neuron-request@HPLABS.HP.COM ("Neuron-Digest Moderator Peter Marvit") (11/14/89)
Neuron Digest Monday, 13 Nov 1989 Volume 5 : Issue 46 Today's Topics: connectionist book series announcement ICNC in Duesseldorf TR available: Evolution, Learning and Culture too! Biomedical Imaging Mailing List Symposium:CONTROL FOR PROFIT announcing: Rochester Connectionist Simulator, Version 4.2 Cognitive Science Talk: David Touretzky graduate study TR available NIPS VLSI workshop IJCNN - Request for Volunteers Call for papers Send submissions, questions, address maintenance and requests for old issues to "neuron-request@hplabs.hp.com" or "{any backbone,uunet}!hplabs!neuron-request" Use "ftp" to get old issues from hplpm.hpl.hp.com (15.255.176.205). ------------------------------------------------------------ Subject: connectionist book series announcement From: Jeff Elman <elman@amos.ucsd.edu> Date: Mon, 02 Oct 89 22:23:31 -0700 - New Book Series Announcement - NEURAL NETWORK MODELING & CONNECTIONISM The MIT Press / Bradford Books This series will make available seminal state-of-the art research in neural network and connectionist modeling. The research in this area has grown explosively in recent years and has sparked controversy and debate in a wide variety of areas. Many researchers believe that this para- digm offers new and deep insights into the basis and nature of intelligent behavior in both biological and artificial systems. The series publishing program will include: monographs based on influential dissertations; monographs and in-depth reports of research programs based on mature work by leaders in the field; edited volumes and collections on topics of special interest; major reference works; undergraduate and graduate level textbooks. The series will be highly inter- disciplinary, spanning fields as diverse as psychology, linguistics, cognitive science, neuroscience, neurobiology and genetics, physics and biophysics, mathematics, computer science, artificial intelligence, engineering, and econom- ics. Potential authors are encouraged to contact any of the Editors or the Publisher. Editor: Jeffrey L. Elman Dept. of Cognitive Science UCSD; La Jolla, CA 92093 elman@amos.ucsd.edu Associate Editors: James Anderson (Brown) James McClelland (CMU) Andrew Barto (UMass/Amherst) Domenico Parisi (Rome) Gary Dell (Illinois) David Rumelhart (Stanford) Jerome Feldman (ICSI, Berkeley) Terrence Sejnowski (UCSD, Salk) Stephen Grossberg (BU) Paul Smolensky (Colorado) Stephen Hanson (Bellcore) Stephen Stich (Rutgers) Geoffrey Hinton (Toronto) David Touretzky (CMU) Michael Jordan (MIT) David Zipser (UCSD) Publisher: Henry B. Stanton The MIT Press / Bradford Books 55 Hayward Street; Cambridge MA 02142 ------------------------------ Subject: ICNC in Duesseldorf From: "Rolf Eckmiller" <eckmille@dd0rud81.bitnet> Date: Wed, 11 Oct 89 17:22:00 +0700 ICNC in Duesseldorf 2nd Announcement 10/89 Int.Conf.on PARALLEL PROCESSING IN NEURAL SYSTEMS AND COMPUTERS (ICNC) -- 10th Cybernetics Congress of the DGK -- 19.-21. March, 1990, Heinrich-Heine-Universitaet Duesseldorf (FRG) Organizing Committee: R. Eckmiller (chair) Duesseldorf (FRG) G. Hartmann Paderborn (FRG) G. Hauske Muenchen (FRG) C.v.d. Malsburg Los Angeles (USA) W.v. Seelen Bochum (FRG) Invited Lectures include: J.R. Barker: Nanoelectronics Res. Ctr., Univ. Glasgow (UK) NOVEL LOGIC AND ARCHITECTURES FOR MOLECULAR COMPUTING G. Carpenter: Center for Adaptive Systems, Boston Univ. (USA) ADAPTIVE RESONANCE THEORY A. Cremers: Informatik, Univ. Dortmund (FRG) PARALLEL PROCESS INTERFACES TO KNOWLEDGE SYSTEMS J. Feldman: Int. Comp. Sci. Inst., ICSI, Berkeley (USA) TIME, SPACE, AND FORM IN VISION K. Fukushima: Faculty of Engineering Science, Osaka University, (Japan) NEURAL NETWORK MODELS FOR VISUAL PATTERN RECOGNITION H. Haarer: Experimentalphysik, Universitaet Bayreuth, (FRG) NEW LASER TECHNIQUES FOR QUASI-MOLECULAR STORAGE: PRESENT STATUS AND LIMITATIONS H. Haken: Theor. Physik, Universitaet Stuttgart (FRG) PATTERN RECOGNITION BY SYNERGETIC COMPTUTERS T. Kohonen: Helsinki Univ. of Technology, Espoo (Finland) INTERNAL REPRESENTATIONS AND ASSOCIATIVE MEMORY D. Psaltis: Caltech, Electr. Enineering, Pasadena (USA) LEARNING IN OPTICAL NEURAL NETWORKS W. Reichardt: MPI f. Biol. Kybernetik, Tuebingen (FRG) THE FIGURE-GROUND DISCRIMINATION PROBLEM: THE FLY'S SOLUTION U. Trottenberg: SUPRENUM GmbH, Bonn (FRG) SUPREMUN - PRESENT AND FUTURE ICNC - CONFERENCE SECRETARIAT: Dr. R. Eckmiller Division of Biocybernetics, Heinrich-Heine-Universitaet Duesseldorf Universitaetsstrasse 1, D-4000 Duesseldorf 1 (FRG) TEL:(211) 311-5204, E-MAIL: ECKMILLE@DD0RUD81.BITNET CONFERENCE LOCATION: Building 23.02 (Lecture Halls and Foyer) Heinrich-Heine-Universtaet Duesseldorf Universitaetsstrasse 1, D-4000 Duesseldorf 1 (FRG) HOTEL RESERVATION Make your own hotel reservation via the Tourist Association: Verkehrsverein der Stadt Duesseldorf, Konrad-Adenauer-Platz D-4000 Duesseldorf 1 (FRG), TEL:(211)35 05 05 or by contacting one of the following Hotels: In Duesseldorf In Neuss vis a vis Duesseldorf Hotel an der Uni City Hotel Neuss Moorenstrae 4 Adolf-Flecken-Strasse 18-20 D-4000 Duesseldorf 1 (FRG) D-4040 Neuss 1 (FRG) TEL:(211)33 22 93 TEL:(2101)27 50 21 Hotel Pons Swisshotel Rheinpark Christophstrasse 2 Rheinallee 1 D-4000 Duesseldorf 1 (FRG) D-4040 Neuss 1 (FRG) TEL:(211)33 57 47 TEL:(2101)153-0 Hotel am Rathaus Rheinstrasse 3 D-4000 Duesseldorf 1 (FRG) TEL:(211)32 65 56 Hotel Aida Ubierstrasse 36 D-4000 Duesseldorf 1 (FRG) TEL:(211)15 99-0 Haus Rheinblick Muehlenstrasse 25 D-4000 Duesseldorf 1 (FRG) TEL:(211)32 53 16 cut here- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - REGISTRATION FORM - ICNC, Duesseldorf (FRG), 19.-21. March, 1990 Please send a separate bank draft or check for each person registering. Registration fees: Before 15 November, 1989 = 150 DM (or US$ 81.-) (incl. Proceedings) After 15 November, 1989 = 200 DM (or US$108.-) Students* = 75 DM (or US$ 40.-) *) Students present proper identification either by Student ID Card or by letter from their supervisor. Exhibit Space** Before 15 November, 1989 = 200 DM (or US$ 108.-) After 15 November, 1989 = 300 DM (or US$ 162.-) **) Early reservations of the limited exhibit space compartments are advised. Interested exhibitors should contact the ICNC-Conference Secretariat by TEL (211)311-5204 or FAX (211)34 22 29. Please send fees for registration and exhibit space reservation by Bank Draft to: Account No. 14 11 131, Dr. Rolf Eckmiller/Neurale Systeme Commerzbank Duesseldorf (FRG), Bank Code: 300 400 00 Participants from outside Europe may choose to send fees by mailing a check in US Dollars (payable to: Dr. Rolf Eckmiller/Neurale Systeme) to the ICNC-Conference Secretariat. Please circle one: Dr. Mr. Ms. Please check one: Last Name _____________________________ ( )I have sent_____DM by Bank Draft. First Name_____________________________ Affiliation___________________________ ( )I enclose a check for US$________ Adress_________________________________ City___________________________________ State________________________________ Country________________________________ TEL:( )______________________ Date___________________________________ Signature_____________________________ SUBMISSION OF PAPERS AND PUBLICATION Conference proceedings (hard cover book) will be published by Elsevier Science Publishers and will be available at the conference!! The majority of accepted papers will be presented as posters. Therefore the participants are strongly encouraged to select the choice: Poster presentation. Please, mail your camera-ready 4 page manuscript as one original and four copies (for review) together with Reprint Order and Copyright Forms and the Registration Form before 15 NOVEMBER, 1989 to the ICNC-Conference Secretariat. Submitted manuscripts arriving at ICNC-Conference Secretariat later than 15 NOVEMBER, 1989 cannot be considered. Additional typing sheets, reprint order-, and copyright forms may be requested from: Camera-Ready Publ. Group Elsevier, TEL: (20) 58 62-518 in Amsterdam, Netherlands, or from the ICNC-Conference Secretariat. PRESENTATION PREFERANCE: Check one: ( ) Oral presentation ( ) Poster presentation ( ) Poster or Oral presentation ( ) No presentation TOPICS SELECTION: Check one of the 6 topics for your presentation: 1) New Concepts in Neuroscience