[sci.math] <None>

** Sender Unknown ** (11/03/90)

ci.misc
Subject: CNS Program at BU Hiring 2 Assistant Professors
Message-ID: <67404@bu.edu.bu.edu>
From: mike@bucasb.bu.edu
Date: 30 Oct 90 19:31:46 GMT
Reply-To: mike@bucasb.UUCP ()
Sender: news@bu.edu.bu.edu
Followup-To: bu.cns.general,bu.general,bu.seminars,bu.seminars,ne.seminars,bionet.followup,bionet.population-bio,bionet.sci-resources,bionet.technology.conversion,comp.theory.self-org-sys,comp.theory.dynamic-sys,sci.bio,sci.math,sci.math.stat,sci.physics,
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Organization: Boston University Center for Adaptive Systems
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i.misc:691

Boston University seeks two tenure track assistant or associate
professors starting in Fall, 1991 for its M.A. and Ph.D. Program
in Cognitive and Neural Systems.  This program offers an
intergrated curriculum offering the full range of psychological,
neurobiological, and computational concepts, models, and methods
in the broad field variously called neural networks,
connectionism, parallel distributed processing, and biological
information processing, in which Boston University is a leader. 
Candidates should have extensive analytic or computational
research experience in modelling a broad range of nonlinear
neural networks, especially in one or more of the areas: vision
and image processing, speech and language processing, adaptive
pattern recognition, cognitive information processing, and
adaptive sensory-motor control  Candidates for associate
professor should have an international reputation in neural
network modelling.  Send a complete curriculum vitae and three
letters of recommendation to Search Committee, Cognitive and
Neural Systems Program, Room 240, 111 Cummington Street, Boston
University, Boston, MA 02215, preferably by November 15, 1990 but
no later than January 1, 1991.  Boston University is an Equal
Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer.  


--
Boston University (617-353-7857) Email: mike@bucasb.bu.edu
Smail: Michael Cohen                     111 Cummington Street, RM 242
       Center for Adaptive Systems        Boston, Mass 02215
       Boston University

** Sender Unknown ** (11/21/90)

ci.misc
Subject: Neural Network Conference, Call for Papers
Message-ID: <69062@bu.edu.bu.edu>
From: mike@bucasb.bu.edu
Date: 20 Nov 90 23:36:26 GMT
Reply-To: mike@bucasb.UUCP ()
Sender: news@bu.edu.bu.edu
Followup-To: bu.cns.general
Organization: Boston University Center for Adaptive Systems
Lines: 615
Xref: cerritos.edu bionet.general:140 bionet.population-bio:28 bionet.sci-resources:21 bionet.technology.conversion:6 comp.theory.self-org-sys:50 comp.theory.dynamic-sys:178 sci.bio:1500 sci.math:5205 sci.math.stat:814 sci.physics:5518 sci.research:380 sc
i.misc:728

                      BOSTON UNIVERSITY

     A World Leader In Neural Network Research and Technology
          Presents Two Major Events on the Cutting Edge


NEURAL NETWORKS: FROM FOUNDATIONS TO APPLICATIONS, MAY 5-10, 1991
 
     A self-contained systematic course by leading neural architects. 

NEURAL NETWORKS FOR VISION AND IMAGE PROCESSING, MAY 10-12, 1991

     An international research conference presenting INVITED and
     CONTRIBUTED papers, herewith solicited, on one of the most 
     active research topics in science and technology today. 

     Special student registration rates are available.  

     Sponsored by: Boston University's Wang Institute, Center for
Adaptive Systems, and Graduate Program in Cognitive and Neural Systems, 
with partial support from the Air Force Office of Scientific
Research. 

         NEURAL NETWORKS: FROM FOUNDATIONS TO APPLICATIONS

                       MAY 5-10, 1991

This self-contained systematic five-day course is based on the
graduate curriculum in the technology, computation, mathematics, and
biology of neural networks developed at the Center for Adaptive Systems 
(CAS) and the graduate program in Cognitive and Neural Systems (CNS) of 
Boston University. The curriculum refines and updates the successful 
course held at the Wang Institute in May, 1990. The course will be 
taught by CAS/CNS faculty, as well as by distinguished guest lecturers 
at the beautiful and superbly equipped campus of the Wang Institute. 
An extraordinary range and depth of models, methods, and applications will 
be presented with ample opportunity for interaction with the lecturers 
and other participants at the daily discussion sections, meals, receptions,
and breaks that are included with registration. At the 1990 Course,
participants came from 20 countries and 35 states of the U.S.

