student groups. Particular attention will be paid to
the question of why there is a prevalence of numbers used for ordering
meals in certain classes of restaurants. Then, the principle of new
characters are investigated. It is found that Chinese meals have
certain advantages over that of linear cuisine not only in artistic
beautifulness and cultural richness, but also in terms of
palatability, variety and ease of accomodating different tastes and
nutritional constraints. If time permits, a speculative discussion of
the grounds for the prevalence of Chinese restaurants surrounding
technical schools of higher education will be held. Similar
concentrations of Chinese food in high tech areas such as Silicon
Valley will also be considered.
Friday, March 22nd, 12:13 p.m. NE43 8th Floor Playroom.
Good Food 12:10p.m.
Real Hackers: Arthur Lent, David Gillman and Rosario Gennaro
Administrative Hacker: Karen Sarachik
Humor Hacker: Tom Russ