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- From: neuron-request@CATTELL.PSYCH.UPENN.EDU ("Neuron-Digest Moderator")
- Newsgroups: comp.ai.neural-nets
- Subject: Neuron Digest V11 #5 (CFP & Conferences)
- Message-ID: <17012.727721225@cattell.psych.upenn.edu>
- Date: 22 Jan 93 16:47:05 GMT
- Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU
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-
- Neuron Digest Friday, 22 Jan 1993
- Volume 11 : Issue 5
-
- Today's Topics:
- Symposium on Aliens, Apes, and AI
- WCNN extension of submission deadline
- Update - SCHEMAS AND NEURAL NETWORKS
- ICNN'93 and FUZZ-IEEE'93
- CFP - Grammatical Inference Conference
-
-
- Send submissions, questions, address maintenance, and requests for old
- issues to "neuron-request@cattell.psych.upenn.edu". The ftp archives are
- available from cattell.psych.upenn.edu (130.91.68.31). Back issues
- requested by mail will eventually be sent, but may take a while.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Subject: Symposium on Aliens, Apes, and AI
- From: "Dr. S. Kak" <kak@max.ee.LSU.EDU>
- Date: Fri, 15 Jan 93 11:12:37 -0600
-
- [[ Editor's Note: The title of this symposium is extremely intriguing. I
- hope that some DIgest reader will attend and give a report back to the
- general readership (or at *least* me!). -PM ]]
-
-
- A symposium on Aliens, Apes, and AI: Who is a person in the postmodern
- world?
-
- will be held in Huntsville, AL on Feb 13, 1993. The symposium is being
- organized by profs Lyn Miles and Stephen Harper of U. of Tennessee,
- Chattanooga. For further information contact
- FAX 615-755-4279; BITNET:SHARPER@UTCVM ; LMILES@UTCVM
-
- - -------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- My paper at the symposium is described below:
-
-
- - ----------------------------------------------------------------
- Symposium on Aliens, Apes, and Artificial Intelligence , The
- University of Alabama in Huntsville, February 13, 1993.
- - ---------------------------------------------------------------
- Technical Report 92-12 ECE-LSU December 1, 1992
-
- Reflections In Clouded Mirrors: Selfhood In Animals And Machines
-
- by Subhash Kak Copyright
-
- Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering Louisiana State
- University Baton Rouge, LA 70803-5901
-
- Abstract
-
- This essay is a tapestry woven out of three threads: Vedic theory
- of consciousness, quantum mechanics, and neural networks. The
- ancient Vedic tradition of philosophy of consciousness that goes
- back to at least 2000 BCE posits that analytical approaches to
- defining awareness or personhood end up in paradox. In this
- tradition one views awareness in terms of the reflection that the
- hardware of the brain provides to an underlying illuminating or
- awareness principle called the self . This tradition allows one
- to separate questions of the tools of awareness, such as eyes and
- ears and the mind, from the person who obtains this awareness.
- This tradition will be reviewed and issues related to its application
- to an understanding of personhood in animals and machines will be
- taken up. Parallels between the insights of the Vedic tradition
- and quantum mechanics will be sketched. The observer plays a
- fundamental role in the measurement problem of quantum mechanics
- and several scientists have claimed that physics will remain
- incomplete unless consciousness is incorporated into it. We will
- also consider the perspective of AI that intelligence emanates from
- the complexity of the neural hardware of the brain. This will take
- us to the question that what is it that separates humans from apes
- and other animals and from machines. We will address the question
- if machines will ever be endowed with self-awareness.
