If you ask a specialist in <strong>artificial-intelligence</strong> that question, you will get a very different answer than if you ask are (non-specialist) normal person that question!
A common way for normal people (who are <em>not</em> specialists in <strong>artificial-intelligence</strong>) to think about <strong>artificial-intelligence</strong> is
<strong>artificial-intelligence</strong> includes (simple) <strong>linear-regression</strong>, <strong>epsilon-greedy</strong>, and other things with names that sound just as weird as these if you are <em>not</em> (yet) familiar with <strong>artificial-intelligence</strong> jargon.
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But more on that later
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let's first explore the lay-person conception of <strong>artificial-intelligence</strong> a bit more.
Let's look at <abbrtitle="science-fiction">sci-fi</abbr>
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and in particular, <strong>artificial-intelligence</strong>, <strong>androids</strong>, and <strong>robots</strong> in <abbrtitle="science-fiction">sci-fi</abbr>.