[net.ai] Dynamic Bindings

bobgian@psuvax.UUCP (Bob Giansiracusa) (03/26/84)

I am searching for a new teaching or industrial research position.  To me,
this is more than just a career: it is a search for the right environment
in which my vision for the future of AI and education can come to fruition.

I don't want just to teach computer science or build machines.  I want to
innovate.  My slightly atypical past has brought me to a vision of what I
think Computer Science should be, and I want to build that vision.

I see Computer Science as a subset of Artificial Intelligence; CS is that
subfield of the study of intelligence which deals with its mechanization
via physical symbol systems.  The computational paradigm is powerful indeed,
and it permeates all other subfields of AI (algorithms, data structures,
languages, logic, linguistics, psychology, neurophysiology, cybernetics
and control, signal processing, and so on).  I want to bring together my
background in all these areas (stronger in some, weaker in others, but
STRONG INTEREST in ALL) to build a new foundation for this field as a true
science and a new liberal art.

To those interested: please mail or call!  To those not, please excuse my
"deluge of the airwaves".

--
Brief resume:

Research    Artificial Intelligence, especially models of Learning (in
Interests   both humans and machines); AI models for scientific discovery,
	    invention, creativity, and the evolution of consciousness.
	    Perceptual organization, including signal/symbol transformations
	    in visual and auditory understanding.
	   
	    Novel computer architectures for Signal Processing and Artificial
	    Intelligence applications.  New languages and machine models
	    (dataflow, message-passing, non-procedural, functional, etc.).
	    
	    New models for intelligent machines (adaptive architectures,
	    dynamic reconfiguration, HLL machines, etc.).

	    Design strategies for extremely complex systems (automated
	    VLSI design and layout, circuit testing, and program debugging).

Teaching    All of above, plus foundational courses in all of Computer
Interests   Science and Electrical Engineering.  Very strong interest
	    in curricular innovation.

Formal      BS, Electrical Engineering, University of California, Berkeley,
Education   1975.  Math, Physics, Circuit Design, Communications Theory,
            Linear Systems and Control Theory, Computer Architecture, IC
	    Design, Neurophysiology, Mathematical Biophysics, Business Law.

	    MS, Electrical Engineering, MIT, Cambridge, 1978.  Artificial
	    Intelligence, Algorithms, Data Structures, Language Processors,
	    Operating Systems, Image Processing, Digital Signal Processing,
	    Estimation and Control, VLSI Design.

            PhD Candidate, Artificial Intelligence Lab, MIT.  Am now ABD.
	    Thesis research concerns the automatic construction of models
	    which can predict and characterize the behavior of unknown
	    dynamical systems at multiple levels of abstraction.  Am
	    seriously attempting to discover the fundamental substrate
	    for domain-independent learning.

Present     Instructor, Department of Computer Science, Penn State University,
Position    University Park, PA 16802, from March 1983 through May 1984.
	    Taught introductory courses in FORTRAN, PL/I, and LISP.  Created
	    and taught first undergraduate AI course.  Created and am now
	    teaching graduate AI seminar on Machine Learning and AI Software
	    Engineering course.

--
Bob Giansiracusa
Computer Science Dept, Penn State U, 814-865-9507 (ofc), 814-234-4375 (home)
Arpa:   bobgian%PSUVAX1.BITNET@Berkeley
UUCP:   bobgian@psuvax.UUCP            -or-    ..!allegra!psuvax!bobgian
Bitnet: bobgian@PSUVAX1.BITNET         CSnet:  bobgian@penn-state.CSNET
USmail: PO Box 10164, Calder Square Branch, State College, PA 16805