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Neuron Digest Volume 09 Number 31
Neuron Digest Monday, 29 Jun 1992 Volume 9 : Issue 31
Today's Topics:
EUROPEAN SOCIETY FOR PHILOSOPHY AND PSYCHOLOGY
ICNN'93 Call for papers
COLT `92 conference program
Call for Participation for Physics of Computation Workshop
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 (128.91.2.173). Back issues
requested by mail will eventually be sent, but may take a while.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Subject: EUROPEAN SOCIETY FOR PHILOSOPHY AND PSYCHOLOGY
From: davies@Athena.MIT.EDU
Date: Mon, 25 May 92 18:26:05 -0500
************************************************************************
****** EUROPEAN SOCIETY FOR PHILOSOPHY AND PSYCHOLOGY ******
*********** INAUGURAL CONFERENCE ***********
**** 17 - 19 JULY, 1992 ****
****** SECOND ANN0UNCEMENT: REGISTRATION AND ACCOMMODATION ******
The Inaugural Conference of the European Society for Philosophy and
Psychology will be held in the Philosophy Institute, University of
Louvain, Belgium, from Friday 17 July to Sunday 19 July, 1992.
The goal of the Society is 'to promote interaction between
philosophers and psychologists on issues of common concern'.
***** REGISTRATION *****
In order to register for the conference, please send your NAME, ACADEMIC
AFFILIATION, POSTAL MAIL ADDRESS, EMAIL ADDRESS, and TELEPHONE NUMBER to:
Beatrice de Gelder, Psychology Department,
Tilburg University, P.O.Box 90153,
5000 LE Tilburg, Netherlands
or provide the same information by email to: beadegelder@kub.nl
In either case, please state whether you are paying the Registration Fee
by cheque, banker's draft, or electronic transfer.
THE REGISTRATION FEE is Bfrs. 2400,- (approx. 40 pounds sterling) or Bfrs.
1200,- for students (approx. 20 pounds sterling).
If you would like to attend the conference dinner on Friday 17 July, then
the extra charge is Bfrs. 1500,- including wine (approx. 25 pounds sterling).
REGISTRATION IS NOT COMPLETE UNTIL PAYMENT HAS BEEN RECEIVED.
Payment MUST be in Belgian francs, by cheque or banker's draft made payable
to:
B. de Gelder-Euro-SPP
OR by electronic transfer to the following:
Bank: AN-HYP Brussels, Belgium,
Account number: 750-9345993-07,
for the attention of: B. de Gelder-Euro-SPP.
When registration is complete, you will be sent an information pack
including maps and other touristic information along with a detailed
programme.
************************************************************************
***** ACCOMMODATION *****
Rooms have been reserved in several hotels (all within walking distance
of The Philosophy Institute) at special reduced rates. In order to book
accommodation, please contact one of the hotels directly, and mention
the Euro-SPP Conference.
The hotels and rates are:
Hotel Binnenhof Hotel Industrie
Maria-Theresiastraat 65 Martelarenplein 7
B-3000 Leuven (Louvain) B-3000 Leuven (Louvain)
Tel: +32-16-20.55.92 Tel: +32-16-22.13.49
Fax: +32-16-23.69.26 Fax: +32-16-20.82.85
Rate: Bfrs. 2450,- Rate: Bfrs. 1050,-
Begijnhof Congreshotel Hotel Arcade
Tervuursevest 70 Brusselsestraat 52
B-3000 Leuven (Louvain) B-3000 Leuven (Louvain)
Tel: +32-16-29.10.10 Tel: +32-16-29.31.11
Fax: +32-16-29.10.22 Fax: +32-16-23.87.92
Rate: Bfrs. 3.500,- Rate: Bfrs. 2000,-
Student accommodation
Contact: Stefan Cuypers
Centre for Logic and
Philosophy of Science
B-3000 Leuven (Louvain)
Tel: +32-16-28.63.15
Fax: +32-16-28.63.11
Rate: Bfrs. 585,-
TO MAKE SURE YOU WILL OBTAIN HOTEL ACCOMMODATION YOU MUST CONTACT THE
HOTEL OF YOUR CHOICE BEFORE 17 JUNE 1992.