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: WCNN extension of submission deadline
- From: btelfe%ulysses@relay.nswc.navy.mil (Brian Telfer)
- Date: Fri, 15 Jan 93 14:57:00 -0500
-
- (posted for Harold Szu)
-
-
- EXTENDED DEADLINE FOR PAPER SUBMISSION - 2/2/93
- -------- -------- --- ----- ---------- ------
-
- W O R L D C O N F E R E N C E O N N E U R A L N E T W O R K S
-
- 1993 International Neural Network Society Annual Meeting
- Oregon Convention Center
- Portland OR
- July 11-15, 1993
-
- COOPERATING SOCIETIES
- European Neural Networks Society Japanese Neural Network Society
- IEEE Neural Networks Council Society of Manufacturing Engineers
- IEEE Computer Society Int'l Fuzzy Systems Association
-
- MEETING ORGANIZERS
- General Chairman: George Lendaris
- Main Program Chairs: Stephen Grossberg and Bart Kosko
- SME/INNS Track Program Chairs: Kenneth Marko and Bernard Widrow
- IFSA/INNS Track Program Charis: Ronald Yager and Paul Werbos
- Conference Coordinator: Melissa Bishop, Talley Management Group
- Cooperating Societies Chairman: Mark Kon
- Industrial Liason Chairman: Benjamin Peek
- Student Volunteer Chairman: Roger Barga
-
-
- CALL FOR PAPERS
-
- Papers may be overnight-mailed no later than Tuesday, February 2, 1993.
- Submit the camera-ready original (do not fold or staple) and
- 5 copies. Four page limit, in English. $20 per page for additional
- pages. Checks for overlength charges should be made out to WCNN'93 and
- must be included with submitted paper. Papers must be printed on 8 1/2
- x 11 white paper with 1" margins, single column, single spaced, Times
- or similar font of 10 points or larger, one side of paper only. FAXs
- not acceptable. Centered at top of first page should be complete
- title, author name(s), affiliation(s), mailing addresses. Followed by
- blank space, abstract up to 15 lines and text. Include in accompanying
- letter: full paper title, author(s), presenter(s), addresses,
- telephone and fax numbers, technical session (see below) 1st and 2nd
- choices, oral or poster presentation preferred, audio-visual
- requirements. Papers should be sent to address below, Attention:
- Program Chairs.
-
- Address: WCNN'93
- Talley Management Group
- 875 Kings Highway, suite 200
- West Deptford NJ 08096
-
- Tel: (609) 845-1720
- Fax: (609) 853-0411
- registration@wcnn93.ee.pdx.edu
- tutorials@wcnn93.ee.pdx.edu
- housing@wcnn93.ee.pdx.edu
- papers@wcnn93.ee.pdx.edu
- sessions@wcnn93.ee.pdx.edu
-
- Plenary Speakers include:
-
- Carver Mead Real-Time On-Chip Learning in Analog VLSI Networks
- Stephen Grossberg 3-D Vision and Figure-Ground Pop-Out
- Bart Kosko Neural Fuzzy Systems
- Wolf Singer Coherence as an Organizing Principle of Cortical
- Function
- Kumpati Narendra Intelligent Control Using Neural Networks
-
- Session Topics: Session Chairs:
- 1. Biological Vision C. Malsburg, V.S. Ramachandran
- 2. Machine Vision R. Chellappa, K. Fukushima
- 3. Speech and Language M. Cohen, D. Rumelhart
- 4. Biological Sensory-Motor Control A. Barto, S. Kelso
- 5. Robotics and Control M. Kuperstein, K. Narendra
- 6. Supervised Learning L. Cooper, P. Werbos
- 7. Unsupervised Learning G. Carpenter, E. Oja
- 8. Pattern Recognition T. Kohonen, D. Specht
- 9. Local Circuit Neurobiology J. Byrne, J. Houk
- 10. Cognitive Neuroscience R. Desimone, L. Optician
- 11. Intelligent Neural Systems S. Grossberg, D. Levine
- 12. Neural Fuzzy Systems W. Daugherty, B. Kosko
- 13. Signal Processing S.Y. Kung, B. Widrow
- 14. Neurodynamics S. Amari, H. White
- 15. Electro-Optical Neurocomputers L. Giles, H. Szu
- 16. Associative Memory J. Anderson, J. Taylor
- 17. Applications J. Dayhoff, R. Hecht-Neilsen
-
- In addition, special tracks will be offered in conjunction with the
- Society of Manufacturing Engineers on Manufacturing and the
- International Fuzzy Systems Association on Fuzzy Logic.
-
-
- REGISTRATION INFORMATION
-
- before 6/15/93 after 6/15/93
- INNS or Cooperating
- Society Member $270 $350
-
- Nonmembers* $370 $450
-
- Full-time student** $75 $95
-
- Spouse/Guest*** $60 $70
-
- *includes 1993 INNS membership and subscription to Neural Networks
- **must be accompanied by a verification letter from department chairman
- ***includes 2 receptions only
-
- Information on the tutorial program can be obtained from the above address.
