Is It Intelligent? A Systematic Review of Intelligence in the Most Cited Papers in IoT
Resumen
Artificial intelligence is a buzz word and even more when its accomplishments have challenged our intelligence. However, what is intelligence? Is there a consensus in its meaning for researchers and professionals? Is it just a sales word? What does it mean in practical terms? To answer these questions, we followed a systemic review of literature in most cited papers about intelligent systems in the Internet of Things (IoT) and discovered that only 58% were intelligent as we defined: “Intelligent Systems are systems conformed by algorithms that are programmed using some machine learning techniques and that can learn from data and perform tasks with a superior performance”. The rest 42% were just traditional systems with hardware or software enhancements.
Cómo citar
Grados, B. & Bedón, H. (2021). Is It Intelligent? A Systematic Review of Intelligence in the Most Cited Papers in IoT. En M. Botto-Tobar, S. Montes León, O. Camacho, D. Chávez, P. Torres-Carrión & M. Zambrano Vizuete (Eds.), Applied Technologies: Second International Conference, ICAT 2020, Quito, Ecuador, December 2–4, 2020, Proceedings, Communications in Computer and Information Science (vol. 1388, pp. 272-286). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-71503-8_21Editor
SpringerÁrea / Línea de investigación
Productividad y empleo / Innovación: tecnologías y productosISSN
1865-0929Coleccion(es)
- Ingeniería de Sistemas [69]
- Ingeniería Industrial [135]