and Computational Neuroscience 2) Massively Parallel Computers (e.g. SUPRENUM, Transputer Systems) 3) Structure and Function of Biological Neural Systems 4) Self Organization versus Programming in Parallel Computers 5) Optical Computers and Molecular Computers 6) Parallel Processing in Artificial Intelligence ------------------------------ Subject: TR available: Evolution, Learning and Culture too! From: rik%cs@ucsd.edu (Rik Belew) Date: Tue, 24 Oct 89 19:33:27 -0700 EVOLUTION, LEARNING AND CULTURE: Computational metaphors for adaptive algorithms Richard K. Belew Cognitive Computer Science Research Group Computer Science & Engr. Dept. (C-014) Univ. California at San Diego La Jolla, CA 92093 rik%cs@ucsd.edu CSE Technical Report #CS89-156 Potential interactions between connectionist learning systems and algorithms modeled after evolutionary adaptation are becoming of increasing interest. In a recent, short and elegant paper Hinton and Nowlan extend a version of Holland's Genetic Algorithm (GA) to consider ways in which the evolution of species and the learning of individuals might interact. Their model is valuable both because it provides insight into potential interactions between the {\em natural} processes of evolution and learning, and as a potential bridge between the {\em artificial} questions of efficient and effective machine learning using the GA and connectionist networks. This paper begins by describing the GA and Hinton and Nowlan's simulation. We then analyze their model, use this analysis to explain its non-trivial dynamical behaviors, and consider the sensitivity of the simulation to several key parameters. Our next step is to interpose a third adaptive system --- culture --- between the learning of individuals and the evolution of populations. Culture accumulates the ``wisdom'' of individuals' learning beyond the lifetime of any one individual but adapts more responsively than the pace of evolution allows. We describe a series of experiments in which the most minimal notion of culture has been added to the Hinton and Nowlan model, and use this experience to comment on the functional value of culture and similarities between and interactions among these three classes of adaptive systems. ------------------------------------------------------- Copies of this technical report are available by sending $3 (and asking for Technical Report #CS89-156) to: Ms. Kathleen Hutcheson CSE Dept. (C-014) Univ. Calif. -- San Diego La Jolla, CA 92093 ------------------------------ Subject: Biomedical Imaging Mailing List From: m20163@mwvm.mitre.org (Nahum Gershon) Date: Wed, 25 Oct 89 11:30:25 -0500 MEDIMAGE is a mailing list for the discussion of all aspects of biomedical imaging and image processing. The list is intended to cover a wide range of topics including: Image Enhancement Volume Rendering Scientific Visualization CT (X-Ray Computed Tomography) MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) PET (Positron Emission Tomography) Ultrasound SPECT (Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography) Pattern Recognition Related Artificial Intelligence Areas PACS (Picture Archiving and Communication Systems) Image Management and Communication Systems Radiology Software Hardware Display Holography and Stereo Display Industrial Applications Any of the following are reasonable: Abstracts Bibliographies Work Planned or in Progress Reviews Conference Announcements Research Overviews Conference Reports Ideas Unsolved Problems History and Anecdotes Questions and Requests Submissions to the list are welcome (to MEDIMAGE@POLYGRAF.BITNET or MEDIMAGE%POLYGRAF.BITNET@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU for non-Bitnet users). Please contact the moderator if you have any questions or suggestions. To subscribe send the following command to LISTSERV@POLYGRAF.BITNET (non-Bitnet users send mail to LISTSERV%POLYGRAF.BITNET@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU): SUBSCRIBE MEDIMAGE Your_Full_Name where Your_Full_Name is your real name (not your userid). To unsubscribe, send UNSUBSCRIBE MEDIMAGE Moderator: Nahum Gershon <gershon@mdf.mitre.org> ------------------------------ Subject: Symposium:CONTROL FOR PROFIT From: chandra%ncl.shire@newcastle.ac.uk (Chandrasekhar Kambhampati) Organization: Chemical & Process Engineering Dept, University of Newcastle, UK. Date: 31 Oct 89 11:23:21 +0000 THE UNIVERSITY OF NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE DEPARTMENT OF CHEMICAL AND PROCESS ENGINEERING WITH ICI ENGINEERING THIRD INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM CONTROL FOR PROFIT 29 - 30 NOVEMBER 1989 The annual one day symposia on aspects of Advanced Process Con- trol, organised in conjunction with ICI Engineering, have in the past years proved highly successful. This year the third interna- tional meeting will continue this tradition when it takes as its theme CONTROL FOR PROFIT The market requirements which need to be satisfied by the process industries are becoming increasingly complex and uncertain. Cus- tomer expectations are sophisticated than ever before, thus pro- duct diversity is necessarily increasing. Add this to today's en- vironmental pressures and the need to pay more attention to the consumption and reutilisation of energy and materials and we can see that manufacturing processes must become ever more integrat- ed, flexible and faster in their operation. The implications for the Control Engineering Function in meeting this challenge will be reflected in the selection and development of viable control strategies that will be assessed in terms of business value - minimum supervision and maximum profit measurement. Programme Wednesday 29 November Civic Reception and Dinner 7.30 pm Thursday 30 November Control for Profit Symposium 8.30 am - 5.30 pm The number of participants will be restricted to 70 in order that each delegate will be free to participate in, and receive maximum benefit from, the presentations and discussions. The invited speakers are Professor T McAvoy, University of Maryland, USA (Neural Networks in Process Engineering) Professor T Marlin, McMaster University, Canada (Optimising Con- trol) Professor S Skogestad, Trondheim University, Norway (Estimation of product compositions from secondary measurements) Dr W Tucker, G E C Corporate Research Centre, U S A (Statistical Process Control) Professor J D Perkins, Imperial College, U K (Structuring Process Control Systems) FOR FURTHER DETAILS CONTACT Dr M.T.Tham Department of Chemical and Process Engineering, The University of Newcastle Upon Tyne Newcastle Upon Tyne NE1 7RU U.K. U.K. : tel: (091) 222 6000 ext. 7266 fax: (091) 261 1182 International : tel: +4491 222 6000 ext. 7266 fax: +4491 261 1182 e-mail within the UK : Ming.Tham@uk.ac.newcastle e-mail outside the UK : Ming.Tham@newcastle.ac.uk - --------------------------cut here----------------------------- International Symposium ON CONTROL FOR PROFIT IMPERIAL HOTEL, NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE, 29-30 November 1989 REGISTRATION DETAILS The 'Control For Profit' Symposium includes a Civic Reception and Dinner on 29 November and Symposium Proceedings with lunch and interval refreshments on 30 November. Fees for the Symposium are 150 pounds for industrialists and 100 pounds for academics and students. NAME: TITLE ADDRESS: TELEPHONE NUMBER FAX NUMBER I enclose a cheque for I require/do not require vegetarian meals (delete as applicable) Cheques should be made payable to University of Newcastle Upon Tyne and sent to the Department of Chemical and Process Engineer- ing. - ----------------------------------------------------------------- ACCOMMODATION REQUEST Symposium Registration fees do not include accommodation. We have, however, negotiated special bed and breakfast rates for Symposium delegates wishing to stay at the Imperial Hotel. The rates are 50 pounds for a single room, bed and breakfast. Please tick the appropriate box if you wish to be booked into the Imperial Hotel: Accommodation charges should be settled by delegates on departure. Single Room (Bed and Breakfast) 29 November (50 pounds) ------- | | ------- Single room (Bed and Breakfast) 30 November (50 Pounds) ------- | | ------- - ---------------------------------------------------------------- Please return completed forms to : Dr M.T.Tham