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- From: ais-prog@cs.bham.ac.uk (Aisb93 Prog)
- Subject: AISB'93 Conference: Programme and Registration
- Message-ID: <C1KH8B.5BJ@cs.bham.ac.uk>
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- Reply-To: P.M.Hickey@cs.bham.ac.uk
- Organization: Cognitive Science, Birmingham, UK
- Date: Thu, 28 Jan 1993 13:52:59 GMT
- Lines: 770
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- CONFERENCE PROGRAMME and REGISTRATION INFORMATION
-
- A I S B' 9 3
-
- 'P R O S P E C T S F O R A R T I F I C I A L I N T E L L I G E N C E'
-
- Cognitive Science Research Centre
- The University of Birmingham
- March 29th -- April 2nd 1993
- ________________________________________________________________________
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
-
- MESSAGE FROM THE PROGRAMME CHAIR
-
- The biennial conferences of the Society for the Study of Artificial
- Intelligence and the Simulation of Behaviour are traditionally
- "single-track" scientific meetings aiming to bring together all areas
- of research in AI and computational cognitive science, and AISB'93 is
- no exception. With the end of the century close at hand, it seemed
- appropriate to choose a forward looking theme, so the five invited
- speakers, all distinguished researchers in their own sub-fields, have
- been asked to identify trends and project into the future, instead of
- simply surveying past achievements. Some but not all of the submitted
- papers also analyse prospects; the others report on work already done.
-
- The referees and the selection committee used as a major criterion for
- selection the requirement that papers should be of interest to a
- general AI audience. All of the papers have in common a commitment to
- a "design-based" approach to the study of intelligence, though some of
- them focus mainly on requirements, some mainly on designs and some on
- actual implementations, and of course there is wide variation not only
- regarding the sub-domains of AI (such as vision, learning, language,
- emotions) but also between the techniques used (such as symbolic
- reasoning, neural net models, genetic algorithms), and also between
- those who attempt to design intelligent agents using a top down
- analysis of human-like intelligence and those who work bottom up from
- primitive insect-like mechanisms. There is also international variety,
- with papers from several European countries and further afield.
-
- This variety of topics and approaches promises to make the conference
- particularly lively, with plenty of scope for controversy. We have
- therefore decided to allow a little more time than usual for each item
- in the programme, so that questions and discussions can add to the
- interest.
-
- There will also be poster presentations, where some work that could
- not be included in the formal proceedings can be presented, and it is
- expected that there will be book displays by major AI publishers and
- possibly some displays and demonstrations by vendors of AI software
- and systems. The conference will be preceded by a programme of seven
- tutorials and workshops for which separate registration is available.
-
- Integral Solutions Limited have agreed to present a prize of AI
- software, including Poplog, and a place on one of their training
- courses, for the paper voted "best presented" by the audience.
-
- For those involved in AI and Cognitive Science, the conference is a
- primary opportunity to meet, discuss and learn about current work. For
- those new to these fields, the conference is a chance to become
- acquainted with them in pleasant surroundings and to meet the people
- involved. For full-time students, large reductions in registration
- fees are offered.
-
- The location of the conference is one of the attractive halls of
- residence in a pleasant lakeside setting at one end of the campus of
- the University of Birmingham. This is not very far from the city
- centre, so a visit to one of the local attractions of the centre, such
- as the renowned Symphony Hall, will require a journey of only a few
- minutes by taxi or train. Single room accommodation has been booked,
- and the auditorium is in the same building as the bedrooms and dining
- room, so that the conference will provide excellent opportunities for
- informal mixing and discussions. The number of rooms available is
- limited, so early booking is recommended.
-
- We look forward to seeing you and hope you enjoy the conference.
-
- Aaron Sloman.
-
-
-
- ORGANISATION
-
-
- Programme Chair:
- Aaron Sloman (University of Birmingham)
-
- Programme Committee:
- David Hogg (University of Leeds)
- Glyn Humphreys (University of Birmingham)
- Allan Ramsay (University College Dublin)
- Derek Partridge (University of Exeter)
-
- Local Organiser:
- Donald Peterson (University of Birmingham)
-
- Administration:
- Petra Hickey (University of Birmingham)
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- GENERAL INFORMATION
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- TIME
-
- The AISB'93 Conference will take place from Monday 29th March to
- Friday 2nd April 1993.