************************************************************************
***** PROGRAMME *****
FRIDAY 17 JULY
Conference desk open from 11 am
2.00 pm Coffee
3.00 - 5.00 pm SYMPOSIUM 1: Consciousness
5.30 pm INVITED LECTURE: Larry Weiskrantz
7.00 pm RECEPTION
at the kind invitation of the Philosophy Institute
8.00 pm CONFERENCE DINNER
SATURDAY 18 JULY
9.00 - 10.30 am SYMPOSIUM 2: Probabilistic Reasoning
10.30 am Coffee
11.00 am - 1.00 pm SYMPOSIUM 3: Intentionality
1.00 - 2.30 pm Lunch
2.30 - 4.00 pm SYMPOSIUM 4: Theory of Mind
4.30 - 6.00 pm SYMPOSIUM 5: Philosophical Issues from Linguistics
6.15 pm INAUGURAL BUSINESS MEETING OF THE EURO-SPP
7.00 pm RECEPTION
at the kind invitation of Blackwell Publishers
SUNDAY 19 JULY
9.00 - 11.00 am SYMPOSIUM 6: Connectionist Models
11.00 am Coffee
11.30 am INVITED LECTURE: Dan Sperber
1.00 pm Lunch
Symposium speakers include:
Peter Carruthers, Andy Clark, Anthony Dickinson, Gerd Gigerenzer,
Stevan Harnad, Nigel Harvey, Nick Humphrey, Pierre Jacob, Giuseppe
Longobardi, Gabriele Miceli, Odmar Neumann, David Over, Josef Perner,
Kim Plunkett, David Premack, Andrew Woodfield, Andy Young.
************************************************************************
For further information contact:
Daniel Andler Martin Davies
CREA Philosophy Department
1 rue Descartes Birkbeck College
75005 Paris Malet Street
France London WC1E 7HX
Email:azra@poly.polytechnique.fr England
Email: ubty003@cu.bbk.ac.uk
Beatrice de Gelder Tony Marcel
Psychology Department MRC Applied Psychology Unit
Tilburg University 15 Chaucer Road
P.O. Box 90153 Cambridge CB2 2EF
5000 LE Tilburg England
Netherlands Email: tonym@mrc-apu.cam.ac.uk
Email: beadegelder@kub.nl
************************************************************************
------------------------------
Subject: ICNN'93 Call for papers
From: Hamid Berenji <berenji@ptolemy.arc.nasa.gov>
Date: Thu, 28 May 92 17:48:53 -0800
1993 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON NEURAL NETWORKS
San Francisco, California, March 28 - April 1, 1993
The IEEE Neural Networks Council is pleased to announce its 1993
International Conference on Neural Networks (ICNN'93) to be held in San
Francisco, California from March 28 to April 1, 1993. ICNN'93 will be
held concurrently with the Second IEEE International Conference on Fuzzy
Systems (FUZZ-IEEE'93). Participants will be able to attend the
technical events of both meetings.
ICNN '93 will be devoted to the discussion of basic advances and
applications of neurobiological systems, neural networks, and neural
computers. Topics of interest include:
* Neurodynamics
* Associative Memories
* Intelligent Neural Networks
* Invertebrate Neural Networks
* Neural Fuzzy Systems
* Evolutionary Programming
* Optical Neurocomputers
* Supervised Learning
* Unsupervised Learning
* Sensation and Perception
* Genetic Algorithms
* Virtual Reality & Neural Networks
* Applications to:
- Image Processing and Understanding
- Optimization
- Control
- Robotics and Automation
- Signal Processing
ORGANIZATION:
General Chair: Enrique H. Ruspini
Program Chairs: Hamid R. Berenji, Elie Sanchez, Shiro Usui
ADVISORY BOARD:
S.-i. Amari
J. A. Anderson
J. C. Bezdek
Y. Burnod
L. Cooper
R. C. Eberhart
R. Eckmiller
J. Feldman
M. Feldman
F. Fukushima
R. Hecht-Nielsen
J. Holland
C. Jorgensen
T. Kohonen
C. Lau
C. Mead
N. Packard
D. Rummelhart
B. Skyrms
L. Stark
A. Stubberud
H. Takagi
P. Treleaven
B. Widrow
PROGRAM COMMITTEE:
K. Aihara
I. Aleksander
L.B. Almeida
G. Andeen
C. Anderson
J. A. Anderson
A. Andreou
P. Antsaklis
J. Barhen
B. Bavarian
H. R. Berenji
A. Bergman
J. C. Bezdek
H. Bourlard
D. E. Brown
J. Cabestany
D. Casasent
S. Colombano
R. de Figueiredo
M. Dufosse
R. C. Eberhart