Department of Chemical and Process Engineering, The University of Newcastle Upon Tyne Newcastle Upon Tyne NE1 7RU U.K. U.K. : tel: (091) 222 6000 ext. 7266 fax: (091) 261 1182 International : tel: +4491 222 6000 ext. 7266 fax: +4491 261 1182 e-mail within the UK : Ming.Tham@uk.ac.newcastle e-mail outside the UK : Ming.Tham@newcastle.ac.uk ------------------------------ Subject: announcing: Rochester Connectionist Simulator, Version 4.2 From: bukys@cs.rochester.edu (Liudvikas Bukys) Organization: University of Rochester Computer Science Department Date: 31 Oct 89 20:59:44 +0000 [[ Editor's Note: RCS now has a mostly working X11 interface! -PM ]] ___________________________________________________________________________ The Rochester Connectionist Simulator, version 4.2, is now available by anonymous FTP from CS.Rochester.Edu, in the directory pub/simulator. (Don't forget the FTP BINARY mode when retrieving compressed files!) The simulator is too big to mail electronically, so please don't ask. The same files are available to subscribers of UUNET's UUCP service. They are stored in the directory ~uucp/pub/simulator. This new version includes an X11 interface, and it should run with little effort on Vaxen, Sun-3s, Sun-4s (but not on Sun386i machines), DECstations, and MIPS workstations. It includes various bug and documentation fixes that have been accumulating for the last 18 months. A Macintosh/MPW port of the 4.1 simulator has also been contributed for redistribution. Finally, version 4.2 adopts the licensing terms of the Free Software Foundation. If you are unable to obtain anonymous FTP or UUCP access to the simulator distribution, you can still order a copy the old-fashioned way. Send a check for US$150 (payable to the University of Rochester) to: Peg Meeker Computer Science Department University of Rochester Rochester, NY 14627 (USA) You will, in return, receive a distribution tape and a 200-page manual. PLEASE SPECIFY WHETHER YOU WANT: a 1600bpi 1/2" reel OR a QIC-24 (SUN) 1/4" cartridge. If you have a PostScript printer, you should be able to produce your own copy of the manual. If you want a paper copy of the manual anyway, send a check for $10 per manual (payable to the University of Rochester) to Peg Meeker at the above address. We do not have the facilities for generating invoices, so payment is required with any order. If you do decide to use the simulator, you should join the simulator users' mailing list, to keep up with the latest news, patches, and helpful hints. To join, drop me a note at the following address... Liudvikas Bukys <simulator-request@cs.rochester.edu> ___________________________________________________________________________ ------------------------------ Subject: Cognitive Science Talk: David Touretzky From: berg@albanycs.Albany.Edu (George Berg) Organization: Computer Science Department, SUNY at Albany Date: 03 Nov 89 22:41:16 +0000 COGNITIVE SCIENCE COLLOQUIUM Sponsored by the Department of Linguistics and Cognitive Science State University of New York at Albany --------- A COMPUTATIONAL BASIS FOR PHONOLOGY Dr. David S. Touretzky School of Computer Science Carnegie Mellon Unversity Pittsburgh, PA 15213 Friday, November 17, 1989, 2:30 PM Humanities Building 354 State University of New York at Albany ABSTRACT Phonology is the study of the sound patterns of a language. It includes processes such as nasal assimilation, vowel harmony, tone shifting, and syllabification. The phonological structure of human languages is intricate, but it is also highly constrained and stunningly regular. The easy observability of phonological processes, their discrete, symbolic nature, and their rapid acquisition by very young children suggest that this may be a good domain in which to explore issues of rules and symbolic representations in the brain. In this talk I will give a brief sketch of George Lakoff's new theory of cognitive phonology, in which sequential derivations are eliminated by having all rules apply in parallel. I will then describe how our attempt to construct a connectionist implementation of the theory led us to revise it in significant ways. The architecture we developed resulted