-
- Information on accomodations, transportation and the Portland area
- will be sent to you upon receipt of your registration.
-
-
- SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP MEETINGS
-
- Wednesday evening after the banquet, all topical SIGINNS chairmen
- should organize sessions/meetings/panel discussions for their topical
- special interest groups. Please suggest activities, technical talks or
- panel discussion or social, that you would like, before February 15.
- These special interest groups are listed below with points of contact
- for your input:
-
- Automatic Target Recognition Brian Telfer
- (301) 394-1846, fax:-3923
- btelfe@ulysses.nswc.navy.mil
-
- Control, Automation and Robotics Kaveh Ashenayi
- (918) 631-3278, fax:-3220
- kash@ohm.ee.utulsa.edu
-
- Education John V. Urbas
- (404) 421-1670, fax:423-6530
- jurbas@uscn.cc.uga.edu
-
- Electronics/VLSI Ralph H. Castain
- (505) 667-3283, fax:665-4657
- rhc@lanl.gov
-
- Financial and Economic Applications Guido DeBoeck
- (202) 477-0054, fax:-8589
- wg08497@ibrdvax1.bitnet
-
- Geology/Geophysics Horacio Bouzas
- (713) 952-2100 x460, fax:-2420
- hrb@geoquest.com
-
- Higher Level Cognitive Processes John Barnden
- (505) 646-6235, fax:-6218
- jbarnden@nmsu.edu
-
- Mathematics and Theory Robert Dawes
- (214) 422-4570
-
- Mental Function and Disfunction Daniel Levine
- (817) 273-3598, fax:794-5802
- b344dsl@utarlg.uta.edu
-
- Neuroscience Daniel J. Alkon, MD
- (301) 496-3629, fax:402-0117
-
- Optics Mohammed Sayeh
- (618) 536-2364, fax:453-7455
-
- Pulsed Networks Mark Bagula
- (408) 991-7456, fax:-7474
- or
- Judith Dayhoff
- (301) 405-6556, fax:314-9920
- dayhoff@rq.src.umd.edu
-
- Speech Rich Peterson
- (404) 874-0168, fax:894-3906
- rick@eedsp.gatech.edu
-
- Standards Mary Lou Padgett
- (205) 844-1855, fax:-1809
- mpadgett@eng.auburn.edu
-
- Vision/Motion Analysis David Fong
- (408) 433-3922, fax:-3925
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Update - SCHEMAS AND NEURAL NETWORKS
- From: arbib@cs.usc.edu (Michael Arbib)
- Date: Sat, 16 Jan 93 10:37:55 -0800
-
-
- Please publish the following update. Many thanks!!
-
- #####
-
- SCHEMAS AND NEURAL NETWORKS:
- INTEGRATING SYMBOLIC AND SUBSYMBOLIC APPROACHES TO
- COOPERATIVE COMPUTATION
-
- A Workshop sponsored by the
-
- Center for Neural Engineering
- University of Southern California
- Los Angeles, CA 90089-2520
-
- April 13th and 14th, 1993
-
- Program Committee: Michael Arbib (Organizer), John Barnden, George Bekey,
- Francisco Cervantes-Perez, Damian Lyons, Paul Rosenbloom, Ron Sun,
- Akinori Yonezawa
-
- A previous announcement (reproduced below) announced a registration fee
- of $150 and advertised the availability of hotel accommodation at
- $70/night.
-
- To encourage the participation of qualified students we have made 3
- changes:
-
- 1) We have appointed Jean-Marc Fellous as Student Chair for the meeting
- to coordinate the active involvement of such students.
-
- 2) We offer a Student Registration Fee of only $40 to students whose
- application is accompanied by a letter from their supervisor attesting
- to their student status.
-
- 3) Mr. Fellous has identified a number of lower-cost housing options, and
- will respond to queries to fellous@pollux.usc.edu
-
- The original announcement - with updated registration form - follows:
-
- ********
-
- To design complex technological systems and to analyze complex biological
- and cognitive systems, we need a multilevel methodology which combines a
- coarse-grain analysis of cooperative or distributed computation (we shall
- refer to the computing agents at this level as "schemas") with a
- fine-grain model of flexible, adaptive computation (for which neural
- networks provide a powerful general paradigm). Schemas provide a
- language for distributed artificial intelligence, perceptual robotics,
- cognitive modeling, and brain theory which is "in the style of the
- brain", but at a relatively high level of abstraction relative to neural
- networks.
