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Neuron Digest Volume 11 Number 34
Neuron Digest Monday, 31 May 1993 Volume 11 : Issue 34
Today's Topics:
Call for papers: SAB94
KR94: Call for Papers
CALL FOR PAPERS: Psychology Graduate Students Journal (c)
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: call for papers: SAB94
From: Phil Husbands <philh@cogs.sussex.ac.uk>
Date: Thu, 22 Apr 93 14:44:38 +0000
==============================================================================
Conference Announcement and Call For Papers
FROM ANIMALS TO ANIMATS
Third International Conference on Simulation of Adaptive Behavior (SAB94)
Brighton, UK, August 8-12, 1994
The object of the conference is to bring together researchers in
ethology, psychology, ecology, cybernetics, artificial intelligence,
robotics, and related fields so as to further our understanding of
the behaviors and underlying mechanisms that allow animals and,
potentially, robots to adapt and survive in uncertain environments.
The conference will focus particularly on well-defined models,
computer simulations, and built robots in order to help characterize
and compare various organizational principles or architectures
capable of inducing adaptive behavior in real or artificial animals.
Contributions treating any of the following topics from the
perspective of adaptive behavior will receive special emphasis.
Individual and collective behavior Autonomous robots
Neural correlates of behavior Hierarchical and parallel organizations
Perception and motor control Emergent structures and behaviors
Motivation and emotion Problem solving and planning
Action selection and behavioral Goal directed behavior
sequences Neural networks and evolutionary
Ontogeny, learning and evolution computation
Internal world models Characterization of environments
and cognitive processes Applied adaptive behavior
Authors should make every effort to suggest implications of their
work for both natural and artificial animals. Papers which do not
deal explicitly with adaptive behavior will be rejected.
Submission Instructions
Authors are requested to send five copies (hard copy only) of a full paper
to the Program Chair (Dave Cliff). Papers should not exceed 10 pages
(excluding the title page), with 1 inch margins all around, and no smaller
than 10 pt (12 pitch) type (Times Roman preferred).
Each paper must include a title page containing the following: (1) Full
names, postal addresses, phone numbers, email addresses (if available),
and fax numbers for each author, (2) A 100-200 word abstract, (3) The
topic area(s) in which the paper could be reviewed (see list above).
Camera ready versions of the papers, in two-column format, will be
required after acceptance. Computer, video, and robotic demonstrations
are also invited. Please contact Phil Husbands to make arrangements for
demonstrations. Other program proposals will also be considered.
Conference committee
Conference Chair
Philip HUSBANDS
School of Cognitive and Computing Sciences
University of Sussex
Brighton BN1 9QN
UK
e-mail: philh@cogs.susx.ac.uk
Jean-Arcady MEYER
Groupe de Bioinformatique
URA686.Ecole Normale Superieure
46 rue d'Ulm
75230 Paris Cedex 05
France
e-mail: meyer@wotan.ens.fr
Stewart WILSON
The Rowland Institute for Science
100 Cambridge Parkway
Cambridge, MA 02142
USA
e-mail: wilson@smith.rowland.org
Program Chair
David CLIFF
School of Cognitive and Computing Sciences
University of Sussex
Brighton BN1 9QN
UK
e-mail: davec@cogs.susx.ac.uk
Financial Chair: P. Husbands, H. Roitblat
Local Arrangements: I. Harvey, P. Husbands
Program Committee
M. Arbib, USA; R. Arkin, USA; R. Beer, USA; A. Berthoz, France; L. Booker,
USA; R. Brooks, USA; P. Colgan, Canada; T. Collett, UK; H. Cruse, Germany;
J. Daugman, UK; J. Delius, Germany; A. Dickinson, UK; J. Ferber, France;
N. Franceschini, France; S. Goss, Belgium; I. Harvey, UK; I. Horswill, USA;
L. Kaelbling, USA; H. Klopf, USA; L-J. Lin, USA; P. Maes, USA; M. Mataric,
USA; D. McFarland, UK; G. Miller, UK; R. Pfeifer, Switzerland; H. Roitblat,
USA; J. Slotine, USA; O. Sporns, USA; J. Staddon, USA; F. Toates, UK; P. Todd,
USA; S. Tsuji, Japan; W. Uttal, USA; D. Waltz, USA.