-
- The Tutorials and Workshops run on Monday 29th and Tuesday 30th March.
- The main Technical Programme begins after lunch on Tuesday 30th March
- and ends before lunch on Friday 2nd April.
-
- VENUE
-
- The venue for registration and all conference events is:
-
- Lake Hall,
- The Vale,
- Church Road,
- Edgbaston,
- Birmingham,
- B15 3SX.
-
- Tel. +44-(0)21-454-0678
-
- TRANSPORT
-
- Lake Hall is two and a half miles from Birmingham's city centre, and
- is easily reached from New Street Station, and from Birmingham
- International Airport. Full travel details will be sent on
- registration.
-
- LANGUAGE
-
- The official language of the conference is English.
-
- ACCOMMODATION
-
- Single room accommodation has been reserved for conference delegates
- in Lake Hall. Delegates preferring to stay at a hotel must book their
- own accommodation, though names of nearby hotels are available on
- request.
-
- CAMPUS FACILITIES
-
- The University Campus nearby contains branches of Lloyds and Barclays
- banks, Dillons University Bookshop, Stanford and Man Stationers, a
- men's hairdresser, and the Barber Institute of Fine Arts.
-
- PARKING
-
- There is ample free parking in the vicinity of Lake Hall.
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- TECHNICAL PROGRAMME
-
- (The order is provisional. Invited talks are asterisked)
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
-
- MONDAY MARCH 29TH
-
- Workshops and Tutorials (see below)
-
- TUESDAY MARCH 30TH (Morning)
-
- Workshops and Tutorials (see below)
-
- TUESDAY MARCH 30TH (Afternoon)
-
- 14.00 Introduction
-
- 14.15 * Kurt Van Lehn (Pittsburg)
- --- Prospects for modelling human learning (e.g. college physics)
-
- 15.30 Husbands, Harvey, Cliff
- --- An evolutionary approach to AI
-
- 16.00 TEA & COFFEE
-
- 16.30 Edmund Furse
- --- Escaping from the box
-
- 17.00 Thomas Vogel
- --- Learning biped robot obstacle crossing
-
- 17.30 Antunes, Moniz, Azevedo
- --- RB+ the dynamic estimation of the opponent's strength
-
- 18.00 SHERRY RECEPTION
-
- 18.45 DINNER
-
-
- WEDNESDAY 31ST MARCH
-
- 09.00 * Ian Sommerville (Lancaster)
- --- Prospects for AI in systems design
-
- 10.15 Oh, Azzelarabe, Sommerville, French
- --- Incorporating a cooperative design model in a computer aided
- design improvement system
-
- 10.45 TEA & COFFEE
-
- 11.15 Stuart Watt
- --- Fractal behaviour analysis
-
- 11.45 Valente, Breuker, Bredewg
- --- Integrating modeling approaches in the commonKADS library
-
- 12.15 Cawsey, Galliers, Reece, Jones
- --- Revising beliefs and intentions: a unified framework for agent interaction
-
- 12.45 LUNCH
-
- 14.15 * Allan Ramsay (Dublin)
- --- Prospects for natural language processing by machine
-
- 15.30 Lin, Fawcett, Davies
- --- Genedis: the discourse generator in communal
-
- 16.00 TEA & COFFEE
-
- 16.30 Miwa, Simon
- --- Production system modelling to represent individual differences:
- tradeoff between simplicity and accuracy in simulation of behaviour
-
- 17.00 Freksa, Zimmerman
- --- Enhancing spatial reasoning by the concept of motion
-
- 17.30 POSTER SESSION
-
- 18.45 DINNER
-
-
- THURSDAY 1ST APRIL
-
- 09.00 * Glyn Humphreys (Birmingham)
- --- Prospects for connectionism - science and engineering
-
- 10.15 Rodrigues, Lee
- --- Nouvelle AI and perceptual control theory
-
- 10.45 TEA & COFFEE
-
- 11.15 Vogel, Popwich, Cercone
- --- Logic-based inheritance reasoning
-
- 11.45 Beatriz Lopez
- --- Reactive planning through the integration of a case-based system
- and a rule-based system
-
- 12.15 James Stone
- --- Computer vision: what is the object?