R. M. Farber
J. Farrell
J. Feldman
W. Fisher
W. Fontana
A.A. Frolov
T. Fukuda
C. Glover
K. Goser
D. Hammerstrom
M. H. Hassoun
J. Herault
J. Hertz
D. Hislop
A. Iwata
M. Jordan
C. Jorgensen
L. P. Kaelbling
P. Khedkar
S. Kitamura
B. Kosko
J. Koza
C. Lau
C. Lucas
R. J. Marks
J. Mendel
W.T. Miller
M. Mitchell
S. Miyake
A.F. Murray
J.-P. Nadal
T. Nagano
K. S. Narendra
R. Newcomb
E. Oja
N. Packard
A. Pellionisz
P. Peretto
L. Personnaz
A. Prieto
D. Psaltis
H. Rauch
T. Ray
M. B. Reid
E. Sanchez
J. Shavlik
B. Sheu
S. Shinomoto
J. Shynk
P. K. Simpson
N. Sonehara
D. F. Specht
A. Stubberud
N. Sugie
H. Takagi
S. Usui
D. White
H. White
R. Williams
E. Yodogawa
S. Yoshizawa
S. W. Zucker
ORGANIZING COMMITEE:
PUBLICITY: H.R. Berenji
EXHIBITS: W. Xu
TUTORIALS: J.C. Bezdek
VIDEO PROCEEDINGS: A. Bergman
FINANCE: R. Tong
SPONSORING SOCIETIES:
ICNN'93 is sponsored by the Neural Networks Council.
Constituent Societies:
* IEEE Circuits and Systems Society
* IEEE Communications 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 Robotics and Automation Society
* IEEE Signal Processing Society
* IEEE Systems, Man, and Cybernetics Society
CALL FOR PAPERS
The program committee cordially invites interested authors to submit
papers dealing with any aspects of research and applications related to
the use of neural models. Papers must be written in English and must be
received by SEPTEMBER 21, 1992. Six copies of the paper must be
submitted and the paper should not exceed 8 pages including figures,
tables, and references. Papers should be prepared on 8.5" x 11" white
paper with 1" margins on all sides, using a typewriter or letter quality
printer in one column format, in Times or similar style, 10 points or
larger, and printed on one side of the paper only. Please include title,
authors name(s) and affiliation(s) on top of first page followed by an
abstract. FAX submissions are not acceptable. Please send submissions
prior to the deadline to: Dr. Hamid Berenji, AI Research Branch, MS
269-2, NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, California 94035
CALL FOR VIDEOS:
The IEEE Neural Networks Council is pleased to announce its first Video
Proceedings program, intended to present new and significant experimental
work in the fields of artificial neural networks and fuzzy systems, so as
to enhance and complement results presented in the Conference
Proceedings. Interested researchers should submit a 2 to 3 minute video
segment (preferable formats: 3/4" Betacam, or Super VHS) and a one page
information sheet (including title, author, affiliation, address, a
200-word abstract, 2 to 3 references, and a short acknowledgment, if
needed), prior to September 21, 1992, to Meeting Management, 5665 Oberlin
Drive, Suite 110, San Diego, CA 92121. We encourage those interested in
participating in this program to write to this address for important
suggestions to help in the preparation of their submission.
TUTORIALS:
The Computational Brain: Biological Neural Networks
Terrence J. Sejnowski
The Salk Institute
Evolutionary Programming
David Fogel
Orincon Corporation
Expert Systems and Neural Networks
George Lendaris
Portland State University
Genetic Algorithms and Neural Networks
Darrell Whitley
Colorado State University
Introduction to Biological and Artificial Neural Networks
Steven Rogers
Air Force Institute of Technology
Suggestions from Cognitive Science for Neural Network Applications
James A. Anderson
Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences
Brown University
EXHIBITS:
ICNN '93 will be held concurrently with the Second IEEE International
Conference on Fuzzy Systems (FUZZ-IEEE '93). ICNN '93 and FUZZ-IEEE '93
are the largest conferences and trade shows in their fields.