Official Language: English
Publisher: MIT Press/Bradford Books
Important Dates
===============
JAN 5, 1994: Submission deadline
MAR 10: Notification of acceptance or rejection
APR 10: Camera ready revised versions due
MAY 1: Early registration deadline
JUL 8: Regular registration deadline
AUG 8-12: Conference dates
General queries to: sab94@cogs.susx.ac.uk
==============================================================================
------------------------------
Subject: KR94: Call for Papers
From: KR94 Conference Service <kr94@mail2.ai.univie.ac.at>
Date: Fri, 23 Apr 93 16:59:40 +0100
KR'94 - CALL FOR PAPERS
FOURTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON
PRINCIPLES OF
KNOWLEDGE REPRESENTATION AND REASONING
Gustav Stresemann Institut, Bonn, Germany
May 24-27, 1994
with support from Gesellschaft fuer Informatik
Explicit representations of knowledge manipulated by inference
algorithms provide an important foundation for much work in Artificial
Intelligence, from natural language to expert systems, and a growing
number of researchers study the principles governing systems based on
such representations and reasoning. The KR conferences bring together
these researchers in a more intimate setting than that of general AI
conferences, and provide authors with the opportunity to give
presentations of adequate length to present substantial results.
This year's conference will take place in Europe for the first time.
The conference emphasizes both the theoretical principles of knowledge
representation and reasoning and the relationships between these
principles and their embodiments in working systems. Authors are
encouraged to relate their work to at least one of the following
questions:
(1) What issues arise in representing and using knowledge about real
problems, and how can they be addressed?
(2) What are the theoretical principles in knowledge representation
and reasoning?
(3) How can these principles be embodied in implemented knowledge
representation systems, and what practical tradeoffs arise?
(4) How do these approaches to problems relate to corresponding
approaches in other parts of AI (natural language, robotics, etc.)
or in other fields (psychology, philosophy, logic, economics,
cognitive science, computer science, management, engineering, etc.)
Submissions are encouraged in (but are not limited to) the following
topic areas:
REPRESENTATIONAL FORMALISMS REASONING METHODS AND TASKS
- - logics of knowledge and belief - deduction
- - nonmonotonic logics - abduction
- - temporal logics - induction
- - spatial logics - deliberation and decision analysis
- - taxonomic logics - planning and plan analysis
- - logics of uncertainty - learning
and evidence - diagnosis
- - logics of preference and utility - classification
- - logics of intentions and actions - inheritance
- - deontic logics - belief management and revision
- constraint solving
- analogical reasoning
- reasoning about reasoning
GENERIC ONTOLOGIES FOR DESCRIBING ISSUES IN IMPLEMENTED KR&R SYSTEMS
- - time - comparative evaluation
- - space - empirical results
- - causality - benchmarking and testing
- - resources - reasoning architectures
- - constraints - efficiency/completeness tradeoffs
- - decisions - complexity
- - activities - algorithms
- - mental states - embedded systems
- - multi-agent organizations - knowledge sharing and reuse
- - applications classes, e.g. medicine - standards
SUBMISSION OF PAPERS
The Program Committee will review EXTENDED ABSTRACTS rather than complete
papers. Abstracts must be at most twelve (12) pages with a maximum of 38
lines per page and an average of 75 characters per line (corresponding to
the LaTeX article-style, 12pt), excluding the title page and the
bibliography. Overlength submissions will be rejected without review.
All abstracts must be submitted on 8 1/2" x 11" or A4 paper, and printed
or typed in 12-point font (10 characters/inch on a typewriter). Dot
matrix printout, FAX, or electronic submission will not be accepted.
Each submission should include the names and complete addresses
(including email, when possible) of all authors. Correspondence will be
sent to the first author, unless otherwise indicated. Also, authors
should indicate under the title which of the questions and/or topic areas
listed above best describes their paper (if none is appropriate, please
give a set of keywords that best describe the topic of the paper). To be
considered, five (5) paper copies of the extended abstract must be
received by one of the program co-chairs no later than November 8, 1993
(or must have been sent by express courier no later than November 5).
Authors are also STRONGLY encouraged (it is to their advantage) to submit
an electronic abstract in the form described below. Electronic abstracts
that accurately reflect the contents of the papers will significantly aid
the reviewing process by helping direct the papers to the most
appropriate reviewers.