-
- 12.45 LUNCH
-
- 14.15 SESSION ON EMOTIONS AND MOTIVATION
-
- Moffatt, Phaf, Frijda
- --- Analysis of a model of emotions
-
- Beaudoin, Sloman
- --- A computational exploration of the attention control theory of
- motivator processing and emotion
-
- 15.30 Bruce Katz
- --- Musical resolution and musical pleasure
-
- 16.00 TEA & COFFEE
-
- 16.30 Reichgelt, Shadbolt et al.
- --- EXPLAIN: on implementing more effective tutoring systems
-
- 17.00 POSTER SESSION
-
- 18.45 CONFERENCE DINNER
-
-
-
- FRIDAY 2ND APRIL (Morning)
-
- 09.00 * David Hogg (Leeds)
- --- Prospects for computer vision
-
- 10.15 Elio, Watanabe
- --- Simulating the interactive effects of domain knowledge and category
- structure within a constructive induction system
-
- 10.45 TEA & COFFEE
-
- 11.15 Dalbosco, Armando
- --- MRG an integrated multifunctional reasoning system
-
- 11.45 Bibby, Reichgelt
- --- Modelling multiple uses of the same representation in SOAR1
-
- 12.15 Sam Steel
- --- A connection between decision theory and program logic
-
- 12.45 Closing Session and award of Prize.
-
- 13.00 LUNCH
-
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- Workshop 1: Connectionism, Cognition and a New AI
-
- Organiser: Dr Noel Sharkey (Exeter)
-
- Committee: Andy Clark (Sussex)
- Glyn Humphreys (Birmingham)
- Kim Plunkett (Oxford)
- Chris Thornton (Sussex)
-
- Time: Monday 29th pm & Tuesday 30th March (all day)
-
- Note: This workshop overlaps with the events in the main
- Technical Programme on the afternoon of Tuesday 30th.
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- A number of recent developments in Connectionist Research have strong
- implications for the future of AI and the study of Cognition. Among
- the most important are developments in Learning, Representation, and
- Productivity (or Generalisation). The aim of the workshop will be to
- focus on how these developments may change the way we look at AI and
- the study of Cognition.
-
- Some provisional topics are: Connectionist representation,
- Generalisation and Transfer of Knowledge, Learning Machines and models
- of human development, Symbolic Learning versus Connectionist learning,
- Advantages of Connectionist/Symbolic hybrids, Modelling Cognitive
- Neuropsychology, Connectionist modelling of Creativity and music (or
- other arts).
-
- ENQUIRIES and SUBMISSIONS (500 word abstract)
- Dr. Noel Sharkey
- Centre for Connection Science
- Dept. Computer Science
- University of Exeter
- Exeter EX4 4PT
- Devon U.K.
-
- Email: noel@uk.ac.exeter.dcs
-
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- Workshop 2: Qualitative and Causal Reasoning
-
- Organiser: Dr Tony Cohn (Leeds, U.K.)
-
- Committee: Mark Lee (Aberystwth)
- Chris Price (Aberystwth)
- Chris Preist (Hewlett Packard Labs, Bristol)
-
- Time: Monday 29th March (morning and afternoon) + Tuesday 30th March
- (morning)
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- This workshop is intended to follow on from the series of DKBS (Deep
- Knowledge Based Systems) workshops which were originally initiated
- under the Alvey programme, and this will be the 8th in the series.
- The format of the one and a half day workshop will consist mainly of
- presentations, with ample time for discussion. It is hoped to have an
- invited talk in addition.
-
- The scope of the workshop includes:
- * Task-level reasoning (e.g., design, diagnosis, training, etc.)
- * Ontologies (e.g., space, time, fluids, etc.)
- * Explanation, causality and teleology
- * Mathematical formalization of QR
- * Management of multiple models (formalization, architecture, studies)
- * Model building tools
- * Integration with other techniques (e.g., dynamics, uncertainty, etc.)
- * Methodologies for selecting/classifying QR methods
- * Practical applications of QR, or Model Based Reasoning etc.
