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Neuron Digest Volume 06 Number 29
Neuron Digest Monday, 7 May 1990 Volume 6 : Issue 29
Today's Topics:
character recognition testing
Conference Announcement
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NEURAL SYSTEMS
Summer Hiring at Ford Aerospace
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: character recognition testing
From: Handprint Sample Form Account <hsf@magi.ncsl.nist.gov>
Organization: National Institute of Standards and Technology formerly National Bureau of Standards
Date: Tue, 24 Apr 90 10:44:17 -0400
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
formerly National Bureau of Standards (NBS) has developed
a data base for testing handprint character recognition.
The database is on a ISO-9660 formated CD and is
described briefly below. Please forward this to
interested parties.
__________________________________________________________________
NIST Handprint Database
The NIST handprinted character database consists of 2100
pages of bilevel, black and white, image data of hand
printed numerals and text with a total character count of
over 1,000,000 characters. Data is compressed using CCIT
G4 compression and decompression software is provided in
C.
The total image database, in uncompressed form, contains
about 3 Gigabytes of image data, with 273,000 numerals
and 707,700 alphabetic characters. The handprinting
sample was obtained from a selection of field data
collection staff of the Bureau of the Census, with a
geographic sampling corresponding to the population
density of the United States. The geographical sampling
was done because previous national samples of
handprinted material have suggested that there are
significant regional differences in handprinting style.
Most of the individuals who participated in the sampling
are accustomed to filling out forms relatively neatly,
and so this sample may represent a "best possible" sample
of handprinting. Even so, the range of characters and
spatial placement of those characters is broad enough to
present very difficult challenges to the image
recognition systems currently available or likely to be
available in the near future.
Typical Use
This test data set was designed for multiple uses in the
area of image (character) recognition. The problem of
computer recognition of document content from images is
usually broken down into three operations. First the
relevant areas containing text are located. This is
usually referred to as field isolation. Next the entire
field image containing one or more characters is broken
into the images of individual characters. This process is
usually referred to as segmentation. Finally, these
isolated characters must be correctly interpreted. The
images in the data base are designed to test all three
of the processes.
The test data can be used for any one of the three
operations, although it is important to recognize that
the success of all subsequent steps in this process is
dependent on the success of the previous steps.
for further information contact:
Joan Sauerwine
301-975-2208
FAX 301-975-2183
------------------------------
Subject: Conference Announcement
From: B344DSL@UTARLG.ARL.UTEXAS.EDU
Date: Tue, 24 Apr 90 22:55:00 -0500
CALL FOR ABSTRACTS
NEURAL NETWORKS FOR KNOWLEDGE REPRESENTATION AND INFERENCE
Fourth Annual Workshop of the Metroplex Institute for Neural Dynamics (MIND)
October 4-6, 1990
IBM Westlake, TX
Abstracts due June 15, 1990
The Metroplex Institute for Neural Dynamics is an independent
organization of industrial and academic interests within the Dallas/Fort
Worth Metroplex. This is our fourth annual workshop, each being
dedicated to a specific problem area, and all of them characterized by a
balance of theoretical, applied, and biological interests. Past topics
have included Sensory-Motor Coordination and Motivation, Emotion, and
Goal Direction. Past speakers have included Harry Klopf, Richard Sutton,
Karl Pribram, Harold Szu, Michael Kuperstein, Daniel Bullock, and James
Houk.
This year's topic of Knowledge Representation and Inference will be
focused by its attempts to apply neural architectures within the more
traditional rubrics of artificial intelligence and general computer
science. This is not merely the application of neural networks to the
problem domains of other approaches; more fundamentally, this workshop
will explore how the con- nectionist approach can implement other
theoretical frameworks and translate to other technical vocabularies.
Subtopics will include:
-- Connectionist approaches to semantic and symbolic problems from AI
-- Architectures for evidential and case-based reasoning
-- Cognitive maps and their control of sequence and planning
-- Representations of logical primitives and constitutive relations.
The 1988 MIND workshop on Motivation, Emotion, and Goal Direction in
Neural Networks has culminated in a book, now in press at Erlbaum. This
book is characterized by extensive cross-referencing of papers, arising
from the associations of the workshop.
We plan to generate a similar book from this workshop on Knowledge
Representation and Inference. Abstracts must be submitted for review and
will be available to participants at the workshop. Some of the
presentations will then be developed into book chapters. In addition to
oral presentations, there will be some space for poster presentations at
the workshop.