MULTIPLE SUBMISSIONS
Submitted papers must be unpublished and substantively different from
papers currently under review. Papers may be submitted after January
1, 1994 to other conferences as long as (a) the prior submission to
KR'94 is noted on those submissions and (b) the paper is withdrawn
from the later conference if accepted by KR'94.
ELECTRONIC ABSTRACT
In addition to submitting the paper copies of the extended abstract,
authors should (if possible) send a short (200 word) electronic
abstract of their paper to KR94-abstracts@medg.lcs.mit.edu to aid in
the reviewing process. In order to make use of software for
classifying papers and selecting reviewers, most of the electronic
abstract must be in plain ASCII text (no LaTeX or other formatting
commands) in the following format, separating each field from the next
with a blank line.
TITLE: <title of paper>
FIRST AUTHOR: <last name, first name>
FIRST ADDRESS: <first author address or affiliation>
COAUTHORS: <their names, if any>
OTHER ADDRESSES: <addresses or affiliations of coauthors>
CONTENT AREAS: <at most three content areas, separated by commas>
KEYWORDS: <keywords, separated by commas>
ABSTRACT: <text of the abstract>
The content areas preferably should be drawn from the topics listed
above, with other areas added only if necessary. The keywords are to
aid the human reviewers only and may be chosen as desired. The text
of the abstract field may include formatting commands, if desired, but
these should be omitted from all other fields. A blank form for
electronic abstracts and an example abstract may be found at the end
of this Call.
REVIEW OF PAPERS
Submissions will be judged on clarity, significance, and originality.
An important criterion for acceptance is that the paper clearly
contributes to principles of representation and reasoning that are
likely to influence current and future AI practice. Extended
abstracts should contain enough information to enable the Program
Committee to identify and evaluate the principal contribution of the
research and its importance. It should also be clear from the
extended abstract how the work compares to related work in the field.
NOTIFICATION
Authors will be notified of the Program Committee's decision by
January 24, 1994. Notification will be made by electronic mail
whenever possible.
FINAL PAPERS
Authors of accepted papers will be expected to submit substantially
longer full papers for the conference proceedings. Final camera-ready
copies of the full papers will be due February 28, 1994. Final papers
will be allowed at most twelve (12) double-column pages in the
conference proceedings (corresponding to approximately 28
article-style LaTeX pages; a style file will be provided by the
publisher).
PLANNING TO ATTEND
People planning to attend the conference are asked to send a note
stating their intention as early as possible to the local conference
organizer, Ms. Christine Harms (Christine.Harms@gmd.de), in order to
help estimate the facilities needed for the conference. (Postal
address: Christine Harms, c/o GMD, Schloss Birlinghoven, W-5205 Sankt
Augustin 1, Germany. Phone: +49-2241-14-2473, Fax: +49-2241-14-2472.)
CONFERENCE CHAIR
Erik Sandewall
Department of Computer and Information Science
Linkoeping University
S-58183 Linkoeping
SWEDEN
Voice: +46 1328 1408
Fax: +46 1328 2606
Email: ejs@ida.liu.se
PROGRAM CO-CHAIRS
Jon Doyle Piero Torasso
MIT Universita' di Torino
Laboratory for Computer Science Dipartimento di Informatica
545 Technology Square Corso Svizzera 185
Cambridge, MA 02139 I-10149 Torino
USA ITALY
Voice: +1 (617) 253-3512 Voice: +39 11 7712002
Fax: +1 (617) 258-8682 Fax: +39 11 751603
Email: doyle@lcs.mit.edu Email: torasso@di.unito.it