-
- The proposed workshop will provide a 2-hour introductory tutorial and
- problem statement by Michael Arbib, and sessions in which an invited
- paper will be followed by several contributed papers, selected from those
- submitted in response to this call for papers. Preference will be given
- to papers which present practical examples of, theory of, and/or
- methodology for the design and analysis of complex systems in which the
- overall specification or analysis is conducted in terms of schemas, and
- where some but not necessarily all of the schemas are implemented in
- neural networks.
-
- A list of sample topics for contributions is as follows, where a hybrid
- approach means one in which the abstract schema level is integrated with
- neural or other lower level models:
-
- Schema Theory as a description language for
- neural networks
- Modular neural networks
- Linking DAI to Neural Networks to Hybrid
- Architecture
- Formal Theories of Schemas
- Hybrid approaches to integrating planning &
- reaction
- Hybrid approaches to learning
- Hybrid approaches to commonsense reasoning by
- integrating neural networks and rule-
- based reasoning (using schema for the
- integration)
- Programming Languages for Schemas and Neural
- Networks
- Concurrent Object-Oriented Programming for
- Distributed AI and Neural Networks
- Schema Theory Applied in Cognitive Psychology,
- Linguistics, Robotics, AI and Neuroscience
-
-
- Prospective contributors should send a hard copy of a five-page extended
- abstract, including figures with informative captions and full references
- (either by regular mail or fax) by February 15, 1993 to Michael Arbib,
- Center for Neural Engineering, University of Southern California, Los
- Angeles, CA 90089-2520, USA [Tel: (213) 740-9220, Fax: (213) 746-2863,
- arbib@pollux.usc.edu]. Please include your full address, including fax
- and email, on the paper.
-
- Notification of acceptance or rejection will be sent by email no later
- than March 1, 1993. There are currently no plans to issue a formal
- proceedings of full papers, but revised versions of accepted abstracts
- received prior to April 1, 1993 will be collected with the full text of
- the Tutorial in a CNE Technical Report which will be made available to
- registrants at the start of the meeting. [A useful way to structure such
- an abstract is in short numbered sections, where each section presents
- (in a small type face!) the material corresponding to one
- transparency/slide in a verbal presentation. This will make it easy for
- an audience to take notes if they have a copy of the abstract at your
- presentation.]
-
- Hotel Information: Attendees may register at the hotel of their choice,
- but the closest hotel to USC is the University Hilton, 3540 South
- Figueroa Street, Los Angeles, CA 90007, Phone: (213) 748- 4141,
- Reservation: (800) 872-1104, Fax: (213) 748- 0043. A single room costs
- $70/night while a double room costs $75/night. Workshop participants
- must specify that they are "Schemas and Neural Networks Workshop"
- attendees to avail of the above rates. Information on student
- accommodation may be obtained from the Student Chair, Jean-Marc Fellous,
- fellous@pollux.usc.edu.
-
- The registration fee of $150 ($40 for qualified students who include a
- "certificate of student status" from their advisor) includes a copy of
- the abstracts, coffee breaks, and a dinner to be held on the evening of
- April 13th.
-
- Those wishing to register should send a check payable to "Center for
- Neural Engineering, USC" for $150 ($40 for students) together with the
- following information to Paulina Tagle, Center for Neural Engineering,
- University of Southern California, University Park, Los Angeles, CA
- 90089-2520, USA.