Abstracts (2 or 3 paragraphs) must be submitted by June 15 to either:
Daniel S. Levine
Dept. of Mathematics
Univ. of Texas at Arlington
Arlington, TX 76019-9408
(817)-273-3598
b344dsl@utarlg.bitnet or b344dsl@utarlg.arl.utexas.edu
or
Manuel Aparicio
Mail Stop 03-04-40
IBM
5 West Kirkwood Blvd.
Roanoke, TX 76299-0001
(817)-962-5944
------------------------------
Subject: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NEURAL SYSTEMS
From: Benny Lautrup <LAUTRUP%nbivax.nbi.dk@vma.CC.CMU.EDU>
Date: Thu, 26 Apr 90 13:18:00 +0200
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NEURAL SYSTEMS
The International Journal of Neural Systems is a quarterly journal which
covers information processing in natural and artificial neural systems.
It publishes original contributions on all aspects of this broad subject
which involves physics, biology, psychology, computer science and
engineering. Contributions include research papers, reviews and short
communications. The journal presents a fresh undogmatic attitude towards
this multidisciplinary field with the aim to be a forum for novel ideas
and improved understanding of collective and cooperative phenomena with
computational capabilities.
ISSN: 0129-0657 (IJNS)
- ----------------------------------
Contents of issue 1:
1. C. Peterson and B. Soderberg: A new Method for mapping Optimization
Problems onto Neural Networks.
2. M. G. Paulin, M. E. Nelson and J. M. Bower: Dynamics of Compensatory
Eye Movement Control: An Optimal Estimation Analysis of the
Vestibulo-Ocular Reflex.
3. P. Peretto: Learning Learning Sets in Neural Networks.
4. B. A. Huberman: The Collective Brain.
5. S. Patarnello and P. Carnevali: A Neural Network Model to Simulate
a conditioning Experiment.
6. J.-P. Nadal: Study of a Growth Algorithm for a Feed-Forward Network.
7. E. Oja: Neural Networks, Principal Components and Subspaces.
8. S. Bacci, G. Mato, and N. Parga: The Organization of Metastable
States in a Neural Network with Hierarchical Patterns.
9. A. Lansner and O. Ekeberg: A One-layer Feedback Artificial Neural
Network with a Bayesian Learning Rule.
10. J. Midtgaard and J. Hounsgaard: Nerve Cells as Source of Time
Scale and Processing Density in Brain Function.
11. S. Chen: On Computational Vision.
- ----------------------------------
Contents of issue 2:
1. P. Baldi and A. Attiya: Oscillations and synchronizations in
neural networks: An exploration of the labeling hypothesis.
2. A. W. Smith and D. Zipser: Learning sequential structure with
the real-time recurrent learning algorithm.
3. M. R. Davenport and G. W. Hoffmann: A recurrent neural network
using tri-state hidden neurons to orthogonalize the memory space.
4. H. K. M. Yusuf, S. Rahman and H. Akhtar:
Rats kept in environmental isolation for twelve months from weaning:
Performance in maze learning and visual discrimination tasks
and brain composition.
5. H. C. Card and W. R. Moore:
VLSI devices and circuits for learning in neural networks.
6. L. Gislen, C. Peterson and B. Soderberg:
"Teachers and classes" with neural networks.
7. A. E. Gunhan, L. P. Csernai, and J. Randrup:
Unsupervised competitive learning in Purkinje networks.
8. H.-U. Bauer and T. Geisel:
Motion detection and direction detection in local neural nets.
- ----------------------------------
Editorial board:
B. Lautrup (Niels Bohr Institute, Denmark) (Editor-in-charge)
S. Brunak (Technical Univ. of Denmark) (Assistant Editor-in-Charge)
D. Stork (Stanford) (Book review editor)
Associate editors:
B. Baird (Berkeley)
D. Ballard (University of Rochester)
E. Baum (NEC Research Institute)
S. Bjornsson (University of Iceland)
J. M. Bower (CalTech)
S. S. Chen (University of North Carolina)
R. Eckmiller (University of Dusseldorf)
J. L. Elman (University of San Diego)
M. V. Feigelman (Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics)
F. Fogelman-Soulie (Paris)
K. Fukushima (Osaka University)
A. Gjedde (Montreal Neurological Institute)
S. Grillner (Nobel Institute for Neurophysiology, Stockholm)
T. Gulliksen (University of Oslo)
D. Hammerstroem (University of Oregon)
J. Hounsgaard (University of Copenhagen)
B. A. Huberman (XEROX PARC)
L. B. Ioffe (Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics)
P. I. M. Johannesma (Katholieke Univ. Nijmegen)
M. Jordan (MIT)
G. Josin (Neural Systems Inc.)
I. Kanter (Princeton University)
J. H. Kaas (Vanderbilt University)
A. Lansner (Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm)
A. Lapedes (Los Alamos)
B. McWhinney (Carnegie-Mellon University)
M. Mezard (Ecole Normale Superieure, Paris)
A. F. Murray (University of Edinburgh)
J. P. Nadal (Ecole Normale Superieure, Paris)
E. Oja (Lappeenranta University of Technology, Finland)
N. Parga (Centro Atomico Bariloche, Argentina)
S. Patarnello (IBM ECSEC, Italy)
P. Peretto (Centre d'Etudes Nucleaires de Grenoble)
C. Peterson (University of Lund)
K. Plunkett (University of Aarhus)
S. A. Solla (AT&T Bell Labs)
M. A. Virasoro (University of Rome)
D. J. Wallace (University of Edinburgh)
D. Zipser (University of California, San Diego)
- ----------------------------------
CALL FOR PAPERS
Original contributions consistent with the scope of the journal are
welcome. Complete instructions as well as sample copies and subscription
information are available from
The Editorial Secretariat, IJNS
World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd.
73, Lynton Mead, Totteridge
London N20 8DH
ENGLAND
Telephone: (44)1-446-2461
or
World Scientific Publishing Co. Inc.
687 Hardwell St.
Teaneck
New Jersey 07666
USA
Telephone: (1)201-837-8858
or
World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd.
Farrer Road, P. O. Box 128
SINGAPORE 9128
Telephone (65)278-6188
------------------------------
Subject: Summer Hiring at Ford Aerospace
From: Kamil A Grajski <kamil@wdl1.fac.ford.com>
Date: Thu, 26 Apr 90 12:47:24 -0700
Hi,
In the spirit of public-service, here is an unofficial announcement, an
announcelette, if you please, that some people at Ford Aerospace (San
Jose) might be looking for summer hires.
=================================================================
4/25/90
The Advanced Development Department of Ford Aerospace's Western
Development Laboratories in San Jose historically has summer (May,June-
August) job positions open to promising junior & senior undergraduates
and graduate students.
Broadly speaking, on-going projects are aimed at algorithm design and
development (software & hardware) for real-time systems combining digital
signal processing and classification. The classification component
includes, but is NOT limited to neural network technology. There is a
statistical component which is looking at classical as well as some new
non-parametric methods.
On-going projects (funded by Ford Motor Co. and/or IR&D) involve:
a.) design, development and implementation of an on-board
engine knock detector and classifier for aiding engine
performance optimization - joint project with Ford Motor
Co. - real real-time data! (Free rides in a Taurus!)
b.) several related projects in real-time speech processing,
e.g., speaker change detection, word spotting in continuous speech,
- we have home-grown, TIMIT and other databases on-line.
We are currently interested in the performance and applicability
of recurrent architectures to ASR, developing synergy with HMMs,
and some recent nonparametric statistical discriminant methods.
c.) parallel computation - we have a 2K processor element SIMD
machine from MasPar (the beta version) with possible limited
access to 8K and 16K versions onto which we are
porting a variety of DSP, neural network and statistical
methodologies for production and in-house research efforts.
We are emphasizing some neat approaches to writing "virtualized"
code for multi-processor systems. (Preliminary results to be
reported at IJCNN and INNC.)
The office environment is a typical Silicon Valley set-up. There are
shower facilities for that afternoon jog or bike-ride; loads of places to
eat, etc.
Send resume or note to: kamil@wdl1.fac.ford.com (TCP/IP:128.5.32.1).