-
- ENQUIRIES AND SUBMISSIONS (4 copies, max 5000 words)
- Tony Cohn,
- Division of AI,
- School of Computer Studies,
- University of Leeds,
- LEEDS, LS2 9JT, ENGLAND.
-
- UUCP: ...!ukc!leeds!agc
- JANET: agc@uk.ac.leeds.scs
- INTERNET: agc@scs.leeds.ac.uk
- BITNET: agc%uk.ac.leeds.scs@UKACRL
- PHONE: +44 (0)532 335482
- FAX: +44 (0)532 335468
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- Workshop 3: AISB POST-GRADUATE STUDENT WORKSHOP
-
- Organiser: Dr Hyacinth Nwana
- University of Keele, UK.
-
-
- Time: Monday 29th (all day) + Tuesday 30th March (morning)
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- Many postgraduate students become academically isolated as a result of
- working in specialised domains within fairly small departments. This
- workshop is aimed at providing a forum for graduate students in AI to
- present and discuss their ideas with other students in related areas. In
- addition there will invited presentations from a number of prominent
- researchers in AI. A small number of group discussions is planned,
- including study for and completion of theses, life after a doctorate,
- paper refereeing and how to make use of your supervisor.
-
- All attendees are expected to present an introduction to their
- research in a poster session on the first day's morning. In addition
- a couple of attendees will be given the opportunity to present short
- papers.
-
- Confirmed tutors so far include:
- Dr John Self (Lancaster) - 'Why do supervisors supervise?'
- Dr Steve Easterbrook (Sussex) - 'How to write a thesis'
- Dr Elizabeth Churchill (Nottingham) - Title to be confirmed.
- Dr Peter Hancox (Birmingham) - Title to be confirmed.
-
- ENQUIRIES and SUBMISSIONS
-
- Dr. Hyacinth S. Nwana,
- Computer Science Dept.
- Keele University, Newcastle,
- Staffs ST5 5BG,
- ENGLAND.
-
- JANET: nwanahs@uk.ac.keele.cs
- other: nwanahs@cs.keele.ac.uk
- tel: +44 (0)782 583413
- fax: +44 (0)782 713082
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- Workshop 4: Motivation, Emotions and Attention
-
- Organiser: Tim Read,
- University of Birmingham
-
- Time: Friday 2nd April 2.30 - 5pm
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- An informal workshop will be held after lunch on Friday 2nd April
- enabling further discussion of issues raised in the Thursday afternoon
- session on motivation and emotions, and possibly additional
- presentations. There will be no charge, though numbers will be limited
- by available space. For more information contact
-
- The study of emotion encounters many difficulties, among them the
- looseness of emotional terminology in everyday speech. A theory of
- emotion should supersede this terminology, and should connect with
- such issues as motivation, control of attention, resource limitations
- architectural parallelism and underlying biological mechanisms.
-
- Computation provides useful analogies in generating an information
- processing account of emotion, and computer modelling is a rigorous
- and constructive aid in developing theories of affect.
-
- It makes sense for researchers within this field to collaborate, and
- the aim of the workshop is to facilitate cross-fertilisation of ideas,
- sharing of experience, and healthy discussion.
-
- ENQUIRIES and SUBMISSIONS
-
- Tim Read
- School of Computer Science,
- The University of Birmingham,
- Edgbaston,
- Birmingham
- B15 2TT, England
-
- Email T.M.Read@cs.bham.ac.uk
- Phone: +44-(0)21-414-4766
- Fax: +44-(0)21-414-4281
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- Tutorial 1: Collaborative Human-Computer Systems:
- Towards an Integrated Theory of Coordination
-
- Dr Stefan Kirn
- University of Muenster, Germany
-
- Time: Monday 29th March (morning)
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- Intelligent support of human experts' intellectual work is one of the
- most competitive edges of computer technology today. Important
- advances have been made in the fields of computer networking, AI
- (e.g., KADS, CBR, Distributed AI), integrated design frameworks (the
- European JESSI project), nonstandard databases (e.g., databases for
- teamwork support), computer supported cooperative work, and
- organizational theory. The time is ripe for developing integrated
- human computer collaborative systems to significantly enhance the
- problem solving capabilities of human experts. Perhaps one of the most
- interesting challenges here is the development of an integrated theory
- of human computer coordination. Such a theory will help to link humans
- and computers together in order to let them collaboratively work on
- complex "nonstandard" problems. It is the aim of the tutorial to put
- the loose ends of the above mentioned disciplines together thus
- arguing towards the development of an integrated theory of human
- computer coordination. Only undergraduate-level knowledge in at least
- one of the following fields is assumed: AI, database/information
- systems, organisational theory and CSCW.