-
-
- - -------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- SCHEMAS AND NEURAL NETWORKS
- Center for Neural Engineering, USC
- April 13 - 14, 1992
-
-
- NAME: ___________________________________________
-
- ADDRESS: _________________________________________
-
- PHONE NO.: _______________ FAX:___________________
-
- EMAIL: ___________________________________________
-
-
- I intend to submit a paper: YES [ ] NO [ ]
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: ICNN'93 and FUZZ-IEEE'93
- From: Hideyuki Takagi <takagi@diva.berkeley.edu>
- Date: Tue, 19 Jan 93 20:49:54 -0800
-
- =====================================================================
- Date: Tue, 19 Jan 93 15:52:58 PST
- From: Hamid Berenji <berenji@ptolemy.arc.nasa.gov>
- Subject: IEEE Conferences
-
- ** CALL FOR PARTICIPATION **
-
- 1993 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON NEURAL NETWORKS
-
- SECOND IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON FUZZY SYSTEMS
-
- March 28 - April 1, 1993
- San Francisco Hilton
- San Francisco, California
-
- The IEEE Neural Networks Council cordially invites you to attend the
- Second International Conference on Fuzzy Systems (FUZZ-IEEE'93) and the
- 1993 IEEE International Conference on Neural Networks (ICNN'93), to be
- held concurrently at the San Francisco Hilton Hotel, San Francisco,
- California from March 28 to April 1, 1993.
-
- These IEEE-sponsored events have grown to become the largest conferences
- in their fields. In 1993, their importance will be enhanced by their
- combined meeting in an environment that assures that conference
- participants will have full access to all functions and events of either
- of these multidisciplinary meetings. In addition to an exciting program
- of plenary lectures, tutorial presentations, and technical sessions and
- panels, we anticipate an extraordinary trade show and exhibits program
- affording a unique opportunity to become acquainted with the latest
- developments in products based on neural-networks and fuzzy-systems
- techniques.
-
- PLENARY SPEAKERS
-
- Lotfi A. Zadeh
- University of California, Berkeley
-
- Didier Dubois
- Universite Paul Sabatier, Toulouse
-
- Hamid R. Berenji
- NASA Ames Research Center
-
- Michio Sugeno
- Tokyo Institute of Technology
-
- E.H. Mamdani
- Queens Mary College, London
-
- Henri Prade
- Universite Paul Sabatier, Toulouse
-
- Bernard Widrow
- Stanford University
-
- Kumpati Narendra
- Yale University
-
- Teuvo Kohonen
- Helsinki University of Technology, Finland
-
- Richard Sutton
- GTE Laboratories
-
- Carver Mead
- California Institute of Technology
-
- Piero Bonissone
- General Electric Corporate R&D
-
- TUTORIALS
-
- SUNDAY MARCH 28, 1993, 9:00AM - 12:30PM
-
- 1. Introduction to Fuzzy Set Theory,
- Uncertainty and Information Theory
- George Klir
- State University of New York
-
- 2. Fuzzy Logic in Databases and Information Retrieval
- Maria Zemankova
- National Science Foundation
-
- 3. Fuzzy Logic and Neural Networks Pattern Recognition
- James Bezdek
- University of West Florida
-
- 4. Evolutionary Programming
- David Fogel
- Orincon Corporation
-
- 5. Introduction to Biological and Artificial Neural Networks
- Steven Rogers
- Air Force Institute of Technology
-
- 6. The Biological Brain: Biological Neural Networks
- Terrence J. Sejnowski
- The Salk Institute
-
- SUNDAY, MARCH 28, 1993, 2:00PM - 5:30PM
-
- 7. Hardware Approaches to Fuzzy Logic Applications
- H. Watanabe
- University of North Carolina
-
- 8. Fuzzy Logic and Neural Networks for Control Systems
- Hamid R. Berenji
- NASA Ames Research Center
-
- 9. Fuzzy Logic and Neural Networks for Computer Vision
- James Keller
- University of Missouri
-
- 10. Genetic Algorithms and Neural Networks
- Darrell Whitley
- Colorado State University
-
- 11. Suggestions from Cognitive Science for Neural Network Applications
- James A. Anderson
- Brown University
-
- 12. Expert Systems and Neural Networks
- George Lendaris
- Portland State University
-
- ****************************************************************************
- 1993 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON NEURAL NETWORKS
-
- Sponsored by the IEEE Neural Networks Council with the cooperation of
- the European Neural Networks Society and the Japan Neural Networks
- Society.
