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Neuron Digest Volume 12 Number 25
Neuron Digest Friday, 10 Dec 1993 Volume 12 : Issue 25
Today's Topics:
NNSP'94 Call For Papers
Call for Papers: COLT'94
CFP: 1994 Conference of the Cognitive Science Society
Announcement - General Purpose Parallel Computing
New request for ad for ICONIP
ICNN 94 Deadline Extension & Call For Papers
Send submissions, questions, address maintenance, and requests for old
issues to "neuron-request@psych.upenn.edu". The ftp archives are
available from psych.upenn.edu (130.91.68.31). Back issues requested by
mail will eventually be sent, but may take a while.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Subject: NNSP'94 Call For Papers
From: Jenq-Neng Hwang <hwang@pierce.ee.washington.edu>
Date: Wed, 29 Sep 93 18:28:41 -0800
1994 IEEE WORKSHOP ON
NEURAL NETWORKS FOR SIGNAL PROCESSING
September 6-8, 1994 Ermioni, Greece
Sponsored by the IEEE Signal Processing Society
(In cooperation with the IEEE Neural Networks Council)
GENERAL CHAIR
John Vlontzos
INTRACOM S.A.
Peania, Attica, Greece
jvlo@intranet.gr
PROGRAM CHAIR
Jenq-Neng Hwang
University of Washington
Seattle, Washington, USA
hwang@ee.washington.edu
PROCEEDINGS CHAIR
Elizabeth J. Wilson
Raytheon Co.
Marlborough, MA, USA
bwilson@sud2.ed.ray.com
FINANCE CHAIR
Demetris Kalivas
INTRACOM S.A.
Peania, Attica, Greece
dkal@intranet.gr
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Joshua Alspector
Les Atlas
Charles Bachmann
David Burr
Rama Chellappa
Lee Giles
Steve J. Hanson
Yu-Hen Hu
Jenq-Neng Hwang
Bing-Huang Juang
Shigeru Katagiri
Sun-Yuan Kung
Gary M. Kuhn
Stephanos Kollias
Richard Lippmann
Fleming Lure
John Makhoul
Richard Mammone
Elias Manolakos
Nahesan Niranjan
Tomaso Poggio
Jose Principe
Wojtek Przytula
Ulrich Ramacher
Bhaskar D. Rao
Andreas Stafylopatis
Noboru Sonehara
John Sorensen
Yoh'ichi Tohkura
John Vlontzos
Raymond Watrous
Christian Wellekens
Yiu-Fai Issac Wong
CALL FOR PAPERS
The fourth of a series of IEEE workshops on Neural Networks for Signal
Processing will be held at the Porto Hydra Resort Hotel, Ermioni, Greece,
in September of 1994. Papers are solicited for, but not limited to,
the following topics:
APPLICATIONS:
Image, speech, communications, sensors, medical, adaptive
filtering, OCR, and other general signal processing and pattern
recognition topics.
THEORIES:
Generalization and regularization, system identification, parameter
estimation, new network architectures, new learning algorithms, and
wavelet in NNs.
IMPLEMENTATIONS:
Software, digital, analog, and hybrid technologies.
Prospective authors are invited to submit 4 copies of extended summaries
of no more than 6 pages. The top of the first page of the summary should
include a title, authors' names, affiliations, address, telephone and
fax numbers and email address if any. Camera-ready full papers
of accepted proposals will be published in a hard-bound volume by IEEE
and distributed at the workshop. Due to workshop facility constraints,
attendance will be limited with priority given to those who submit
written technical contributions. For further information, please
contact Mrs. Myra Sourlou at the NNSP'94 Athens office,
(Tel.) +30 1 6644961, (Fax) +30 1 6644379, (e-mail)
msou@intranet.gr.
Please send paper submissions to:
Prof. Jenq-Neng Hwang
IEEE NNSP'94
Department of Electrical Engineering, FT-10
University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA
Phone: (206) 685-1603, Fax: (206) 543-3842
SCHEDULE
Submission of extended summary: February 15
Notification of acceptance: April 19
Submission of photo-ready paper: June 1
Advanced registration, before: June 1
------------------------------
Subject: Call for Papers: COLT'94
From: Ming Li <mli@math.uwaterloo.ca>
Date: Wed, 29 Sep 93 23:26:18 -0500
CALL FOR PAPERS---COLT 94
Seventh ACM Conference on
Computational Learning Theory
New Brunswick, New Jersey
July 12--15, 1994
The Seventh ACM Conference on Computational Learning Theory (COLT
94) will be held at the New Brunswick campus of Rutgers
University from Tuesday, July 12, through Friday, July 15, 1994.
