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VISION-LIST Digest 1990 01 10
Vision-List Digest Wed Jan 10 10:47:34 PDT 90
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Today's Topics:
Digital Darkroom (popi)
3D-glasses
CVGIP Abstract
Conference on Photogrammetry Meets Machine Vision
RMCAI 90
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Thu, 4 Jan 90 03:14:23 GMT
From: us214777@mmm.serc.3m.com (John C. Schultz)
Subject: Digital Darkroom (popi)
Organization: 3M - St. Paul, MN 55144-1000 US
I recently grabbed a public domain version of an X window based image
generation? processing? analysis? package called DigitalDarkroom (or popi).
This seems to me to be an interesting package with a lot of potential for
image processing. I particularly like the simple syntax to access image
pixels and the transparent conversion from rectangular to polar coordinates.
Does anyone use this package for image analysis? Any analysis routines
available (e.g. morphology, blob analysis, filtering, transforms)?
If you don't have a copy you might want to pick one up from the net.
John C. Schultz EMAIL: jcschultz@mmm.3m.com
3M Company WRK: +1 (612) 733 4047
3M Center, Building 518-01-1 St. Paul, MN 55144-1000
The opinions expressed above are my own and DO NOT reflect 3M's
------------------------------
Date: 4 Jan 90 18:55:00 GMT
From: tjeerd@mbfys4.sci.kun.nl (Tjeerd Dijkstra)
Subject: 3D-glasses
Keywords: 3D-glasses, liquid crystal
I want to use glasses with liquid crystal shutters in an
experimental setup that opens the visual feedback loop.
Until now I was unable to obtain any information on shops,
brandnames etc. Does anyone have any pointers?
I have a SUN4/260 CXP which has a framerate of 66Hz
Tjeerd Dijkstra
E-mail: tjeerd@sci.kun.nl
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 4 Jan 90 17:24:50 -0800
From: bertolas@cs.washington.edu (William Bertolas)
Subject: CVGIP Abstract
Computer Vision, Graphics, and Image Processing
Volume 49, Number 2, February 1990
CONTENTS
Kwangyoen Wohn and Allen M. Waxman. The Analytic Structure of
Image Flows: Deformation and Segmentation, p.127
Michael T. Goodrich and Jack Scott Snoeyink. Stabbing Parallel
Segments with a Convex Polygon, p.152.
J.P. Oakley and M.J. Cunningham. A Function Space Model for
Digital Image Sampling and Its Application in Image
Reconstruction, p.171.
Per-Erik Danielsson and Olle Seger. Rotation Invariance in
Gradient and Higher Order Derivative Detectors, p. 198.
Daphna Weinshall. Qualitative Depth from Stereo, with Applications, p. 222.
NOTE
Yuh-Tay Liow and Theo Pavlidis. Use of Shadows for Extracting
Buildings in Aerial Images, p. 242.
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jan 90 09:30:00 EST
From: ELHAKIM@NRCCIT.NRC.CA
Subject: conference on photogrammetry meets machine vision
Second Announcement and Call for Papers
ISPRS Symposium
Close-Range Photogrammetry Meets Machine Vision
ETH Zurich, Switzerland
September 3 - 7, 1990
Organised by
- Institute of Geodesy and Photogrammetry
- ISPRS Commission V
Sponsored by
SGPBF - Swiss Society for Photogrammetry, Image Analysis
and Remote Sensing
Cooperating Organisations
SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
IEEE - IEEE, The Computer Society, TC on Pattern Analysis
and Machine Intelligence
FIG - Federation Internationale des Geometres
ITG - Information Technology Society of the SEV
SGBT - Swiss Association of Biomedical Engineering
INVITATION TO ZURICH
You are invited to attend this international and interdisciplinary Symposium
of the International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing
(ISPRS) and to share your knowledge in photogrammetry and the various
vision disciplines with an expert group of photogrammetrists, geodesists,
mathematicians, physicists, system engineers, electrical engineers, computer
scientists, mechanical engineers, architects, archaeologists and others, whose
concern is precise and reliable spatial measurements using imaging systems.
We hope that this Symposium, according to its title "Close-Range Photo-
grammetry Meets Machine Vision", will provide the stage where ideas and
experience can be exchanged in a stimulating environment. The conference
will take place at ETH-Hoenggerberg, a campus of the Swiss Federal
Institute of Technology (ETH) Zurich, which is conveniently located close to
downtown Zurich in a restful and delightful natural environment.
Zurich is a captivating city of many contrasts. It is a world-famous
banking and stock-exchange centre and at the same time an idyllic
place with all the charm of a small city. It is a bastion of the arts
and sciences - and also a friendly and hospitable city. A paradise
for shoppers, it also offers a host of entertainment and leisure
activities. Zurich is situated on a celebrated lake and river, between
gentle hills, with the snow-capped peaks of the Alps on the skyline.
Aircraft from most countries of every continent land at Zurich's
airport and a day excursion is enough to reach any part of
Switzerland.
The conference will feature tutorials, technical sessions, a scientific
exhibition and a variety of social and cultural events. We will spare no effort
in providing an interesting program for both regular participants and
accompanying persons.
May I cordially invite you to participate in this Symposium and to submit a
paper dealing with the topics of interest to ISPRS Commission V.