-
- IEEE Neural Networks Council Constituent Societies:
-
- IEEE Circuits and Systems Society
- IEEE Communications Society
- IEEE Computer Society
- IEEE Control Systems Society
- IEEE Engineering in Medicine & Biology Society
- IEEE Industrial Electronics Society
- IEEE Industry Applications Society
- IEEE Information Theory Society
- IEEE Lasers and Electro-Optics Society
- IEEE Oceanic Engineering Society
- IEEE Power Engineering Society
- IEEE Robotics and Automation Society
- IEEE Signal Processing Society
- IEEE Social Implications of Technology Society
- IEEE Systems, Man, and Cybernetics Society
- IEEE Computer Society
- IEEE Power Engineering Society
-
- ORGANIZATION
-
- General Chair: Enrique H. Ruspini
-
- Program Cochairs:
- Hamid R. Berenji
- Elie Sanchez
- Shiro Usui
-
- ADVISORY BOARD:
-
- S.I. Amari L. Cooper F. Fukushima C. Lau L. Stark
- J. Anderson R.C. Eberhart R. Hecht-Nielsen C.Mead A. Stubberud
- G. Bekey R. Eckmiller J. Holland N.Packard H. Takagi
- J.C. Bezdek J. Feldman C. Jorgensen D.Rummelhart P. Treleaven
- Y. Burnod M. Feldman T. Kohonen B. Skyrms B. Widrow
-
-
- ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
-
- PUBLICITY: H.R. Berenji
- TUTORIALS: J.C. Bezdek
- PRESS/PUBLIC RELATIONS: C. Welch
- EXHIBITS: W. Xu
- FINANCE: R. Tong
- VIDEO PROCEEDINGS: A. Bergman
- VOLUNTEERS: A. Worth
-
- ****************************************************************************
-
- SECOND IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON FUZZY SYSTEMS
-
- Sponsored by the IEEE Neural Networks Council in Cooperation with
-
- IEEE Circuits and Systems Society
- IEEE Communications Society
- IEEE Control Systems Society
- IEEE Systems, Man, and Cybernetics Society
- International Fuzzy Systems Association (IFSA)
- North American Fuzzy Information Processing Society (NAFIPS)
- Japan Society for Fuzzy Theory and Systems (SOFT)
- European Laboratory for Intelligent Techniques Engineering (ELITE)
-
- ORGANIZATION
-
- General Chairman: Enrique H. Ruspini
- SRI International
-
- Program Chairman: Piero P. Bonissone
- General Electric Corporate Research and Development
-
- ADVISORY BOARD:
-
- J. Bezdek H. Prade M. Sugeno T. Yamakawa
- D. Dubois E. Sanchez T. Terano L.A. Zadeh
- G. Klir Ph. Smets E. Trillas H.J. Zimmerman
-
- ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
-
- EXHIBITS: W. Xu, A. Ralescu, M. Togai, L. Valverde, T. Yamakawa
- FINANCE: R. Tong(Chair), R. Nutter
- PRESS/PUBLIC RELATIONS: C. Welch
- PUBLICITY: H. Berenji (Chair),B. D'Ambrosio,
- R. Lopez de Mantaras, T. Takagi
- TUTORIALS: J. Bezdek (Chair),
- H.R. Berenji, H. Watanabe
- VIDEO PROCEEDINGS: A. Bergman
- VOLUNTEERS: A. Worth
-
- **************************************************************************
-
- CONFERENCE REGISTRATION FEES:
-
- Full Conference registration permits attendance at all events and
- functions of both conferences with the exception of optional tour
- programs. The registration fee also includes one set of Proceedings
- (to be chosen by the registrant) for either FUZZ-IEEE '93 or ICNN '93.
- Additional ICNN '93 or FUZZ-IEEE '93 Proceedings or CD-ROM versions of
- the Proceedings are also available for purchase.
-
- Registered Registered
- before 1/31/93 after 1/31/93
-
- IEEE Members $325 US Dollars $395 US Dollars
- Non-Members $425 US Dollars $495 US Dollars
- Students* $80 US Dollars $100 US Dollars
-
- TUTORIAL REGISTRATION FEES:
-
- Members Non-members Students*
-
- One Tutorial $295 $345 $150
- Two Tutorials $395 $450 $200
-
- * A letter from the Department Head to verify full-time student status at
- the time of registration is required. At the conference, all students
- must present a current student ID with picture.