-
- Dr Stefan Kirn is senior researcher and project leader at the
- Institute of Business and Information Systems of the Westfaelische
- Wilhelms-University of Muenster. He has more than 30 major
- publications in international journals and conferences, primarily in
- the areas of DAI, Cooperative Information Systems, CSCW and
- Computer-Aided Software Engineering.
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- Tutorial 2: The Motivation, Meaning and Use of Constraints
-
- Dr Mark Wallace
- European Computer-Industry Research Centre
- Munchen, Germany.
-
- Time: Monday 29th March (afternoon)
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- This tutorial explains how constraints contribute to clear, clean,
- efficient programs. We study constraints as specification tools, as
- formal tools, and as implementation tools. Finally we examine the use
- of constraints in search and optimisation problems. As the tutorial
- unfolds, we will explain the three different notions of constraints:
- constraints as built-in relations, with built-in solvers; constraints
- as active agents, communicating with a store; and propagation
- constraints. We will also explain how these notions are related, and
- moreover how the different types of constraints can all be combined in
- a single program. For programming examples, the logic programming
- framework will be used.
-
- It will be aimed at postgraduates, researchers and teachers of AI, who
- would like to know what constraints are, and what they are for. Also
- anyone interested in declarative programming, seeking a solution to the
- problem of efficiency, will benefit from the tutorial. An understanding
- of formal logic will be assumed, and some familiarity with logic
- programming will be necessary to appreciate the programming examples.
-
- Dr Mark Wallace leads the Constraints Reasoning Team at ECRC (the
- European Computer-Industry Research Centre), Munich. He introduced
- "Negation by Constraints" at SLP'87. He has recently presented papers at
- IJCAI'92, FGCS'92 and JFPL'92. Recent tutorial presentations include a
- short course on Deductive and Object-Oriented Knowledge Bases at the
- Technical University of Munich, and "Constraint Logic Programming - An
- Informal Introduction", written with the CORE team at ECRC for the Logic
- Programming Summer School, '92.
-
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- Tutorial 3: A Little Turing and Goedel for Specialists in AI
-
- Prof. Alexis Manaster Ramer
- Wayne State University, USA.
-
- Time: Monday 29th March (morning + afternoon)
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- Currently debated issues in the foundations of AI go directly back to
- technical work of people like Turing and Godel on the power and limits
- of formal systems and computing devices. Yet neither the relevant
- results nor the intellectual climate in which they arose are widely
- discussed in the AI community (for example, how many know that Godel
- himself believed that the human mind was not subject to the limits set
- by his theorems on formal systems?). The purpose of this tutorial is
- to develop a clear picture of the fundamental results and their
- implications as seen at the time they were obtained and at the present
- time. We will primarily refer to the work of Godel, Turing, Chomsky,
- Hinttika, Langendoen and Postal, Searle, and Penrose. Some background
- knowledge is assumed: some programming, some AI and some discrete
- mathematics.
-
- Dr Alexis Manaster Ramer is professor of Computer Science at Wayne
- State University. He has over 100 publications and presentations in
- linguistics, computational linguistics, and foundations of CS and AI.
- A few years ago, he taught a short course on the theory of computation
- for the Natural Language Processing group at the IBM T.J.Watson
- Research Center (Hawthorne, NY, USA) and this past summer taught a
- one-week advanced course on mathematics of language at the European
- Summer School in Logic, Language, and Information (Colchester, UK).
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- OTHER MEETINGS
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- LAGB CONFERENCE.