in a novel prediction of a constraint on insertion processes. Subsequent consultations with expert phonologists have so far confirmed this prediction. If correct, it represents the first step toward our long term goal of developing a computational explanation for why phonology looks the way it does. This is joint work with Deirdre Wheeler of the University of Pittsburgh. --------- To obtain additional information about this talk, please contact George Berg (Phone: (518) 442-4267, Internet: berg@cs.albany.edu). ------------------------------ Subject: graduate study From: caroly@bucasb.BU.EDU (Carol Yanakakis) Date: Tue, 07 Nov 89 14:17:48 -0500 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * M.A. AND Ph.D. PROGRAM in * * * * COGNITIVE AND NEURAL SYSTEMS * * * * at BOSTON UNIVERSITY * * * * Gail Carpenter and * * Stephen Grossberg, Co-Directors * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Boston University offers a unique M.A. and Ph.D. program in Cognitive and Neural Systems. This program presents an integrated 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 an acknowledged leader. Each student is required to take an equal number of carefully selected courses in one or more core departments, such as psychology, biology, computer science, mathematics, or engineering. A limited number of full-time graduate research fellowships are expected to be available. ***> For application materials, write to: Admissions Office Graduate School, Boston University 705 Commonwealth Avenue Boston, MA 02215 requesting materials for the Cognitive and Neural Systems (CNS) Program, or call: (617) 353-2697. ***> For a CNS brochure describing the curriculum and degree requirements, write to: Carol Yanakakis, Coordinator CNS Graduate Program Center for Adaptive Systems Boston University 111 Cummington Street Boston, MA 02215 or reply to: caroly@bucasb.bu.edu NOTE: You must contact BOTH the University Admissions Office and the CNS Program Coordinator in order to receive all materials necessary for applying. ------------------------------ Subject: TR available From: Eric Hartman <eric@mcc.com> Date: Tue, 07 Nov 89 16:17:23 -0600 The following technical report is available. Requests may be sent to eric@mcc.com or via physical mail to the MCC address below. MCC Technical Report Number: ACT-ST-272-89 Layered Neural Networks With Gaussian Hidden Units as Universal Approximators Eric Hartman, James D. Keeler, and Jacek M Kowalski Microelectronics and Computer Technology Corporation 3500 W. Balcones Center Dr. Austin, TX 78759-6509 Abstract: A neural network with a single layer of hidden units of gaussian type (radial basis functions) is proved to be a universal approximator for real-valued maps defined on convex, compact sets set of R^n. (Submitted to Neural Computation) ------------------------------ Subject: NIPS VLSI workshop From: Joshua Alspector <josh@flash.bellcore.com> Date: Thu, 09 Nov 89 14:54:04 -0500 The following is an announcement for one of the workshops to be held December 1-2, 1989 at the Keystone resort after the NIPS-89 conference. -------------------------------------------------- VLSI NEURAL NETWORKS: CURRENT MILESTONES AND FUTURE HORIZONS Moderators: Joshua Alspector and Daniel B. Schwartz Bell Communications Research GTE Laboratories, Inc. 445 South Street 40 Sylvan Road Morristown, NJ 07960-19910 Waltham, MA 02254 (201) 829-4342 (617) 466-2414 e-mail: josh@bellcore.com e-mail: dbs%gte.com@relay.cs.net This workshop will explore the potential and problems of VLSI implementations of neural network. Several speakers will discuss their implementation strategies and speculate about where their work may lead. Workshop attendees will then be encouraged to organize working groups to address specific issues raised in connection with the presentations. An example of a topic that has lead to contentious discussion in the past is the relative virtue of analog vs. digital implementations of neural networks. Some other possible topics include: o Architectural issues - synchronous or asynchronous - full time or multiplexed interconnect - local or global connectivity o Technological issues - neural network