Participants to either conference will be able to attend the combined
exhibit program. We anticipate an extraordinary trade show offering a
unique opportunity to become acquainted with the latest developments in
products based on neural-networks and fuzzy-systems techniques.
Interested exhibitors are requested to contact the Chairman, Exhibits,
ICNN '93 and FUZZ-IEEE '93, Wei Xu at Telephone (408) 428-1888, FAX (408)
428-1884.
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION, CONTACT
Meeting Management
5665 Oberlin Drive
Suite 110
San Diego, CA 92121
Tel. (619) 453-6222
FAX (619) 535-3880
------------------------------
Subject: COLT `92 conference program
From: David Haussler <haussler@cse.ucsc.edu>
Date: Fri, 29 May 92 12:37:38 -0800
COLT '92
Workshop on Computational Learning Theory
Sponsored by ACM SIGACT and SIGART
July 27 - 29, 1992
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
GENERAL INFORMATION
Registration & Reception: Sunday, 7:00 - 10:00 pm, 2M56-2P56 Forbes Quadrangle
Conference Banquet: Monday, 7:00 pm
The conference sessions will be held in the William Pitt Union.
Late Registration, etc.: Kurtzman Room (during technical sessions)
Lectures & Impromptu Talks: Ballroom
Poster Sessions: Assembly Room
SCHEDULE OF TALKS
Sunday, July 26
RECEPTION: 7:00 - 10:00 pm
Monday, July 27
SESSION 1: 8:45 - 10:05 am
8:45 - 9:05 Learning boolean read-once formulas with arbitrary symmetric
and constant fan-in gates,
by Nader H. Bshouty, Thomas Hancock, and Lisa Hellerstein
9:05 - 9:25 On-line Learning of Rectangles,
by Zhixiang Chen and Wolfgang Maass
9:25 - 9:45 Cryptographic lower bounds on learnability of AC^1 functions on
the uniform distribution,
by Michael Kharitonov
9:45 - 9:55 Learning hierarchical rule sets,
by Jyrki Kivinen, Heikki Mannila and Esko Ukkonen
9:55 - 10:05 Random DFA's can be approximately learned from sparse uniform
examples,
by Kevin Lang
SESSION 2: 10:30 - 11:50 am
10:30 - 10:50 An O(n^loglog n) Learning Algorithm for DNF,
by Yishay Mansour
10:50 - 11:10 A technique for upper bounding the spectral norm with
applications to learning,
by Mihir Bellare
11:10 - 11:30 Exact learning of read-k disjoint DNF and not-so-disjoint DNF,
by Howard Aizenstein and Leonard Pitt
11:30 - 11:40 Learning k-term DNF formulas with an incomplete membership
oracle,
by Sally A. Goldman, and H. David Mathias
11:40 - 11:50 Learning DNF formulae under classes of probability
distributions,
by Michele Flammini, Alberto Marchetti-Spaccamela and Ludek Kucera
SESSION 3: 1:45 - 3:05 pm
1:45 - 2:05 Bellman strikes again -- the rate of growth of sample
complexity with dimension for the nearest neighbor classifier,
by Santosh S. Venkatesh, Robert R. Snapp, and Demetri Psaltis
2:05 - 2:25 A theory for memory-based learning,
by Jyh-Han Lin and Jeffrey Scott Vitter
2:25 - 2:45 Learnability of description logics,
by William W. Cohen and Haym Hirsh
2:45 - 2:55 PAC-learnability of determinate logic programs,
by Savso Dvzeroski, Stephen Muggleton and Stuart Russell
2:55 - 3:05 Polynomial time inference of a subclass of context-free
transformations,
by Hiroki Arimura, Hiroki Ishizaka, and Takeshi Shinohara
SESSION 4: 3:30 - 4:40 pm
3:30 - 3:50 A training algorithm for optimal margin classifiers,
by Bernhard Boser, Isabell Guyon, and Vladimir Vapnik
3:50 - 4:10 The learning complexity of smooth functions of a single
variable,
by Don Kimber and Philip M. Long
4:10 - 4:20 Absolute error bounds for learning linear functions online,
by Ethan Bernstein
4:20 - 4:30 Probably almost discriminative learning,
by Kenji Yamanishi
4:30 - 4:40 PAC Learning with generalized samples and an application to