-
- FOREIGN PAYMENTS MUST BE MADE BY DRAFT ON A U.S. BANK IN U.S. DOLLARS
-
- REFUND POLICY:
-
- If your registration must be canceled, your fee will be refunded less
- $50 U.S. dollars administrative costs. You must notify us in writing by
- March 1, 1993. No refunds can be given after this date.
-
- LOCATION AND ACCOMMODATIONS
-
- The Conferences will be held at the San Francisco Hilton located downtown
- just one block from famous Union Square in the heart of San Francisco;
- and just twenty minutes from San Francisco International Airport. The
- Hilton offers participants of the Conferences a very special room rate
- of $117 (Single) and $127 (Double).
-
- San Francisco Hilton
- One Hilton Square
- 333 O'Farrell Street
- San Francisco, CA 94102-2189
- Reservations (415) 771-1400
-
- To guarantee your reservation, you must make your reservation with
- payment directly to the hotel to cover the first night's stay by check
- or credit card.
-
- DEADLINE FOR HOTEL RESERVATIONS: March 1, 1993
-
- SIGHTSEEING TOURS
-
- Various sightseeing tours in and around San Francisco and a Dinner
- Cruise will be offered. Details regarding tours as well as reservation
- forms will be sent upon registration for the Symposium.
-
- AIRLINE INFORMATION
-
- American Airlines has waived many of the restrictions to allow the
- FUZZ-IEEE '93/ICNN '93 attendees to obtain SuperSaver fares for which
- they would normally not qualify. Bristol Travel has been named the
- official travel agency for the FUZZ-IEEE '93/ICNN '93 Conferences and
- can assist you with all your travel needs. To make your reservations
- call Bristol Travel at (800) 762- 2746. Bristol Travel also provides
- 24-hour around the-clock service. During off hours you can call
- (800) 237-7980 and refer to VIT (Very Important Traveler) Number SY2CO.
-
- ************************************************************************
-
- CONFERENCE INFORMATION AND REGISTRATION:
-
- PLEASE CONTACT:
-
- FUZZ-IEEE '93/ICNN '93 Conference Office:
- P.O. Box 16502
- Irvine, CA 92713-6502 USA
-
- For Express Mail only:
- Conference Office
- 2603 Main Street, Suite 690
- Irvine, CA 92714 USA
-
- Tel (619) 453-6222 or (800) 321-6338
- FAX (714) 752-7444
-
- E-Mail: 70750.345@compuserve.com
-
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: CFP - Grammatical Inference Conference
- From: Lucas S M <sml@essex.ac.uk>
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 93 17:12:25 +0000
-
-
- 1st ANNOUNCEMENT AND CALL FOR PAPERS
- --------------------------------------
-
- GRAMMATICAL INFERENCE: THEORY, APPLICATIONS AND ALTERNATIVES
-
- 22-23 April, 1993
-
- At the UNIVERSITY OF ESSEX,
- WIVENHOE PARK,
- COLCHESTER CO4 3SQ, UK
-
- Sponsored by the Institute of Electrical Engineers and the
- Institute of Mathematics.
-
-
- Relevant Research Areas:
-
- * Computational Linguistics
-
- * Machine Learning
-
- * Pattern Recognition
-
- * Neural Networks
-
- * Artificial Intelligence
-
- MOTIVATION
- - ------------
-
- Grammatical Inference is an immensely important research area
- that has suffered from the lack of a focussed research community.
-
- A two-day colloquium will be held at the University of Essex
- on the 22-23rd April 1993. The purpose of this colloquium is
- to bring together researchers who are working on grammatical
- inference and closely related problems such as sequence learning
- and prediction.
-
- Papers are sought for the technical sessions listed below.
-
-
- BACKGROUND
- - ------------
-
- A grammar is a finite declarative description of a possible infinite set
- of data (known as the language) that is reversible in the sense that it
- may be used to detect language membership (or degree of membership) of a
- pattern, or it may be used generatively to produce samples of the
- language.
-
- The language may be formal and simple such as the set of all symmetric
- strings over a given alphabet, formal and more complex such as the set of
- legal PASCAL programs, less formal such as sentences or phrases in
- natural language, or noisy such as vector-quantised speech or
- handwriting, or even spatial rather than temporal, such as 2-d images.