LOCAL ARRANGEMENT CHAIR
Gerhard Lakemeyer
Institute of Computer Science III
University of Bonn
Roemerstrasse 164
D-5300 Bonn 1
GERMANY
Voice: +49-228-550-281
Fax: +49-228-550-382
Email: gerhard@cs.uni-bonn.de
PUBLICITY CHAIR
Werner Horn
Austrian Research Institute for Artificial Intelligence
Schottengasse 3
A-1010 Vienna
AUSTRIA
Voice: +43 1 53532810
Fax: +43 1 5320652
Email: werner@ai.univie.ac.at
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Giuseppe Attardi (U. Pisa, Italy),
Franz Baader (DFKI, Germany),
Fahiem Bacchus (U. Waterloo, Canada),
Philippe Besnard (IRISA, France),
Piero Bonissone (GE, USA),
Craig Boutilier (UBC, Canada),
Maurice Bruynooghe (KUL, Belgium),
Anthony Cohn (U. Leeds, UK),
Ernest Davis (NYU, USA),
Rina Dechter (UC Irvine, USA),
Johan de Kleer (Xerox, USA),
Oskar Dressler (Siemens, Germany),
Jennifer Elgot-Drapkin (Arizona State U., USA),
Richard Fikes (Stanford U., USA),
Alan Frisch (U. York, UK),
Hector Geffner (Simon Bolivar U., Venezuela),
Georg Gottlob (TU Wien, Austria),
Pat Hayes (U. Illinois, USA),
Hirofumi Katsuno (NTT, Japan),
Henry Kautz (AT&T, USA),
Sarit Kraus (Bar-Ilan U., Israel),
Maurizio Lenzerini (U. Rome, Italy),
Vladimir Lifschitz (U. Texas, USA),
David Makinson (Unesco, France),
Joao Martins (IST, Portugal)
David McAllester (MIT, USA),
John-Jules Meyer (U. Amsterdam, Netherlands),
Katharina Morik (U. Dortmund, Germany),
Johanna Moore (U. Pittsburgh, USA),
Hideyuki Nakashima (ETL, Japan),
Bernhard Nebel (DFKI, Germany),
Hans Juergen Ohlbach (Max Planck Institut, Germany),
Lin Padgham (Linkoeping U., Sweden),
Peter Patel-Schneider (AT&T, USA),
Ramesh Patil (USC/ISI, USA),
Raymond Perrault (SRI, USA),
David Poole (UBC, Canada),
Henri Prade (IRIT, France),
Anand Rao (AAII, Australia),
Jeff Rosenschein (Hebrew U., Israel),
Stuart Russell (UC Berkeley, USA),
Len Schubert (Rochester)
Marek Sergot (Imperial College, UK),
Lokendra Shastri (U. Pennsylvania, USA),
Yoav Shoham (Stanford U., USA),
Lynn Stein (MIT, USA),
Devika Subramanian (Cornell U., USA),
William Swartout (USC/ISI, USA),
Austin Tate (AIAI, Edinburgh, UK),
Peter van Beek (U. Alberta, Canada),
Michael Wellman (U. Michigan, USA)
IMPORTANT DATES
Submission receipt deadline: November 8, 1993
Author notification date: January 24, 1994
Camera-ready copy due to publisher: February 28, 1994
Conference: May 24-27, 1994
<-- cut here -->
- ------------------------------------------------------------
KR'94 Electronic Abstract Form
Complete and send to KR94-abstracts@medg.lcs.mit.edu
- ------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE:
FIRST AUTHOR:
FIRST ADDRESS:
COAUTHORS:
OTHER ADDRESSES:
CONTENT AREAS:
KEYWORDS:
ABSTRACT:
- ------------------------------------------------------------
<-- cut here -->
- ------------------------------------------------------------
KR'94 Electronic Abstract Example
- ------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE: Begriffsschrift: A formula language, modeled upon that of
arithmetic, for pure thought
FIRST AUTHOR: Frege, Gottlob
FIRST ADDRESS: Department of Mathematics, University of Jena, Germany
CONTENT AREAS: logics, deduction
KEYWORDS: ideography, conceptual content, inferential sequence,
argument, function
ABSTRACT: I present an ideography to provide the most reliable test of
the validity of a chain of inferences, one that points out every
presupposition that tries to sneak in unnoticed, so that its origin
can be investigated. I am confident that my ideography can be
successfully used wherever special value must be placed on the
validity of proofs, as for example when the foundations of the
differential and integral calculus are established.