stochastic geometry,
by S.R. Kulkarni, S.K. Mitter, J.N. Tsitsiklis and O. Zeitouni
POSTER SESSION #1 & IMPROMPTU TALKS: 5:00 - 6:30 pm
BANQUET: 7:00 pm
Tuesday, July 28
SESSION 5: 8:45 - 10:05 am
8:45 - 9:05 Degrees of inferability,
by P. Cholak, R. Downey, L. Fortnow, W. Gasarch, E. Kinber, M. Kummer,
S. Kurtz, and T. Slaman
9:05 - 9:25 On learning limiting programs,
by John Case, Sanjay Jain, and Arun Sharma
9:25 - 9:45 Breaking the probability 1/2 barrier in FIN-type learning,
by Robert Daley, Bala Kalyanasundaram, and Mahendran Velauthapillai
9:45 - 9:55 Case based learning in inductive inference,
by Klaus P. Jantke
9:55 - 10:05 Generalization versus classification,
by Rolf Wiehagen and Carl Smith
SESSION 6: 10:30 - 11:50 am
10:30 - 10:50 Learning switching concepts,
by Avrim Blum and Prasad Chalasani
10:50 - 11:10 Learning with a slowly changing distribution,
by Peter L. Bartlett
11:10 - 11:30 Dominating distributions and learnability,
by Gyora M. Benedek and Alon Itai
11:30 - 11:40 Polynomial uniform convergence and polynomial-sample
learnability,
by Alberto Bertoni, Paola Campadelli, Anna Morpurgo, and Sandra Panizza
11:40 - 11:50 Learning functions by simultaneously estimating errors,
by Kevin Buescher and P.R. Kumar
INVITED TALK: 1:45 - 2:45 pm: Reinforcement learning,
by Andy Barto, University of Massachusetts
SESSION 7: 3:10 - 4:40 pm
3:10 - 3:30 On learning noisy threshold functions with finite precision
weights,
by R. Meir and J.F. Fontanari
3:30 - 3:50 Query by committee,
by H.S. Seung, M. Opper, H. Sompolinsky
3:50 - 4:00 A noise model on learning sets of strings,
by Yasubumi Sakakibara and Rani Siromoney
4:00 - 4:10 Language learning from stochastic input,
by Shyam Kapur and Gianfranco Bilardi
4:10 - 4:20 On exact specification by examples,
by Martin Anthony, Graham Brightwell, Dave Cohen and John Shawe-Taylor
4:20 - 4:30 A computational model of teaching,
by Jeffrey Jackson and Andrew Tomkins
4:30 - 4:40 Approximate testing and learnability,
by Kathleen Romanik
IMPROMPTU TALKS: 5:00 - 6:00 pm
BUSINESS MEETING: 8:00 pm
POSTER SESSION #2: 9:00 - 10:30 pm
Wednesday, July 29
SESSION 8: 8:45 - 9:45 am
8:45 - 9:05 Characterizations of learnability for classes of 0,...,n-valued
functions,
by Shai Ben-David, Nicol`o Cesa-Bianchi and Philip M. Long
9:05 - 9:25 Toward efficient agnostic learning,
by Michael J. Kearns, Robert E. Schapire, and Linda Sellie
9:25 - 9:45 Approximating Bayes decisions by additive estimations
by Svetlana Anoulova, Paul Fischer, Stefan Polt, and Hans Ulrich Simon
SESSION 9: 10:10 - 10:50 am
10:10 - 10:30 On the role of procrastination for machine learning,
by Rusins Freivalds and Carl Smith
10:30 - 10:50 Types of monotonic language learning and their
characterization,
by Steffen Lange and Thomas Zeugmann
SESSION 10: 11:10 - 11:50 am
11:10 - 11:30 An improved boosting algorithm and its implications on learning
complexity,
by Yoav Freund
11:30 - 11:50 Some weak learning results,
by David P. Helmbold and Manfred K. Warmuth
SESSION 11: 1:45 - 2:45 pm
1:45 - 2:05 Universal sequential learning and decision from individual data
sequences,
by Neri Merhav and Meir Feder
2:05 - 2:25 Robust trainability of single neurons,
by Klaus-U. Hoffgen and Hans-U. Simon
2:25 - 2:45 On the computational power of neural nets,
by Hava T. Siegelmann and Eduardo D. Sontag
===============================================================================
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
To receive complete information regarding conference registration and
accomodations contact Betty Brannick:
E-mail: brannick@cs.pitt.edu
PHONE: (412) 624-8493
FAX: (412) 624-8854.