Dr. Kamil A. Grajski
Ford Aerospace
Advanced Development Department
Mail Stop X-22
220 Henry Ford II Dr. (dig that address!)
San Jose, CA 95161-9041
==================================================================
Kamil
------------------------------
Subject: Call for Papers
From: nelsonde%avlab.dnet@wrdc.af.mil
Date: Mon, 23 Apr 90 11:15:32 -0400
I N T E R O F F I C E M E M O R A N D U M
Date: 23-Apr-1990 11:06am EST
From: Dale E. Nelson
NELSONDE
Dept: AAAT-1
Tel No: 57646
Subject: Call for Papers
Please post the following announcement and call for papers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
AGARD
ADVISORY GROUP FOR AEROSPACE RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
7 RUE ANCELLE - 92200 NEUILLY-SUR-SEINE - FRANCE
TELEPHONE: (1)47 38 5765 TELEX: 610176 AGARD
TELEFAX: (1)47 38 57 99
AVP/46 2 APRIL 1990
CALL FOR PAPERS
for the
SPRING, 1991 AVIONICS PANEL SYMPOSIUM
ON
MACHINE INTELLIGENCE FOR AEROSPACE ELECTRONICS SYSTEMS
to be held in
LISBON, Portugal
13-16 May 1991
This meeting will be UNCLASSIFIED
Abstracts must be received not later than 31 August 1990.
Note: US & UK Authors must comply with National Clearance Procedures
requirements for Abstracts and Papers.
THEME
MACHINE INTELLIGENCE FOR AEROSPACE ELECTRONICS SYSTEMS
A large amount of research is being conducted to develop and apply
Machine Intelligence (MI) technology to aerospace applications.
Machine Intelligence research covers the technical areas under the
headings of Artificial Intelligence, Expert Systems, Knowledge
Representation, Neural Networks and Machine Learning. This list is
not all inclusive. It has been suggested that this research will
dramatically alter the design of aerospace electronics systems
because MI technology enables automatic or semi-automatic operation
and control. Some of the application areas where MI is being
considered inlcude sensor cueing, data and information fusion,
command/control/communications/intelligence, navigation and guidance,
pilot aiding, spacecraft and launch operations, and logistics support
for aerospace electronics. For many routine jobs, it appears that MI
systems would provide screened and processed ata as well as
recommended courses of action to human operators. MI technology will
enable electronics systems or subsystems which adapt or correct for
errors and many of the paradigms have parallel implementation or use
intelligent algorithms to increase the speed of response to near real
time.
With all of the interest in MI research and the desire to expedite
transition of the technology, it is appropriate to organize a
symposium to present the results of efforts applying MI technology to
aerospace electronics applications. The symposium will focus on
applications research and development to determine the types of MI
paradigms which are best suited to the wide variety of aerospace
electronics applications. The symposium will be organizaed into
separate sessions for the various aerospace electronics application
areas. It is tentatively proposed that the sessions be organized as
follows:
SESSION 1 - Offensive System Electronics (fire control systems, sensor
cueing and control, signal/data/information fusion, machine
vision, etc.)
SESSION 2 - Defensive System electronics (electronic counter
measures, radar warning receivers, countermeasure
resource management, situation awareness, fusion, etc.)
SESSION 3 - Command/Control/Communications/Intelligence - C3I (sensor
control, signal/data/information fusion, etc.)
SESSION 4 - Navigation System Electronics (data filtering, sensor
cueing and control, etc.)
SESSION 5 - Space Operations (launch and orbital)
SESSION 6 - Logistic Systems to Support Aerospace Electronics (on and
off-board systems, embedded training, diagnostics and
prognostics, etc.)
GENERAL INFORMATION
This Meeting, supported by the Avionics Panel will be held in Lisbon,
Portugal on 13-16 May 1991.
It is expected that 30 to 40 papers will be presented. Each author will
normally have 20 minutes for presentation and 10 minutes for questions and
discussions. Equipment will be available for projection of viewgraph
transparencies, 35 mm slides, and 16 mm films.
The audience will include Members of the Avionics Panel and 150 to 200
invited experts from the NATO nations. Attendance at AGARD Meetings is by
invitation only from an AGARD National Delegate or Panel Member.
Final manuscripts should be limited to no more than 16 pages including
figures. Presentations at the meeting should be an extract of the final
manuscript and not a reading of it. Complete instructions will be sent to
authors of papers selected by the Technical Programme Committee.
Authors submitting abstracts should insure that financial support for
attendance at the meeting will be available.
CLASSIFICATION
This meeting will be UNCLASSIFIED
LANGUAGES
Papers may be written and presented either in English or French.