Boston University tutors are STEPHEN GROSSBERG, GAIL CARPENTER, ENNIO
MINGOLLA, MICHAEL COHEN, DAN BULLOCK, AND JOHN MERRILL.

Guest tutors are FEDERICO FAGGIN, ROBERT HECHT-NIELSEN, MICHAEL JORDAN, 
ANDY BARTO, AND ALEX WAIBEL.

               DAY 1 COURSE SCHEDULE (May 6, 1991)                             

PROFESSOR GROSSBERG: Historical Overview, Cooperation and Competition, 
Content Addressable Memory, and Associative Learning. 

PROFESSORS CARPENTER, GROSSBERG, AND MINGOLLA: Associative Learning Continued,
Neocognitron, Perceptrons, and Introduction to Back Propagation. 

PROFESSOR JORDAN: Recent Developments of Back Propagation.

Evening Discussions with Tutors and Informal Presentations.

               DAY 2 COURSE SCHEDULE (May 7, 1991)

PROFESSORS GROSSBERG AND MINGOLLA: Adaptive Pattern Recognition.

PROFESSORS CARPENTER AND GROSSBERG: Introduction to Adaptive Resonance,
Theory and Analysis of ART 1.

PROFESSOR CARPENTER: Analysis of ART 2, ART 3, Predictive ART, and 
Self-Organization of Invariant Pattern Recognition codes.

Evening Discussions with Tutors and Informal Presentations.

               DAY 3 COURSE SCHEDULE (May 8, 1991)

PROFESSORS GROSSBERG AND MINGOLLA: Vision and Image Processing.

PROFESSORS BULLOCK AND GROSSBERG: Adaptive Sensory-Motor Planning 
and Control. 

Evening Discussions with Tutors and Informal Presentations.

               DAY 4 COURSE SCHEDULE (May 9, 1991)

PROFESSORS COHEN, GROSSBERG, AND WAIBEL: Speech Perception and 
Production. 

PROFESSORS BARTO, GROSSBERG, AND MERRILL: Reinforcement Learning and
Prediction.

DR. HECHT-NIELSEN: Recent Developments in the Neurocomputer Industry.

Evening Discussions with Tutors and Informal Presentations.

              DAY 5 COURSE SCHEDULE (May 10, 1991)

DR. FAGGIN: VLSI Implementation of Neural Networks.

                   END OF COURSE (at 1:30 PM).

 

                     RESEARCH CONFERENCE 
         
         NEURAL NETWORKS FOR VISION AND IMAGE PROCESSING

                      MAY 10-12, 1991

This international research conference on a topic at the cutting
edge of science and technology will bring together leading experts
in academe, government, and industry to present their results on
vision and image processing in INVITED LECTURES and CONTRIBUTED
POSTERS. Topics range from visual neurobiology and psychophysics
through computational modelling to technological applications.

CALL FOR PAPERS - VIP POSTER SESSION: A featured 3-hour poster session 
on neural network research related to vision and image processing will
be held on May 11, 1991.  Attendees who wish to present a poster
should submit three copies of an abstract (one single-spaced page),
postmarked by March 1, 1991, for refereeing. Include with the abstract 
the name, address, and telephone number of the corresponding author.  
Mail to: Poster Session, Neural Networks Conference, Wang Institute 
of Boston University, 72 Tyng Road, Tyngsboro, MA 01879.  Authors 
will be informed of abstract acceptance by March 31, 1991.  


       DAY 1 CONFERENCE PROGRAM (May 10, 1991, 5:00-7:30 PM)

                          
PROFESSOR JOHN DAUGMAN, CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY: "High-Confidence 
Personal Identification System Built from Quadrature Neural Filter"

PROFESSOR DAVID CASASENT, CARNEGIE MELLON UNIVERSITY: "CMU Hybrid Optical/
Digital Neural Net for Scene Analysis"

DR. ROBERT HECHT-NIELSEN, HNC,: "Neurocomputers for Image Analysis"

                DAY 2 CONFERENCE PROGRAM (May 11, 1991)

PROFESSOR V.S. RAMACHANDRAN, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO: 
"Interactions Between `Channels' Concerned with the Perception of Motion, 
Depth, Color, and Form"

PROFESSOR STEPHEN GROSSBERG, BOSTON UNIVERSITY: "A Neural Network 
Architecture for 3-D Vision and Figure-Ground Separation"