The conference will be co-located with the Eleventh International
Conference on Machine Learning (ML 94), which will be held from
Sunday, July 10, through Wednesday, July 13. So the two
conferences overlap on Tuesday and Wednesday.
The COLT 94 conference is sponsored jointly by the ACM Special
Interest Groups for Algorithms and Computation Theory (SIGACT)
and Artificial Intelligence (SIGART).
We invite papers in all areas that relate directly to the
analysis of learning algorithms and the theory of machine
learning, including artificial and biological neural networks,
robotics, pattern recognition, inductive inference, information
theory, decision theory, Bayesian/MDL estimation, statistical
physics, and cryptography. We look forward to a lively,
interdisciplinary meeting. In particular we expect some fruitful
interaction between the research communities of the two
overlapping conferences. There will be a number of joint invited
talks. Prof. Michael Jordan from MIT will be one of the invited
speakers; the others will be announced at a later date.
Abstract Submission: Authors should submit twelve copies
(preferably two-sided copies) of an extended abstract to be
received by Thursday, February 3, 1994, to
Manfred Warmuth - COLT 94
225 Applied Sciences
Department of Computer Science
University of California
Santa Cruz, California 95064
An abstract must be received by February 3, 1994 (or
postmarked January 23 and sent airmail, or sent overnight
delivery on February 2). This deadline is FIRM! Papers that have
appeared in journals or other conferences, or that are being
submitted to other conferences, are not appropriate for
submission to COLT.
Abstract Format: The abstract should consist of a cover page with
title, authors' names, postal and e-mail addresses, and a 200-
word summary. The body of the abstract should be no longer than
10 pages with roughly 35 lines/page in 12-point font. Papers
deviating significantly from this length constraint will not be
considered. The body should include a clear definition of the
theoretical model used, an overview of the results, and some
discussion of their significance, including comparison to other
work. Proofs or proof sketches should be included in the
technical section. Experimental results are welcome, but are
expected to be supported by theoretical analysis.
Notification: Authors will be notified of acceptance or rejection
by a letter mailed on or before Monday, April 4, with possible
earlier notification via e-mail. Final camera-ready papers will
be due on Tuesday, May 3.
Program Format: Depending on submissions, and in order to
accommodate a broad variety of papers, the final program may
consist of both "long" talks, and "short" talks, corresponding to
longer and shorter papers in the proceedings. The short talks
will also be coupled with a poster presentation in special poster
sessions. By default, all papers will be considered for both
categories. Authors who do *not* want their papers considered
for the short category should indicate that fact in the cover
letter. The cover letter should also specify the contact author
and give his/her e-mail.
Program Chair: Manfred Warmuth (UC Santa Cruz, e-mail to
colt94@cse.ucsc.edu).
Conference and Local Arrangements Co-Chairs: Robert Schapire and
Michael Kearns (AT&T Bell Laboratories, e-mail to
colt94@research.att.com).
Program Committee: Shun'ichi Amari (U. Tokyo), Avrim Blum
(Carnegie Mellon), Nader Bshouty (U. Calgary), Bill Gasarch (U.
Maryland), Tom Hancock (Siemens), Michael Kearns (AT&T), Sara
Solla (Holmdel), Prasad Tadepalli (Oregon St. U.), Jeffrey
Vitter (Duke U.), Thomas Zeugmann (TU. Darmstadt).
------------------------------
Subject: CFP: 1994 Conference of the Cognitive Science Society
From: mimi@cc.gatech.edu (Mimi Recker)
Date: Tue, 05 Oct 93 09:15:18 -0500
Sixteenth Annual Conference of the
COGNITIVE SCIENCE SOCIETY
August 13-16, 1994
Georgia Institute of Technology
Atlanta, Georgia
CALL FOR PAPERS
Due date: Friday, January 14, 1994
As Cognitive Science has matured over the years, it has broadened its
scope in order to address fundamental issues of cognition embedded
within culturally, socially, and technologically rich environments. The
Sixteenth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society aims at
broad coverage of the many topics, methodologies, and disciplines that
comprise Cognitive Science. The conference will highlight new ideas,
theories, methods and results in a wide range of research areas relating
to cognition.