Simultanewous interpretation will be provided between these two
languages at all sessions. A copy of your prepared remarks (Oral
Presentation) and visual aids should be provided to the AGARD staff
at least one month prior to the meeting date. This procedure will
ensure correct interpretation of your spoken words.
ABSTRACTS
Abstracts of papers offered for this Symposium are now invited and should
conform with the following instructions:
LENGTH: 200 to 500 words
CONTENT: Scope of the Contribution & Relevance to the Meeting
- Your abstract should fully represent your contribution
SUMITTAL: To the Technical Programme committee by all authors (US
authors must comply with Attachment 1)
IDENTIFICATION: Author Information Form (Attachment 2) must be provided
with you abstract
CLASSIFICATION: Abstracts must be unclassified
Your abstracts and Attachment 2 should be mailed in time to reach all
members of the Technical Program Committee, and the Executive not
later than 31 AUGUST 1990 (Note the exception for the US Authors).
This date is important and must be met to ensure that your paper is
considered. Abstracts should be submitted in the format shown on the
reverse of this page.
TITLE OF PAPER
Name of Author
Organization or Company Affiliation
Address
Name of Co-Author
Organization or Company Affiliation
Address
The test of your ABSTRACT should start on this line.
PUBLICATIONS
The proceedings of this meeting will be published in a single volume
Conference Proceedings. The Conference Proceedings will include the
papers which are presented at the meeting, the questions/discussion
following each presentation, and a Technical Evaluation Report of the
meeting. It should be noted that AGARD reserves the right to print
in the Conference Proceedings any paper or material presented at the
Meeting. The Conference Proceedings will be sent to the printer on
or about July 1990. NOTE: Authors that fail to provide the required
Camera-Ready manuscript by this date may not be published.
QUESTIONS concerning the technical programme should be addressed to
the Technical Programme Committee. Administrative questions should
be sent directly to the Avionics Panel Executive.
GENERAL SCHEDULE
(Note: Exception for US Authors)
EVENT DEADLINE
SUBMIT AUTHOR INFORMATION FORM 31 AUG 90
SUBMIT ABSTRACT 31 AUG 90
PROGRAMME COMMITTEE SELECTION OF PAPERS 1 OCT 90
NOTIFICATION OF AUTHORS OCT 90
RETURN AUTHOR REPLY FORM TO AGARD IMMEDIATELY
START PUBLICATION/PRESENTATION CLEARANCE PROCEDURE UPON NOTIFICATION
AGARD INSTRUCTIONS WILL BE SENT TO CONTRIBUTORS OCT 90
MEETING ANNOUNCEMENT WILL BE PUBLISHED IN JAN 91
SUBMIT CAMERA-READY MANUSCRIPT AND PUBLICATION/
PRESENTATION CLEARANCE CERTIFICATE to arrive at AGARD by 15 MAR 91
SEND ORAL PRESENTATION AND COPIES OF VISUAL AIDS
TO THE AVIONICS PANEL EXECUTIVE to arrive at AGARD by 19 APR 91
ALL PAPERS TO BE PRESENTED 13-16 MAY 91
TECHNICAL PROGRAMME COMMITTEE
CHAIRMAN
Dr Charles H. KRUEGER Jr
Director, Systems Avionics Division
Wright Research and Development Center (AFSC), ATTN: AAA
Wright Patterson Air Force Base
Dayton, OH 45433, USA
Telephone: (513) 255-5218
Telefax: (513) 476-4020
Mr John J. BART Prof Dr A. Nejat INCE
Technical Director, Directorate Burumcuk sokak 7/10
of Reliability & Compatibility P.K. 8
Rome Air Development Center (AFSC) 06752 MALTEPE, ANKARA
GRIFFISS AFB, NY 13441 Turkey
USA
Mr J.M. BRICE Mr Edward M. LASSITER
Directeur Technique Vice President
THOMSON TMS Space Flight Ops Program Group
B.P. 123 P.O. Box 92957
38521 SAINT EGREVE CEDEX LOS ANGELES, CA 90009-2957
France USA
Mr L.L. DOPPING-HEPENSTAL Eng. Jose M.B.G. MASCARENHAS
Head of Systems Development C-924
BRITISH AEROSPACE PLC, C/O CINCIBERLANT HQ
Military Aircraft Limited 2780 OEIRAS
WARTON AERODROME Portugal
PRESTEN, LANCS PR4 1AX
United Kingdom
Mr J. DOREY Mr Dale NELSON
Directeur des Etudes & Syntheses Wright Research & Development Center
O.N.E.R.A. ATTN: AAAT
29 Av. de la Division Leclerc Wright Patterson AFB
92320 CHATILLON CEDEX Dayton, OH 45433
France USA
Mr David V. GAGGIN Ir. H.A.T. TIMMERS
Director Head, Electronics Department
U.S. Army Avionics R&D Activity National Aerospace Laboratory
ATTN: SAVAA-D P.O. Box 90502
FT MONMOUTH, NJ 07703-5401 1006 BM Amsterdam
USA Netherlands
AVIONICS PANEL EXECUTIVE
LTC James E. CLAY, US Army
Telephone Telex Telefax
(33) (1) 47-38-57-65 610176 (33) (1) 47-38-57-99
MAILING ADDRESSES:
From Europe and Canada From United States
AGARD AGARD
ATTN: AVIONICS PANEL ATTN: AVIONICS PANEL
7, rue Ancelle APO NY 09777
92200 Neuilly-sur-Seine
France
ATTACHMENT 1
FOR US AUTHORS ONLY
1. Authors of US papers involving work performed or sponsored by a US
Government Agency must receive clearance from their sponsoring agency.