------------------------------
Subject: CALL FOR PAPERS: Psychology Graduate Students Journal (c)
From: Matthew Simpson <054340%UOTTAWA.BITNET@VM1.MCGILL.CA>
Date: Fri, 23 Apr 93 13:56:32 -0500
===============================
=== GENERAL CALL FOR PAPERS ===
===============================
The Psychology Graduate Student Journal: The PSYCGRAD Journal (c)
Address: psygrd-j@acadvm1.uottawa.ca
psygrd-j@uottawa.bitnet
The PSYCGRAD Project is proud to announce that papers written by graduate
students in the field of psychology are being accepted for publication in
The Psychology Graduate Student Journal: The PSYCGRAD Journal
(psygrd-j@acadvm1.uottawa.ca psygrd-j@uottawa.bitnet). The purpose of
The Psychology Graduate Student Journal is to publish professional-level
papers in the field of psychology from the graduate student perspective.
This journal is being compiled and produced by a team of 20 editors
covering 19 broad topic areas in the field of psychology. All editors
are graduate students in or directly associated with the field of
psychology. The journal is open for public subscription and is targeted
to anyone interested in psychology.
TOPICS CURRENTLY REQUESTED AND BEING COVERED:
- ---------------------------------------------
Aging
Cognitive Psychology
Comparative & Developmental Psychobiology
Developmental Psychology
Educational Psychology
Human Sexuality
Industrial / Organizational Psychology
Graduate Student Issues
Motivation and Emotion
Neuroscience
Personality
Psycholinguistics
Psychological Assessment
Psychopathology-Nosology-Etiology
Psychophysics and Perception
Psychotherapy
School Counseling
Social Cognition
Social Psychology
Volumes of the journal are each compiled by a member of the editing team.
Each member is responsible for a specific topic area. All submissions
are subject to the editing process and must adhere to the guidelines
found below. Please review this list of editors. Please be invited to
contact via e-mail the editor who is primarily responsible for the topic
for which you would like to publish your paper.
NAMES, ADDRESSES, AND TOPICS OF EDITORS: (alphabetically by topic)
Name: David Kurzman
Institution: Concordia, Montreal Quebec
Address: davek@vax2.concordia.ca
Topic: Aging
Name: Matthew Prull
Institution: Claremont Graduate School
Address: PRULLM@CGSVAX.CLAREMONT.EDU
Topic: Cognitive Psychology
Name: Kathy Morgan
Address: kmorgan@wheatnma.bitnet
kathleen_morgan@wheatonma.edu
Topic: Comparative and Developmental Psychobiology
Name: Jason Evan Mihalko
Institution: City University of New York
Name: ak789@po.cwru.edu
Topic: Developmental Psychology
Industrial / Organizational Psychology
Names: Christopher G Kolar
& Punya Mishra (co-editor)
Institution: University of Illinois, Champaign - Urbana
Address: c-kolar@uiuc.edu
p-mishra@uiuc.edu
Topic: Educational Psychology
Name: Rick Adams
Institution: Norwich University, Montpelier, VT
Jackson Community College, Jackson, MI
Address: adamsr@ais.org
Topic: Human Sexuality
Name: Nancy Briton
Address: briton@nuhub.bitnet
briton@northeastern.edu
Topic: Graduate Student Issues
Name: Todd D. Nelson
Institution: Michigan State University
Address: 22817MGR@MSU.Bitnet
nelsont1@student.msu.edu (Internet)
Topics: Motivation and Emotion
Name: Monika Trzcinska
Address: 054470@uottawa.bitnet
054470@acadvm1.uottawa.ca
Topic: Neuroscience
Name: Lynn E. Hanninen
Address: leh1@Lehigh.EDU
Institution: Lehigh University, Bethlehem PA
Topic: Co-editing Neuroscience
Name: Tracy Moncrief
Institution: Claremont Graduate School
Address: moncriet@cgsvax.claremont.edu
Topic: Personality
Name: Zazie Todd
Institution: University of Nottingham, England
Address: kzt@psychology.nottingham.ac.uk
Topic: Psycholinguistics
Name: David M. Fresco
Address: fresco@unc.bitnet
fresco@med.unc.edu
Topic: Psychopathology-Nosology-Etiology
Name: Rodney Timbrook
Institution: Kent State University
Address: rtimbroo@kentvm
Topics: Psychological Assessment
Name: Christopher J. Whaley
Institution: Georgia Tech
Address: whaley@psy.gatech.edu
Topic: Psychophysics and Perception
Name: Peter Fay
Address: faype@bcvms.bc.edu
faype@bcvms.bitnet
Topic: Psychotherapy
Name: Paul Lowry
Institution: University of Florida
Address: plowry@nervm.bitnet
plowry@nervm.nerdc.ufl.edu
Topic: School Counseling
Name: Elizabeth Case
Institution: DePaul University, Chicago
Address: PSYGRDDEC@orion.depaul.edu
Topic: Social Cognition
Co-editing Motivation and Emotion
Name: Sharon Gordon
Institution: University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Address: gordonse@iris.uncg.edu
gordonse@uncg.bitnet
Topic: Social Psychology
Executive Editor - Matthew Simpson
School of Psychology - University of Ottawa
Ottawa - Ontario - Canada (see address below)
REQUIREMENTS FOR SUBMISSION:
1. All submitted articles should be in text format.
2. All articles should contain a table of contents outlined according to
0.0 Abstract
1 Main topic number one
1.1 First sub-topic of main topic one
1.1.1 First sub-sub-topic of main topic one
1.2 Second sub-topic of main topic one
2 Second main topic
etc...
3. Each paragraph should begin with the appropriate number outlined in
the table of contents.
(Items 2 and 3, mentioned above, are necessary because bold and
italic fonts are not recognized on most electronic-mail systems).
4. Each line should be no greater than 70 columns in width. This is
necessary to decrease line-wrapping across systems.
5. APA guidelines must be adhered to (except where otherwise
inconvenienced by electronic format, eg. items above)
6. The author of the article maintains full copyright. However,
The PSYCGRAD Journal retains the right, for its purposes,
to replicate and distribute the article.
7. Articles must not have been published elsewhere in written form.
(Not published in journals; May have been posters or talks at
conferences)
Articles accepted for publication in The PSYCGRAD Journal may
be published elsewhere at a later date with the permission of
the Executive Editor if the editor(s) of the second journal
are notified of this publication, and it is noted in any
subsequent publication that the article was originally published
in The PSYCGRAD Journal.
8. After the title of each article, the author's name, postal address,
e-mail address, and affiliated institution must appear.
9. A list of keywords must also be provided.
PSYGRD-J
Subscriptions are open to the public. The journal is currently
being maintained by a program called Listserv, and is distributed
to the Internet and Bitnet electronic community. It is intended
that with time, the journal will obtain ISSN classification and
operate as a landmark publication in the psychology community.
Archives will be available via FTP at aix1.uottawa.ca and by Gopher
at panda1.uottawa.ca
SUBSCRIBE to the journal by sending the following
command to listserv@uottawa
or listserv@acadvm1.uottawa.ca
sub psygrd-j Yourfirstname Yourlastname
The Psychology Graduate Student Journal: The PSYCGRAD Journal (c) is part
of a larger system, called The PSYCGRAD Project. The project is broken
into two main functions: graduate student discussion and communication;
and graduate student publication.
**********************************************************************
The PSYCGRAD Project
=== Communications ===
PSYCGRAD@UOTTAWA (Psychology Graduate Students Discussion List)
PSYGRRAD@UOTTAWA (The PSYCGRAD Digest)
- with the SET PSYCGRAD DIGEST option)
bit.listserv.psycgrad (The NETNEWS Shadow of PSYCGRAD)
=== Publication / Production ===
PSYGRD-J@UOTTAWA (The Psychology Graduate Student Journal:
The PSYCGRAD Journal)
=== Gopher Access ===
panda1.uottawa.ca (The PSYCGRAD Gopher)
=== FTP Access ===
aix1.uottawa.ca (Archives Driving the Gopher)
/u/ftp/pub/psycgrad
(@uottawa = @acadvm1.uottawa.ca for those with internet access)
*********************************************************************
(c) The Psychology Graduate Student Journal is a production of The
PSYCGRAD Project (Copyright by Matthew Simpson).
For a more detailed announcement of The PSYCGRAD Project, contact
The Executive Producer and Editor, Matthew Simpson, at the address below.
Have Fun!
O======================================================================O
| _ l _ * Matthew Simpson * BITNET: |
| \_l_/ * School of Psychology * 054340@uottawa.bitnet |
| l * 145 Jean Jacques Lussier * INTERNET: |
| l * Ottawa, Ontario K1N 6N5 * 054340@acadvm1.uottawa.ca |
O======================================================================O
------------------------------
End of Neuron Digest [Volume 11 Issue 34]
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