- For the noisy cases stochastic grammars are often used that define the
- probability that the data was generated by the given grammar.
-
- So, given a set of data that the grammar is supposed to generate, and
- perhaps also a set that it should not generate, the problem is to learn a
- grammar that not only satisfies these conditions, but more importantly,
- generalises to unseen data in some desirable way (this may be strictly
- specified in test-cases where the grammar used to create the training
- samples is known).
-
- To date, the grammatical inference research community has evolved largely
- divided into the following areas
-
- a) Theories about the type of languages that can and cannot
- be learned. These theories are generally concerned with the types of
- language that may and may not be learned in polynomial time. Arguably
- irrelevant in practical terms since in practical applications we are
- usually happy to settle for a good grammar rather than some `ideal'
- grammar.
-
- b) Explicit Inference; this deals directly with modifiying a
- set of production rules until a satisfactory grammar is obtained.
-
- c) Implicit inference e.g. estimating the parameters of a hidden Markov
- model -- in this case production rule probabilities in the equivalent
- stochastic regular grammar are represented by pairs of numbers in the
- HMM.
-
- d) Estimating models where the grammatical equivalence uncertain (e.g.
- recurrent neural networks), but often aim to solve exactly the same
- problem.
-
- In many cases, researchers in these distinct subfields seem unaware of
- the other work in the other subfields; this is surely detrimental to the
- progress of grammatical inference research.
-
-
- TECHNICAL SESSIONS
- - --------------------
-
- Oral and poster papers are requested in the following areas:
-
- Theory:
-
- What kinds of language are theoretically learnable; the practical import
- of such theories. Learning 2-d and higher-dimensional grammars,
- attribute grammars etc.
-
-
- Algorithms:
-
- Any new GI algorithms, or new insights on old ones. Grammatical
- inference assistants, that aim to aid humans in writing grammars.
- Performance of Genetic algorithms and simulated annealing for grammatical
- inference etc.
-
- Applications:
-
- Any interesting applications in natural language processing, speech
- recognition Speech and language processing, cursive script recognition,
- pattern recognition, sequence prediction, financial markets etc.
-
- Alternatives:
-
- The power of alternative approaches to sequence learning, such as
- stochastic models and artificial neural networks, where the inferred
- grammar may have a distributed rather than an explicit represention.
-
- Competition:
-
- A number of datasets will be made available for authors to report the
- performance of their algorithms on, in terms of learning speed and
- generalisation power. There is also the possiblity of a live competition
- in the demonstration session.
-
- Demonstration:
-
- There will be a session where authors may demonstrate their algorithms.
- For this purpose we have a large number of Unix workstations running
- X-Windows, with compilers for C, C++, Pascal, Fortran, Common Lisp and
- Prolog. If your algorithms are written in a more exotic language, we may
- still be able to sort something out. PCs can be made available if
- necessary.
-
-
- DISCUSSIONS
- - -------------
-
- There will be open forum discussions of planning the next Grammatical
- Inference Conference, and the setting up of a Grammatical Inference
- Journal (possibly an electronic one).
-
- PUBLICATIONS
- - --------------
-
- Loose-bound collections of accepted conference
- papers will be distributed to delegates upon arrival. It is planned to
- publish a selection of these papers in a book following the conference.
-
-
- REMOTE PARTICIPATION
- - ----------------------
-
- Authors from distant lands unwilling to travel to Essex for the
- conference are encouraged to submit a self-explanatory poster-paper that
- will be displayed at the conference.
-
-
- SUBMISSION DETAILS
- - --------------------
-
- Prospective authors should submit a 2-page abstract
- to Simon Lucas at the address below by the end of February, 1992. Email
- and Faxed abstracts are acceptable. Notification of the intention to
- submit an abstract would would also be appreciated.
-
-
- REGISTRATION DETAILS
- - ----------------------
-
- Prospective delegates are requested to mail/email/fax me at the address
- below for further details.
-
-
-
- Dr. Simon Lucas
- Department of Electronic Systems Engineering
- University of Essex
- Colchester CO4 3SQ
- United Kingdom
-
- Tel: 0206 872935
- Fax: 0206 872900
- Email: sml@uk.ac.essex
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Neuron Digest [Volume 11 Issue 5]
- ****************************************
-