-
- Shortly before AISB'93, the Linguistics Association of Great Britain
- (LAGB) will hold its Spring Meeting at the University of Birmingham
- from 22-24th March, 1993. For more information, contact Dr. William
- Edmondson: postal address as below; phone +44-(0)21-414-4773; email
- EDMONDSONWH@vax1.bham.ac.uk
-
- JCI CONFERENCE
-
- The Joint Council Initiative in Cognitive Science and Human Computer
- Interaction will hold its Annual Meeting on Monday 29th March 1993 in
- the same buildings as AISB'93 (in parallel with the AISB'93 workshops
- and tutorials). The theme will be "Understanding and Supporting
- Acquisition of Cognitive Skills". For more information, contact
- Elizabeth Pollitzer, Department of Computing, Imperial College, 180,
- Queens Gate, London SW7 2BZ, U.K.; phone +44-(0)71-581-8024; email
- eep@doc.ic.ac.uk.
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- REGISTRATION NOTES
-
- Main Programme, Workshops and Tutorials
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- ADDRESS (for registrations and general enquiries)
-
- AISB'93,
- School of Computer Science,
- The University of Birmingham,
- Edgbaston,
- Birmingham, B15 2TT,
- U.K.
-
- Email: aisb93-prog@cs.bham.ac.uk
- Phone: +44-(0)21-414-3711
- Fax: +44-(0)21-414-4281
-
- PAYMENT
-
- Payment should be made by cheque or money order payable to `The
- University of Birmingham', drawn in pounds sterling on a UK clearing
- bank. Payment should be sent together with the Registration Form to
- the above address. It is not possible to register by email.
-
- WORKSHOPS
-
- Please note that before registering for a workshop you should contact
- its organiser directly concerning availability and submissions.
-
- CONFIRMATION
-
- Confirmation of booking, a receipt, and a map with travel details
- will be sent on receipt of this application form.
-
- LATE REGISTRATIONS
-
- Registrations postmarked after 10th March count as late
- registrations.
-
- CANCELLATIONS
-
- In the event of cancellation, an 75% refund of the total cost will be
- made provided that written notice is received by the Local Organiser
- by 10th March 1993. After that date refunds cannot be made, although
- substitutions are possible.
-
- AISB MEMBERSHIP
-
- Delegates wishing to join AISB (thus avoiding the non-AISB-member
- supplement) should contact: AISB Administration, Cognitive and
- Computing Sciences, University of Sussex, Brighton BN1 9QH, U.K.;
- phone: +44-(0)273 678379; fax: +44-(0)273 678188; email:
- aisb@cogs.susx.ac.uk
-
- DISCLAIMER
-
- The University and the Conference Organisers accept no responsibility
- for injury to persons attending the Conference, nor for loss of or
- damage to their property. The Conference Organisers reserve the right
- to change the details given in this document without notice.
- ______________________________________________________________________
-
- R E G I S T R A T I O N F O R M ---- A I S B' 9 3
- ______________________________________________________________________
-
- Figures in parentheses are for full-time students (send photo copy of ID).
-
- ACCOMMODATION and FOOD
-
- 28th 29th 30th 31st 1st sub-totals
-
- lunch 5.50 5.50 5.50 5.50 ______
-
- dinner 7.50 7.50 7.50 20.00 ______
-
- bed & 23.00 23.00 23.00 23.00 23.00 ______
- breakfast
- total ______
- vegetarians please tick _____
-
- TECHNICAL PROGRAMME, WORKSHOPS and TUTORIALS
-
- technical programme 175 (40) _____
-
- non-AISB members add 30 _____
-
- late registration add 35 _____
-
- Nwana workshop 50 _____
-
- Sharkey workshop 60 (30) _____
-
- Cohn workshop 60 (30) _____
-
- Read workshop 0 _____
-
- Manaster Ramer tutorial 110 (55) _____
-
- Wallace tutorial 75 (30) _____
-
- Kirn tutorial 75 (30) _____
-
- total _____ Pounds
-
- PERSONAL DETAILS
- Full time
- Name ___________________________________________ student? Y/N
-
- Address ___________________________________________
-
- ___________________________________________
-
- ___________________________________________
-
- ___________________________________________
-
- Phone _________________________ Fax ___________
-
- Email ___________________________________________
-
- I wish to register for the events indicated, and enclose a cheque in
- pounds sterling, drawn on a U.K. clearing bank and payable to the
- `University of Birmingham' for .....
-
- Signed _________________________ Date ___________
-