PROFESSOR ENNIO MINGOLLA, BOSTON UNIVERSITY: "A Neural Network Architecture 
for Visual Motion Segmentation"

PROFESSOR GEORGE SPERLING, NEW YORK UNIVERSITY: "Two Systems of Visual
Processing"

DR. ROBERT DESIMONE, NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH: "Attentional 
Control of Visual Perception: Cortical and Subcortical Mechanisms"

PROFESSOR GAIL CARPENTER, BOSTON UNIVERSITY: "Neural Network Architectures 
for Attentive Learning, Recognition, and Prediction"

DR. RALPH LINSKER, IBM T.J. WATSON RESEARCH CENTER: "New Approaches to 
Network Learning and Optimization"

PROFESSOR STUART ANSTIS, UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO: "My Recent Research on 
Motion Perception"
               
                           POSTER SESSION
                                      
                DAY 3 CONFERENCE PROGRAM (May 12, 1991)

PROFESSOR JACOB BECK, UNIVERSITY OF OREGON: "Preattentive Visual Processing"

PROFESSOR JAMES TODD, BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY: "Neural Analysis of Motion"

DR. ALLEN M. WAXMAN, MIT LINCOLN LAB: "Extraction"

PROFESSOR ERIC SCHWARTZ, NEW YORK UNIVERSITY: "Biologically Motivated 
Machine Vision"

PROFESSOR ALEX PENTLAND, MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY: "The 
Optimal Observer: Design of a Dynamically-Responding Visual System"

                              DISCUSSION

                 END OF RESEARCH CONFERENCE (at 1 PM)

CNS FELLOWSHIP FUND: Net revenues from the course will endow
fellowships for Ph.D. candidates in the CNS Graduate Program. 
Corporate and individual gifts to endow CNS Fellowships are also
welcome.  Please write:  Cognitive and Neural Systems Fellowship
Fund, Center for Adaptive Systems, Boston University, 111 Cummington
Street, Boston, MA 02215.

STUDENT REGISTRATION: A limited number of spaces at the course and
conference have been reserved at a subsidized rate for full time
students.  These spaces will be assigned on a first-come,
first-served basis.  Completed registration form and payment for
students who wish to be considered for the reduced student rate must
be received by April 15, 1991.


YOUR REGISTRATION FEE INCLUDES:

COURSE							CONFERENCE

Five days of tutorials			   Admission to all invited lectures
Course notebooks for all tutorials	   Admission to poster session
All guest lectures                    One reception
Sunday evening reception              Two continental breakfasts
Five continental breakfasts           One lunch
Five lunches                          One dinner
Four dinners                          Daily morning/afternoon
Daily morning/afternoon coffee          coffee service 
  service                               
Evening discussion sessions with 
  leading neural architects


CANCELLATION POLICY:  Course fee, less $100, and the research
conference fee, less $60, will be refunded upon receipt of a written
request postmarked before March 31, 1991.  After this date no refund
will be made.  Registrants who do not attend and who do not cancel
in writing before March 31, 1991 are liable for the full amount of
the registration fee. You must obtain a cancellation number from our
registrar in order to make the cancellation valid.  

HOW TO REGISTER:

ADVANCE REGISTRATION:  To register by telephone, call (508) 649-9731
with VISA or Mastercard between 8:00-5:00 PM (EST).  To register by
fax, complete and fax back the Registration Form to (508) 649-6926. 
To register by mail, complete the registration form and mail it with
your full form of payment as directed.  Make check payable in U.S.
dollars to Boston University. 

ON-SITE REGISTRATION:  Those who wish to register for the course and
the research conference on-site may do so on a space-available
basis.  

SITE: The Wang Institute of Boston University possesses excellent
conference facilities in a beautiful 220-acre setting.  It is easily
reached from Boston's Logan Airport and Route 128.  

HOTEL RESERVATIONS: Sheraton Tara, Nashua, NH (603) 888-9970; Red
Roof Inn, Nashua, NH (603) 888-1893; or Stonehedge Inn, Tyngsboro,
MA, (508) 649-4342.  The special conference rate applies only if you
mention the name and dates of the meeting when making the
reservation.  The hotels in Nashua are located approximately five
miles from the Wang Institute.  Shuttle bus service will be
provided.  