The conference will feature plenary addresses by invited speakers,
technical paper and poster sessions, research symposia and panels, and a
banquet. The conference will be held at Georgia Tech in Atlanta, home
of the Civil Rights movement, the 1996 Olympics, and the Dogwood
Festival.
GUIDELINES FOR PAPER SUBMISSIONS
Novel research papers are invited on any topic related to cognition.
Reports of research that cuts across traditional disciplinary boundaries
and investigations of cognition within cultural, social and
technological contexts are encouraged. To create a high-quality program
representing the newest ideas and results in the field, submitted papers
will be evaluated through peer review with respect to several criteria,
including originality, quality, and significance of research, relevance
to a broad audience of cognitive science researchers, and clarity of
presentation. Accepted papers will be presented at the conference as
talks or posters, as appropriate. Papers may present results from
completed research as well as report on current research with an
emphasis on novel approaches, methods, ideas, and perspectives.
Authors should submit five (5) copies of the paper in hard copy form by
Friday, January 14, 1994, to:
Prof. Ashwin Ram
Cognitive Science 1994 Submissions
Georgia Institute of Technology
College of Computing
801 Atlantic Drive
Atlanta, Georgia 30332-0280
If confirmation of receipt is desired, please use certified mail or
enclose a self-addressed stamped envelope or postcard.
DAVID MARR MEMORIAL PRIZES FOR EXCELLENT STUDENT PAPERS
Papers with a student first author are eligible to compete for a David
Marr Memorial Prize for excellence in research and presentation. The
David Marr Prizes are accompanied by a $300.00 honorarium, and are
funded by an anonymous donor.
LENGTH
Papers must be a maximum of eleven (11) pages long (excluding only the
cover page but including figures and references), with 1 inch margins on
all sides (i.e., the text should be 6.5 inches by 9 inches, including
footnotes but excluding page numbers), double-spaced, and in 12-point
type. Each page should be numbered (excluding the cover page).
Camera-ready papers will be required only after authors are notified of
acceptance.
Template and style files conforming to these specifications for several
text formatting programs will be available by anonymous FTP from
ftp.cc.gatech.edu:/pub/cogsci94.
COVER PAGE
Each copy of the paper must include a cover page, separate from the body
of the paper, which includes:
1. Title of paper.
2. Full names, postal addresses, phone numbers, and e-mail addresses of
all authors.
3. An abstract of no more than 200 words.
4. Three to five keywords in decreasing order of relevance. The
keywords will be used in the index for the proceedings.
5. Preference for presentation format: Talk or poster, talk only, poster
only. Accepted papers will be presented either as talks or posters,
depending on authors' preferences and reviewers' recommendations
about which would be more suitable, and will not reflect the
quality of the papers.
6. A note stating if the paper is eligible to compete for a Marr Prize.
DEADLINE
Papers must be received by Friday, January 14, 1994. Papers received
after this date will be recycled.
CALL FOR SYMPOSIA
In addition to the technical paper and poster sessions, the conference
will feature research symposia, panels, and workshops. Proposals for
symposia are invited. Proposals should indicate:
1. A brief description of the topic;
2. How the symposium would address a broad cognitive science audience,
and some evidence of interest;
3. Names of symposium organizer(s);
4. List of potential speakers, their topics, and some estimate of their
likelihood of participation;
5. Proposed symposium format (designed to last 90 minutes).
Symposium proposals should be sent as soon as possible, but no later
than January 14, 1994. Abstracts of the symposium talks will be
published in the proceedings.