specific VLSI technololgies - design tools and methodologies - robustness/fault tolerance o Theoretical issues - model of analog computation - complexity As part of the working groups, we also expect to make contact with deeper issues such as the limits to VLSI complexity for neural networks, the nature of VLSI compatible neural network algorithms, and which neural network applications demand special purpose hardware. Speakers (besides the moderators) include: Jay Sage - MIT-Lincoln Lab Rod Goodman - Caltech Bernhard Boser - AT&T/Bell Labs Alan Kramer - UC Berkeley Jim Burr - Stanford Nelson Morgan - ICSI ------------------------------ Subject: IJCNN - Request for Volunteers From: Karen Haines <khaines@GALILEO.ECE.CMU.EDU> Date: Sun, 12 Nov 89 16:35:26 -0500 *************************************************************************** IJCNN - REQUEST FOR VOLUNTEERS *************************************************************************** This is the final call for volunteers to help at the IJCNN conference, to be held at the Omni Shorham Hotel in Washington D.C., on January 15-19, 1990. Full admittance to the conference and a copy of the proceedings is offered in exchange for your assistance throughout the conference. I would like to point out that student registration does not include proceedings. In general, each volunteer is expected to work one shift each day of the conference. Hours are approximately: AM shift - 7:00 am - Noon PM shift - Noon - 5:00 pm In addition, assistance may be required for the social events. There a re a few positions available, but I suggest that if you are interested you conatact ma as soon as possible. Below is a list of specific volunteer events. =================================== VOLUNTEER SCHEDULE OF EVENTS =================================== Sunday, January 14, 1990 - ------------------------- 10am - 2pm Volunteer Shift Signup Registration time is based upon and Registration commitment date (i.e those whose commit earlier will get first choice ) 6pm - 7pm General Meeting **** Mandatory Meeting **** 7pm - 9pm Volunteer Welcome Party To sign up please contact: Karen Haines - Volunteer Coordinator 3138 Beechwood Blvd. Pittsburgh, PA 15217 office: (412) 268-3304 message: (412) 422-6026 email: khaines@galileo.ece.cmu.edu or, Nina Kowalski - Assistant Volunteer Coordinator 209 W. 29th St. FLR 2 Baltimore, MD 21211 message: (301) 889-0587 email: nina@alpha.ece.jhu.edu If you have further questions, please feel free to contact me. Thank you, Karen Haines IJCNN Volunteer Coordinator ------------------------------ Subject: Call for papers From: Walt Baker <Walt_Baker@qmlink.draper.com> Date: 13 Nov 89 17:16:06 -0800 Subject: Time: 4:44 PM OFFICE MEMO Call for papers Date: 11/13/89 Please post the following call for papers in the next issue of Neuron Digest. Thank you! Walter Baker, Member AIAA Technical Committee on Artificial Intelligence e-mail: Internet:baker%draper.com@relay.cs.net ************************************************************ ************************************************************ C A L L F O R P A P E R S 1990 AIAA Guidance, Navigation, and Control Conference Special Announcement: Applications of ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE Technology to Aerospace Guidance, Navigation, and Control Submission Deadline: January 15, 1990 ------------------------------------------------------------ Papers are solicited that describe the application of Artificial Intelligence technology (including artificial neural networks) in the following areas: - Control Theory, Analysis, and Design - Information and Decision Support Systems - Guidance and Navigation of Aerospace Systems - Differential Games - Fault Accommodation - Mission and Trajectory Planning Send draft manuscripts to: Walter Baker The Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, Inc. 555 Technology Square, MS 3B Cambridge, MA 02139 phone: (617) 258-3194 fax: (617) 258-1131 e-mail: Internet:baker%draper.com@relay.cs.net For submission guidelines, see the October 1989 issue of "Aerospace America," pages B37 & B38. ------------------------------ End of Neurons Digest *********************