REGISTRATION FORM:

COURSE - NEURAL NETWORKS: FROM FOUNDATIONS TO APPLICATIONS, 
May 5-10, 1991

RESEARCH CONFERENCE - NEURAL NETWORKS FOR VISION AND IMAGE PROCESSING,
May 10-12, 1991


Name: ______________________________________________________________

Title: _____________________________________________________________

Organization: ______________________________________________________

Address: ___________________________________________________________

City: ____________________________ State: __________ Zip: __________

Telephone: _________________________________________________________


Course:                            Research Conference:

( ) regular attendee $985          ( ) regular attendee $95
( ) full-time student $275*        ( ) Full-time student $75*

*limited number of spaces.  Student registrations must be received
by April 15, 1991.  

Total payment enclosed: ____________________________________________

Form of payment:

( ) Check or money order (payable in U.S. dollars to Boston
    University).
( ) VISA
( ) Mastercard

#_______________________________________Exp. Date:__________________


Signature (as it appears on card): _________________________________

Return to: Neural Networks
           Wang Institute of Boston University 
           72 Tyng Road 
           Tyngsboro, MA 01879 

Boston University's policies provide for equal opportunity and
affirmative action in employment and admission to all programs of
the University.  


From diana@park Tue Nov 20 18:19:14 1990
Return-Path: <diana@park>
Date: Mon, 19 Nov 90 13:01:08 -0500
From: diana@park
To: mike@bucasb.bu.edu

                      BOSTON UNIVERSITY

     A World Leader In Neural Network Research and Technology
          Presents Two Major Events on the Cutting Edge


NEURAL NETWORKS: FROM FOUNDATIONS TO APPLICATIONS, MAY 5-10, 1991
 
     A self-contained systematic course by leading neural architects. 

NEURAL NETWORKS FOR VISION AND IMAGE PROCESSING, MAY 10-12, 1991

     An international research conference presenting INVITED and
     CONTRIBUTED papers, herewith solicited, on one of the most 
     active research topics in science and technology today. 

     Special student registration rates are available.  

     Sponsored by: Boston University's Wang Institute, Center for
Adaptive Systems, and Graduate Program in Cognitive and Neural Systems, 
with partial support from the Air Force Office of Scientific
Research. 

         NEURAL NETWORKS: FROM FOUNDATIONS TO APPLICATIONS

                       MAY 5-10, 1991

This self-contained systematic five-day course is based on the
graduate curriculum in the technology, computation, mathematics, and
biology of neural networks developed at the Center for Adaptive Systems 
(CAS) and the graduate program in Cognitive and Neural Systems (CNS) of 
Boston University. The curriculum refines and updates the successful 
course held at the Wang Institute in May, 1990. The course will be 
taught by CAS/CNS faculty, as well as by distinguished guest lecturers 
at the beautiful and superbly equipped campus of the Wang Institute. 
An extraordinary range and depth of models, methods, and applications will 
be presented with ample opportunity for interaction with the lecturers 
and other participants at the daily discussion sections, meals, receptions,
and breaks that are included with registration. At the 1990 Course,
participants came from 20 countries and 35 states of the U.S.

Boston University tutors are STEPHEN GROSSBERG, GAIL CARPENTER, ENNIO
MINGOLLA, MICHAEL COHEN, DAN BULLOCK, AND JOHN MERRILL.

Guest tutors are FEDERICO FAGGIN, ROBERT HECHT-NIELSEN, MICHAEL JORDAN, 
ANDY BARTO, AND ALEX WAIBEL.

               DAY 1 COURSE SCHEDULE (May 6, 1991)                             

PROFESSOR GROSSBERG: Historical Overview, Cooperation and Competition, 
Content Addressable Memory, and Associative Learning. 

PROFESSORS CARPENTER, GROSSBERG, AND MINGOLLA: Associative Learning Continued,
Neocognitron, Perceptrons, and Introduction to Back Propagation. 

PROFESSOR JORDAN: Recent Developments of Back Propagation.

Evening Discussions with Tutors and Informal Presentations.

               DAY 2 COURSE SCHEDULE (May 7, 1991)

PROFESSORS GROSSBERG AND MINGOLLA: Adaptive Pattern Recognition.

PROFESSORS CARPENTER AND GROSSBERG: Introduction to Adaptive Resonance,
Theory and Analysis of ART 1.

PROFESSOR CARPENTER: Analysis of ART 2, ART 3, Predictive ART, and 
Self-Organization of Invariant Pattern Recognition codes.