CONFERENCE CHAIRS
Kurt Eiselt and Ashwin Ram
STEERING COMMITTEE
Dorrit Billman, Mike Byrne, Alex Kirlik, Janet Kolodner (chair), Nancy
Nersessian, Mimi Recker, and Tony Simon
PLEASE ADDRESS ALL CORRESPONDENCE TO:
Prof. Kurt Eiselt
Cognitive Science 1994 Conference
Georgia Institute of Technology
Cognitive Science Program
Atlanta, Georgia 30332-0505
E-mail: cogsci94@cc.gatech.edu
------------------------------
Subject: Announcement - General Purpose Parallel Computing
From: Ashok Gupta <gupta@prl.philips.co.uk>
Date: Thu, 02 Dec 93 10:09:43 -0300
The British Computer Society
Parallel Processing Specialist Group
(BCS PPSG)
General Purpose Parallel Computing
A One Day Open Meeting with Invited and Contributed Papers
22 December 1993, University of Westminster, London, UK
Invited speakers :
Les Valiant, Harvard University
Bill McColl, PRG, University of Oxford, UK
David May, Inmos, UK
A key factor for the growth of parallel computing is the availability of
port- able software. To be portable, software must be written to a model
of machine performance with universal applicability. Software providers
must be able to provide programs whose performance will scale with
machine and application size according to agreed principles. This
environment presupposes a model of paral- lel performance, and one which
will perform well for irregular as well as regu- lar patterns of
interaction. Adoption of a common model by machine architects, algorithm
& language designers and programmers is a precondition for general
purpose parallel computing.
Valiant's Bulk Synchronous Parallel (BSP) model provides a bridge between
appli- cation, language design and architecture for parallel computers.
BSP is of the same nature for parallel computing as the Von Neumann model
is for sequential computing. It forms the focus of a project for
scalable performance parallel architectures supporting architecture
independent software. The model and its implications for hardware and
software design will be described in invited and contributed talks.
The PPSG, founded in 1986, exists to foster development of parallel
architec- tures, languages and applications & to disseminate information
on parallel pro- cessing. Membership is completely open; you do not have
to be a member of the British Computer Society. For further information
about the group contact ei- ther of the following :
Chair : Mr. A. Gupta Membership Secretary: Dr. N. Tucker
Philips Research Labs, Crossoak Lane, Paradis Consultants, East Berriow,
Redhill, Surrey, RH1 5HA, UK Berriow Bridge, North Hill, Nr. Launceston,
gupta@prl.philips.co.uk Cornwall, PL15 7NL, UK
Please share this information and display this announcement
The British Computer Society
Parallel Processing Specialist Group
(BCS PPSG)
General Purpose Parallel Computing
22 December 1993,
Fyvie Hall, 309 Regent Street,
University of Westminster, London, UK
Provisional Programme
9 am-10 am Registration & Coffee
L. Valiant, Harvard University,
"Title to be announced"
W. McColl, Oxford University,
Programming models for General Purpose Parallel Computing
A. Chin, King's College, London University,
Locality of Reference in Bulk-Synchronous Parallel Computation
P. Thannisch et al, Edinburgh University,
Exponential Processor Requirements for Optimal Schedules
in Architecture with Locality
Lunch
D. May, Inmos
"Title to be announced"
R. Miller, Oxford University,
A Library for Bulk Synchronous Parallel Programming
C. Jesshope et al, Surrey University,
BSPC and the N-Computer
Tea/Coffee
P. Dew et al, Leeds University,
Scalable Parallel Computing using the XPRAM model
S. Turner et al, Exeter University,
Portability and Parallelism with `Lightweight P4'
N. Kalentery et al, University of Westminster,
From BSP to a Virtual Von Neumann Machine
R. Bisseling, Utrecht University,
Scientific Computing on Bulk Synchronous Parallel Architectures
B. Thompson et al, University College of Swansea,
Equational Specification of Synchronous Concurrent Algorithms and
Architectures
5.30 pm Close
Please share this information and display this announcement
The British Computer Society Parallel Processing Specialist Group
Booking Form/Invoice BCS VAT No. : 440-3490-76
Please reserve a place at the Conference on General Purpose Parallel Computing,
London, December 22 1993, for the individual(s) named below.
Name of delegate BCS membership no. Fee VAT Total
(if applicable)
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
Cheques, in pounds sterling, should be made payable to "BCS Parallel Processing
Specialist Group". Unfortunately credit card bookings cannot be accepted.