Please specify whether you want the information sent in PLAIN text or LATEX
format.
NOTE: Attendees must register BY JUNE 19 TO AVOID THE LATE REGISTRATION FEE.
[[ Editor's Note: My apologies for letting this sit in the queue. -PM ]]
------------------------------
Subject: Call for Participation for Physics of Computation Workshop
From: Doug Matzke <matzke@hc.ti.com>
Date: Thu, 25 Jun 92 13:57:13 -0600
Please post this on the Neural-net mailing List! Thank you.
The Symbiosis of Physics and Computation
Call for Participation
Physics of Computation Workshop
October 2 - 4, 1992, Dallas, Texas
Sponsored by Dallas IEEE Computer Society
Corporate Sponsor: Texas Instruments Incorporated
The Physics of Computation Workshop is an opportunity for participants to
better understand and contribute to the intimate relationship emerging
between Modern Physics and Computation Theory. One commonly held view is
that information laws are dependent on the laws of physics. Another
emerging view is that the universe would not work without information
primitives underlying physical laws. Both of these views conclude that
physics and computation are linked together at a very fundamental level.
Understanding the convergence of computation and physics will lead to a
better understanding of using physical mechanisms as computing engines,
and also lead to a better understanding of how the universe is organized.
This field will become increasingly important as the complexity and
computational horsepower requirements continually exceed the available
computing engines we are able to design or build.
The keynote speaker for this workshop will be Rolf Landauer, who
co-organized the first conference on the Physics of Computation.
Creative thinkers are welcome from any background, but basic interest or
expertise in physics, computer sciences, mathematics, philosophy and/or
psychology will contribute to the discussions. You are not expected to
come with answers, but with an interest in exploring the questions. We
are interested in papers that unify Computation (Information Theory,
Communication Theory, Algorithms, Cellular Automata, Automatic Learning,
Neural Networks, Architecture, Simulation, etc) and Physics (Entropy,
Thermodynamics, Complexity, Quantum Theory, Energy/mass, Relativity,
Gravity, etc). The goal of this workshop is to establish links between
participants from various backgrounds.
BACKGROUND: The first conference on the Physics of Computation was held
in 1981 at MIT. The papers from that conference were printed in the 1982
International Journal for Theoretical Physics, Vol 21, April, June, and
December issues. Work in this field has focused on how energy
consumption and computation are related. Many excellent papers on
reversible computation, and energy costs/limits of computation, and
quantum models of computation provide introductions to the subject. We
are assembling a bibliography for this field.
SUBMISSION: Each prospective attendee is requested to submit a position
paper of 1-4 pages (plus 1 page of references). Please send your
submission by Aug 7, both by surface mail (three copies) and also
electronically (if possible) to:
Douglas Matzke EMAIL: matzke@hc.ti.com
Texas Instruments Incorporated PHONE: (214) 917-7426
PO BOX 655621, MS 369 FAX: (214) 917-7487
Dallas, Texas 75265
Notification of acceptance (limit of 100 people) will be mailed by Aug
24, 1992. The technical committee will group submissions into relevant
topics, and select papers and panel members. Time for questions after
each talk and breakout sessions will provide structured time for
discussion and participation. Copies of the position papers will be
distributed at registration.
REGISTRATION (if position paper is accepted): A block of rooms is being
reserved at a North Dallas Area Hotel. Full registration details will be
mailed with acceptance notification. The room rate will be $59 flat
rate. The workshop fee will be $100, payment by check or credit card.
Transportation to the hotel: Supershuttle or Taxi. Free hotel shuttles
for transportation around Addison.
SCHEDULE: Friday August 7: Position papers due
Monday August 24: Notification of acceptance and final schedule
Thursday Oct 1: Out of town arrival, early registration,
& Reception
Friday Oct 2 thru Sunday Oct 4 (noon): Physics of Computation
Workshop
PLEASE POST AND FORWARD
------------------------------
End of Neuron Digest [Volume 9 Issue 31]
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