Evening Discussions with Tutors and Informal Presentations.

               DAY 3 COURSE SCHEDULE (May 8, 1991)

PROFESSORS GROSSBERG AND MINGOLLA: Vision and Image Processing.

PROFESSORS BULLOCK AND GROSSBERG: Adaptive Sensory-Motor Planning 
and Control. 

Evening Discussions with Tutors and Informal Presentations.

               DAY 4 COURSE SCHEDULE (May 9, 1991)

PROFESSORS COHEN, GROSSBERG, AND WAIBEL: Speech Perception and 
Production. 

PROFESSORS BARTO, GROSSBERG, AND MERRILL: Reinforcement Learning and
Prediction.

DR. HECHT-NIELSEN: Recent Developments in the Neurocomputer Industry.

Evening Discussions with Tutors and Informal Presentations.

              DAY 5 COURSE SCHEDULE (May 10, 1991)

DR. FAGGIN: VLSI Implementation of Neural Networks.

                   END OF COURSE (at 1:30 PM).

 

                     RESEARCH CONFERENCE 
         
         NEURAL NETWORKS FOR VISION AND IMAGE PROCESSING

                      MAY 10-12, 1991

This international research conference on a topic at the cutting
edge of science and technology will bring together leading experts
in academe, government, and industry to present their results on
vision and image processing in INVITED LECTURES and CONTRIBUTED
POSTERS. Topics range from visual neurobiology and psychophysics
through computational modelling to technological applications.

CALL FOR PAPERS - VIP POSTER SESSION: A featured 3-hour poster session 
on neural network research related to vision and image processing will
be held on May 11, 1991.  Attendees who wish to present a poster
should submit three copies of an abstract (one single-spaced page),
postmarked by March 1, 1991, for refereeing. Include with the abstract 
the name, address, and telephone number of the corresponding author.  
Mail to: Poster Session, Neural Networks Conference, Wang Institute 
of Boston University, 72 Tyng Road, Tyngsboro, MA 01879.  Authors 
will be informed of abstract acceptance by March 31, 1991.  


       DAY 1 CONFERENCE PROGRAM (May 10, 1991, 5:00-7:30 PM)

                          
PROFESSOR JOHN DAUGMAN, CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY: "High-Confidence 
Personal Identification System Built from Quadrature Neural Filter"

PROFESSOR DAVID CASASENT, CARNEGIE MELLON UNIVERSITY: "CMU Hybrid Optical/
Digital Neural Net for Scene Analysis"

DR. ROBERT HECHT-NIELSEN, HNC,: "Neurocomputers for Image Analysis"

                DAY 2 CONFERENCE PROGRAM (May 11, 1991)

PROFESSOR V.S. RAMACHANDRAN, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO: 
"Interactions Between `Channels' Concerned with the Perception of Motion, 
Depth, Color, and Form"

PROFESSOR STEPHEN GROSSBERG, BOSTON UNIVERSITY: "A Neural Network 
Architecture for 3-D Vision and Figure-Ground Separation"

PROFESSOR ENNIO MINGOLLA, BOSTON UNIVERSITY: "A Neural Network Architecture 
for Visual Motion Segmentation"

PROFESSOR GEORGE SPERLING, NEW YORK UNIVERSITY: "Two Systems of Visual
Processing"

DR. ROBERT DESIMONE, NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH: "Attentional 
Control of Visual Perception: Cortical and Subcortical Mechanisms"

PROFESSOR GAIL CARPENTER, BOSTON UNIVERSITY: "Neural Network Architectures 
for Attentive Learning, Recognition, and Prediction"

DR. RALPH LINSKER, IBM T.J. WATSON RESEARCH CENTER: "New Approaches to 
Network Learning and Optimization"

PROFESSOR STUART ANSTIS, UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO: "My Recent Research on 
Motion Perception"
               
                           POSTER SESSION
                                      
                DAY 3 CONFERENCE PROGRAM (May 12, 1991)

PROFESSOR JACOB BECK, UNIVERSITY OF OREGON: "Preattentive Visual Processing"

PROFESSOR JAMES TODD, BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY: "Neural Analysis of Motion"

DR. ALLEN M. WAXMAN, MIT LINCOLN LAB: "Extraction"

PROFESSOR ERIC SCHWARTZ, NEW YORK UNIVERSITY: "Biologically Motivated 
Machine Vision"

PROFESSOR ALEX PENTLAND, MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY: "The 
Optimal Observer: Design of a Dynamically-Responding Visual System"

                              DISCUSSION

                 END OF RESEARCH CONFERENCE (at 1 PM)

CNS FELLOWSHIP FUND: Net revenues from the course will endow
fellowships for Ph.D. candidates in the CNS Graduate Program. 
Corporate and individual gifts to endow CNS Fellowships are also
welcome.  Please write:  Cognitive and Neural Systems Fellowship
Fund, Center for Adaptive Systems, Boston University, 111 Cummington
Street, Boston, MA 02215.