The delegate fees (including lunch, refreshments and proceedings) are
(in pounds sterling) :
Members of both PPSG & BCS: 55 + 9.62 VAT = 64.62
PPSG or BCS members: 70 + 12.25 VAT = 82.25
Non members: 90 + 15.75 VAT = 105.75
Full-time students: 25 + 4.37 VAT = 29.37
(Students should provide a letter of endorsement from their supervisor
that also clearly details their institution)
Contact Address: ___________________________________________
___________________________________________
___________________________________________
Email address: _________________
Date: _________________ Day time telephone: ________________
Places are limited so please return this form as soon as possible to :
Mrs C. Cunningham
BCS PPSG
2 Mildenhall Close, Lower Earley,
Reading, RG6 3AT, UK
(Phone 0734 665570)
------------------------------
Subject: New request for ad for ICONIP
From: <SP2996%KRHYUCC1.BITNET@pucc.Princeton.EDU>
Date: Thu, 02 Dec 93 16:08:00 +0000
******************************************************************************
CALL FOR PAPERS
ICONIP '94 - Seoul
International Conference on Neural Information Processing
October 17 - October 20, 1994
The Swiss Grand Hotel, Seoul, Korea
*******************************************************************************
Organized by Korean Association for Intelligent Information Systems
Sponsored by Asian Pacific Neural Network Assembly
In Cooperation with IEEE Neural Networks Council, International Neural
Network Society, European Neural Network Society.
Conference Co-Chairs: S. Amari, I. K. Kang, S. T. Yang
Intenational Advisory Committee: T. Kohonen, B. Widrow, R. J. Marks II,
H. Szu, W. Freeman, R. C. Eberhart,
I. Aleksander, G. Matsumoto, Y. S. Wu
Organizing Committee C-Chairs: S. Y. Bang, K. B. Cho, H. S. Chung
Program Committee Co-Chairs: S. Y. Lee, M. W. Kim, K. Fukushima, S. Grossberg,
E. Caianiello
Topics of Interests:
Neurobiological Systems Image Processing & Vision
Neural Networks Architecture Speech Recognition & Language
Network Dynamics Robotics & Control
Cognitive Science Implementation(Electronic, Optical,
and Bio-Chips)
Learning & Memory Hybrid Systems(Fuzzy Logic, Genetic Algorithm,
Expert Systems, Chaos, and AI)
Sensorimotor Systems Financial, Electric Power, Character and
Time-Series Speech Recongition, Optimization, and other
Applications.
Submission of Papers
Authors are required to submit one camera-ready original and five
copies of the manuscripts (maximum six pages) in English to the address
given at the bottom by April 30, 1994. The title of paper, full name of
the author(s), affiliation(s) and mailing address should be given in the
paper.
Registration Fees Regular Participant Student
Until Aug. 31,'94 US$200 US$50
After Aug. 31,'94 US$250 US$70
Exhibition and Social Programs
Exhibition of neural network products and prototypes will be held in
conjunction with the conference. Opening Reception, Banquet, and
Coffee Breaks will provide chances for the participants to mingle and
communicate with their colleagues.
Time Table
Deadline for paper submission April 30, 1994
Notice of acceptance July 31, 1994
Deadline for advance registration and
hotel reservation August 31, 1994
Further Information and Paper Submission: ICONIP'94 Seoul Secretariat,
ICONIP'94-Seoul Secritariat, c/o INTERCOM Convention Service, Inc. SL,
Kang Nam P.O. Box 641, Seoul, 135-606, Korea.
E-mail: ICONIP@cair.kaist.ac.kr, Tel:+82-2-515-1560, Fax:+82-2-516-4807
*****************************************************************************
------------------------------
Subject: ICNN 94 Deadline Extension & Call For Papers
From: Dennis W. Ruck <druck@afit.af.mil>
Date: Fri, 03 Dec 93 08:20:10 -0500
IIIIIIIIIIIIIII CCCCCCCCC NNN NN NNN NN
III CC CC NNNN NN NNNN NN
III CC NN NN NN NN NN NN
III CC NN NN NN NN NN NN
III CC CC NN NNNN NN NNNN
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII CCCCCCCCC NN NNN NN NNN
CALL FOR PAPERS
Extended Deadline for Submission:
December 31, 1993
For the First Time ...