These authors should allow at least six weeks for clearance from their
sponsoring agency. Abstracts, notices of clearance by sponsoring
agencies, and Attachment 2 should be sent to Mr GAGGIN to arrive not
later than 15 AUGUST 1990.
2. All other US authors should forward abstracts and Attachment 2 to
Mr GAGGIN to arrive before 31 JULY 1990. These contributors should
include the following statements in the cover letter:
A. The work described was not performed under sponsorship of a US
Government Agency.
B. The abstract is technically correct.
C. The abstract is unclassified.
D. The abstract does not violate any proprietary rights.
3. US authors should send their abstracts to Mr GAGGIn and Dr
KRUEGER only. Abstracts should NOT be sent to non-US members of
the Technical Programme Committee or the Avionics Panel
Executive.
ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS FROM US AUTHORS CAN ONLY BE SENT TO:
Mr David V. GAGGIN and Dr Charles H. KRUEGER Jr
Director Director, Avionics Systems Div
Avionics Research & Dev Activity Wright Research & Dev Center
ATTN: SAVAA-D ATTN: WRDC/AAA
Ft Monmouth, NJ 07703-5401 Wright Patterson AFB
Dayton, OH 45433
Telephone: (201) 544-4851 Telephone: (513) 255-5218
or AUTOVON: 995-4851
4. US authors should send the Author Information Form (Attachment 2)
to the Avionics Panel Executive, Mr GAGGIN, Dr KRUEGER, and each
Technical Programme Committee Member, to meet the above
deadlines.
5. Authors selected from the United States are remined that their
full papers must be cleared by an authorized national clearance
office before they can be forwarded to AGARD. Clearance
procedures should be started at least 12 weeks before the paper
is to be mailed to AGARD. Mr GAGGIN will provide additional
information at the appropriate time.
AUTHOR INFORMATION FORM
FOR
AUTHORS SUBMITTING AN ABSTRACT FOR THE AVIONICS PANEL SYMPOSIUM
on
MACHINE INTELLIGENCE FOR AEROSPACE ELECTRONICS SYSTEMS
INSTRUCTIONS
1. Authors should complete this form and send a copy to the Avionics
Panel Executive and all Technical Program Committee members by 31
AUGUST 1990.
2. Attach a copy of your abstract to these forms before they are
mailed. US Authors must comply with ATTACHMENT 1 requirements.
a. Probable Title Paper: ____________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________
b. Paper most appropriate for Session # ______________________________
c. Full Name of Author to be listed first on Programmee,
including Courtesy Title, First Name and/or Initials, Last
Name & Nationality.
d. Name of Organization or Activity: _________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________
e. Address for Return Correspondence: Telephone Number:
__________________________________ ____________________
__________________________________ Telefax Number:
__________________________________ ____________________
__________________________________ Telex Number:
__________________________________ ____________________
f. Names of Co-Authors including Courtesy Titles, First Name and/or
Initials, Last Name, their Organization, and their nationality.
___________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________
__________ ____________________
Date Signature
DUE NOT LATER THAN 15 AUGUST 1990
------------------------------
End of Neuron Digest [Volume 6 Issue 29]
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