STUDENT REGISTRATION: A limited number of spaces at the course and
conference have been reserved at a subsidized rate for full time
students.  These spaces will be assigned on a first-come,
first-served basis.  Completed registration form and payment for
students who wish to be considered for the reduced student rate must
be received by April 15, 1991.


YOUR REGISTRATION FEE INCLUDES:

COURSE							CONFERENCE

Five days of tutorials			   Admission to all invited lectures
Course notebooks for all tutorials	   Admission to poster session
All guest lectures                    One reception
Sunday evening reception              Two continental breakfasts
Five continental breakfasts           One lunch
Five lunches                          One dinner
Four dinners                          Daily morning/afternoon
Daily morning/afternoon coffee          coffee service 
  service                               
Evening discussion sessions with 
  leading neural architects


CANCELLATION POLICY:  Course fee, less $100, and the research
conference fee, less $60, will be refunded upon receipt of a written
request postmarked before March 31, 1991.  After this date no refund
will be made.  Registrants who do not attend and who do not cancel
in writing before March 31, 1991 are liable for the full amount of
the registration fee. You must obtain a cancellation number from our
registrar in order to make the cancellation valid.  

HOW TO REGISTER:

ADVANCE REGISTRATION:  To register by telephone, call (508) 649-9731
with VISA or Mastercard between 8:00-5:00 PM (EST).  To register by
fax, complete and fax back the Registration Form to (508) 649-6926. 
To register by mail, complete the registration form and mail it with
your full form of payment as directed.  Make check payable in U.S.
dollars to Boston University. 

ON-SITE REGISTRATION:  Those who wish to register for the course and
the research conference on-site may do so on a space-available
basis.  

SITE: The Wang Institute of Boston University possesses excellent
conference facilities in a beautiful 220-acre setting.  It is easily
reached from Boston's Logan Airport and Route 128.  

HOTEL RESERVATIONS: Sheraton Tara, Nashua, NH (603) 888-9970; Red
Roof Inn, Nashua, NH (603) 888-1893; or Stonehedge Inn, Tyngsboro,
MA, (508) 649-4342.  The special conference rate applies only if you
mention the name and dates of the meeting when making the
reservation.  The hotels in Nashua are located approximately five
miles from the Wang Institute.  Shuttle bus service will be
provided.  


REGISTRATION FORM:

COURSE - NEURAL NETWORKS: FROM FOUNDATIONS TO APPLICATIONS, 
May 5-10, 1991

RESEARCH CONFERENCE - NEURAL NETWORKS FOR VISION AND IMAGE PROCESSING,
May 10-12, 1991


Name: ______________________________________________________________

Title: _____________________________________________________________

Organization: ______________________________________________________

Address: ___________________________________________________________

City: ____________________________ State: __________ Zip: __________

Telephone: _________________________________________________________


Course:                            Research Conference:

( ) regular attendee $985          ( ) regular attendee $95
( ) full-time student $275*        ( ) Full-time student $75*

*limited number of spaces.  Student registrations must be received
by April 15, 1991.  

Total payment enclosed: ____________________________________________

Form of payment:

( ) Check or money order (payable in U.S. dollars to Boston
    University).
( ) VISA
( ) Mastercard

#_______________________________________Exp. Date:__________________


Signature (as it appears on card): _________________________________

Return to: Neural Networks
           Wang Institute of Boston University 
           72 Tyng Road 
           Tyngsboro, MA 01879 

Boston University's policies provide for equal opportunity and
affirmative action in employment and admission to all programs of
the University.  