The 3 Most Exciting Technologies in Engineering Today
Under One Roof
Presenting the
IEEE WORLD CONGRESS ON
COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCE
ICNN
FUZZ-IEEE
EC
IEEE International Conference on Neural Networks
IEEE International Conference on Fuzzy Systems
IEEE International Conference on Evolutionary Computation
3 Conferences ... 1 Great Location ... 1 Inclusive Registration
PLUS ... A Special Symposium Combining the Interests of All
3 Meetings into a Single Comprehensive Forum
June 26 - July 2, 1994
Walt Disney World Dolphin Hotel
Orlando, Florida
IEEE WORLD CONGRESS ON
COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCE
Orlando, Florida, June 26-July 2, 1994
Sponsored by the IEEE Neural Networks Council
The 1994 IEEE World Congress on Computational intelligence consists of
three IEEE International Conferences: The Third IEEE International
Conference on Fuzzy Systems, IEEE International Conference on Neural
Networks, and The IEEE Conference on Evolutionary Computation. The
registration fee for the Congress covers admission to all three of the
Conferences as well as to a special five- day Symposium entitled
"Computational Intelligence: Imitating Life." This Symposium will be
held Monday, June 27, through Friday, July 1, 10:20 am to 12:40 pm.
SPECIAL SYMPOSIUM
COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCE: IMITATING LIFE
THE SYMPOSIUM addresses critical and emerging technologies and issues
relating to biologically, psychologically, and linguistically motivated
models that exhibit various facets of computational intelligence. The
paradigms discussed include learning, reasoning, evolution, search, and
optimization each of which often uses life imitating metaphors for
guiding model building. Machine learning from data, neural and fuzzy
information processing, approximate reasoning, and evolutionary
computation are examples of computational intelli- gence approaches
addressed by Symposium speakers. The Symposium provides a unique forum
for cross-fertilization between the areas of neural networks, fuzzy
logic, and evolutionary computing.
SYMPOSIUM presentations are explicitly targeted toward the identification
of challenges, issues, and potential solutions for problems arising in
computa- tional intelligence.
THE SYMPOSIUM consists of 3 public lectures, 10 plenary talks, and 30
mini- symposia presentations, covering Neural Networks (21), Fuzzy Logic
(13), and Evolutionary Computation (9). Contributions include recent
research that has implications for further progress, state-of-the-art
reviews, and discussions of important applications in fields such as
biology, signal and imaging processing, robotics and control. Presenters
have been chosen from academia and industry and represent the leaders in
their fields from throughout the world.
THE SYMPOSIUM PROCEEDINGS "Computational Intelligence: Imitating Life,"
will be published and available at the Congress for each participant.
Proceedings will later be distributed by the IEEE Press.
INSTRUCTIONS FOR ALL THREE CONFERENCES
Papers must be received by December 31, 1993
Papers will be reviewed by senior researchers in the field, and all
authors will be informed of the decisions at the end of the review
process. All accepted papers will be published in the Conference
Proceedings. Please submit the following:
- Send one original and five copies of the paper. Six total.
- Papers must be camera ready on 8 1/2 x 11 white paper, two-column
format in Times or similar font style, 10 points or larger with one
inch margins on all four sides.
- Do not fold or staple the original camera-ready copy.
- Four pages are encouraged, however, the paper must not exceed six
pages, including figures, tables, and references. Papers over six
pages will not be considered.
- Papers must be written in English.
Authors are encouraged to use the WCCI LaTex template with the IEEEtran.
sty style sheet. (The format is similar to that used in IEEE
transactions.) These documents can be FTP'd using the following
instructions:
FTP FTP.AI.SRI.COM
LOGIN: ANONYMOUS
PASSWORD: <USE YOUR E-MAIL ADDRESS AS THE PASSWORD)
(AN SRI INFORMATION DOCUMENT WILL SCROLL. AFTERWARDS, TYPE ...)
CD PUB/IEEE
GET READ.ME
BYE
Centered at the top of the first page should be the complete title,
author
name(s), affiliation(s), and mailing address(es). In the
accompanying letter, the following information must be included:
- Full Title of the Paper
- Corresponding Author (Name, Mailing Address, Telephone and FAX
Number)
- Technical Session (First and Second Choices)
- Presentation Preferred (Oral or Poster)
- Presenter (Name, Mailing Address, Telephone and FAX Number)
______________________________________________________________________
_______
For information and paper submission, mail to:
World Congress on Computational Intelligence
Meeting Management
2603 Main Street, Suite 690 TEL: 714-752-8205
Irvine, California 92714 FAX: 714- 752-7444
E-MIAL: 74710.2266@COMPUSERVE.COM
Sponsored by The IEEE Neural Networks Council
Dennis W. Ruck
ICNN 94 Program Chair
------------------------------
End of Neuron Digest [Volume 12 Issue 25]
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