--
Boston University (617-353-7857) Email: mike@bucasb.bu.edu
Smail: Michael Cohen                     111 Cummington Street, RM 242
       Center for Adaptive Systems        Boston, Mass 02215
       Boston University

** Sender Unknown ** (12/01/90)

ci.misc
Subject: Neural Network Conference, Call for Papers
Message-ID: <69766@bu.edu.bu.edu>
From: caroly@bucasb.bu.edu
Date: 30 Nov 90 20:19:02 GMT
Reply-To: caroly@bucasb.UUCP ()
Sender: news@bu.edu.bu.edu
Followup-To: bu.cns.general
Organization: Boston University Center for Adaptive Systems
Lines: 87
Xref: cerritos.edu bionet.general:145 bionet.population-bio:29 bionet.sci-resources:22 bionet.technology.conversion:7 comp.theory.self-org-sys:53 comp.theory.dynamic-sys:183 sci.bio:1619 sci.math:5472 sci.math.stat:832 sci.physics:5660 sci.research:397 sc
i.misc:748

(please post)

      ***********************************************
      *                                             *
      *            GRADUATE PROGRAM IN              *
      *      COGNITIVE AND NEURAL SYSTEMS (CNS)     *
      *           AT BOSTON UNIVERSITY              *
      *                                             *
      ***********************************************

     Gail A.Carpenter & Stephen Grossberg, Co-Directors

The Boston University graduate program in Cognitive and Neural Systems
offers comprehensive advanced training in the neural and computational
principles, mechanisms, and architectures that underly human and
animal behavior, and the application of neural network architectures
to the solution of outstanding technological problems.

Applications for Fall, 1991 admissions and financial aid are now
being accepted for both the MA and PhD degree programs.

To obtain a brochure describing the CNS Program and a set of application
materials, write or telephone:

 Cognitive & Neural Systems Program
 Boston University
 111 Cummington Street, Room 240
 Boston, MA 02215
 (617) 353-9481

or send a mailing address to: caroly@park.bu.edu

Applications for admission and financial aid should be received by
the Graduate School Admissions Office no later than January 15.

Applicants are required to submit undergraduate (and, if applicable,
graduate) transcripts, three letters of recommendation, and Graduate
Record Examination (GRE) scores. The Advanced Test should be in the
candidate's area of departmental specialization. GRE scores may be
waived for MA candidates and, in exceptional cases, for PhD candidates,
but absence of these scores may decrease an applicant's chances for
admission and financial aid.

Description of the CNS Program:

The Cognitive and Neural Systems (CNS) Program provides advanced training
and research experience for graduate students interested in the neural and
computational principles, mechanisms, and architectures that underly human
and animal behavior, and the application of neural network architectures
to the solution of outstanding technological problems.  Students are
trained in a broad range of areas concerning cognitive and neural systems,
including vision and image processing; speech and language understanding;
adaptive pattern recognition; associative learning and long-term memory;
cognitive information processing; self-organization; cooperative and
competitive network dynamics and short-term memory; reinforcement,
motivation, and attention; adaptive sensory-motor control and robotics;
and biological rhythms; as well as the mathematical and computational
methods needed to support advanced modeling research and applications. The
CNS Program awards MA, PhD, and BA/MA degrees.

The CNS Program embodies a number of unique features. Its core curriculum 
consists of eight interdisciplinary graduate courses each of which 
integrates the psychological, neurobiological, mathematical, and computational 
information needed to theoretically investigate fundamental issues concerning 
mind and brain processes and the applications of neural networks to technology.
Each course is taught once a week in the evening to make the program available 
to qualified students, including working professionals, throughout the Boston 
area. Students develop a coherent area of expertise by designing a program
that includes courses in areas such as Biology, Computer Science, Engineering, 
Mathematics, and Psychology, in addition to courses in the CNS core curriculum.

The CNS Program prepares Ph.D. students for thesis research with scientists
in one of several Boston University research centers or groups, and with
Boston-area scientists collaborating with these centers. The unit most
closely linked to the Program is the Center for Adaptive Systems.  The
Center for Adaptive Systems is also part of the Boston Consortium for
Behavioral and Neural Studies, a Boston-area multi-institutional
Congressional Center of Excellence. Another multi-institutional
Congressional Center of Excellence focussed at Boston University is the
Center for the Study of Rhythmic Processes.  Other research resources
include distinguished research groups in dynamical systems within the
mathematics department; in theoretical computer science within the Computer
Science Department; in biophysics and computational physics within the
Physics Department; in sensory robotics, biomedical engineering, computer
and systems engineering, and neuromuscular research within the Engineering
School; and in neurophysiology, neuroanatomy, and neuropharmacology at the
Medical School.