Armin Gruen
President of ISPRS Commission V
GENERAL OBJECTIVES
In recent years the modern vision disciplines of computer vision, machine
vision and robot vision have found widespread interest in the scientific and
engineering world. The further development of these disciplines is crucial
for advancements in various other fields of science, technology and industry.
As the scientific and engineering concepts of vision systems are increasingly
being examined in practical application environments, the need for precise,
reliable and robust performance with respect to quantitative measurements
becomes very obvious. Quantitative measurement on the other hand has been
a familiar domain to photogrammetrists for many years. The intention of this
symposium is to combine the longstanding, application-proven expertise of
classical photogrammetric procedures with the up-to-date, forward-looking
vision hardware and algorithmic concepts in order to overcome current
limitations and to arrive at truly efficient and reliable systems which in turn
will open up new and promising fields of application. The aim is to bring
together experts from various disciplines who are concerned with the design,
development and application of modern analogue, digital and hybrid vision
systems which operate in a close-range environment.
This conference is designed for scientists, engineers and users in the fields of
photogrammetry, machine vision and robot vision; from universities,
research institutes, industry, governmental organisations and engineering
firms.
The topics to be addressed should be related, but are not restricted to, the
terms of reference of the Working Groups of ISPRS Commission V:
WG V/1: Digital and Real-Time Close-Range Photogrammetry Systems
Chairmen: Dr. Sabry El-Hakim, Prof.Dr. Kam Wong
- Real-time vision systems for metric measurements
- System hardware and software integration
- Demonstration of systems in actual application environments
WG V/2: Close-Range Imaging Systems - Calibration and Performance
Chairmen: Prof. Dr. John G. Fryer, Prof. Dr. Wilfried Wester-
+ Ebbinghaus
- Geometric and radiometric characteristics of CCD and hybrid
imaging systems
- Procedures and strategies for calibration and orientation
- High precision photogrammetry (<10-5) with large format
photographic images and CCD matrix sensors in image space
WG V/3: Image Analysis and Image Synthesis in Close-Range
Photogrammetry
Chairmen: Dr. Dieter Fritsch, Dr. Jan-Peter Muller
- Algorithmic aspects in image analysis
- Visualisation techniques in image synthesis
- Hardware architecture for real-time image analysis and image
synthesis
WG V/4: Structural and Industrial Measurements with
Consideration of CAD/CAM Aspects
Chairmen: Dr. Clive S. Fraser, Prof.Dr. Heinz Ruther
- Integration of CAD/CAM into the photogrammetric
measurement process
- Digital photogrammetric systems for industrial mensuration
- Transfer of photogrammetric technology to the industrial
design, engineering and manufacturing sector
WG V/5: Photogrammetry in Architecture and Archaeology
Chairmen: Mr. Ross W.A. Dallas, Dr. Rune Larsson
- Application of new photogrammetric technology to
architectural and archaeological surveying and recording
- Possibilities offered by new low-cost photogrammetric systems
and video-based systems
- Study of appropriate applications of CAD/CAM and LIS/GIS
WG V/6: Biostereometrics and Medical Imaging
Chairmen: Prof.Dr. Andreas Engel, Prof.Dr. Peter Niederer
- Human motion analysis and biological surface measurements
- 3D medical imaging and anthropometry; 3D microscopy
- Hardware and software for use in medical imaging
Associate Group: Robot Vision
Chairman: Dr. Reimar Lenz
- Recent developments
- Applications
CALL FOR PAPERS
Deadline for abstracts: January 31, 1990
Notification of acceptance: March 31, 1990
Deadline for complete manuscripts: June 15, 1990
A separate Abstract Form can be obtained from the symposium organisation.
Instructions for authors and forms for papers will be mailed out in due course.
The papers of this Symposium are to be published as Proceedings in the
Archives series of the ISPRS (Volume 28, Part V), which will be made
available prior to the conference. This implies that the deadline for complete
manuscripts has to be observed strictly.
LANGUAGE
Papers may be presented in any of the three official ISPRS languages
English, French and German. The operating language of the Symposium will
be English. Simultaneous translation will not be provided.
GENERAL INFORMATION
SYMPOSIUM SITE
ETH-Hoenggerberg, Zurich, a campus of the Swiss Federal Institute of
Technology (ETH) Zurich.
The location for the technical sessions, tutorials, exhibition and the
information and registration desk will be the HIL-Building.
FACILITIES
The lecture rooms are equipped with slide projectors (5x5 cm) and overhead
projectors. Video installations (projection and monitor display) can be
arranged on request.
TECHNICAL SESSIONS
The technical sessions will be arranged from September 4 to 7, 1990. If
necessary, two sessions will be held in parallel.
TUTORIALS
The following tutorials are offered on September 3, 1990:
(A) Full-day tutorial "Fundamentals of Real-Time Photogrammetry"
Lecturers: Dr. D. Fritsch*, Dr. R. Lenz*, Dipl.-Ing. E. Baltsavias,
Dipl.-Ing. ETH H. Beyer (*Technical Univ. Munich, FRG and ETH Zurich,
Switzerland).
Time: 9.00 to 17.30
A one-day tutorial covering algorithmic and hardware aspects of Real-Time
Photogrammetry is to be presented.
System design aspects and hardware components of Real-Time
Photogrammetric Systems are to be analysed. Emphasis will be placed on the
performance in 3-D vision and measurement tasks. The principal topics will
include: system design, data acquisition, data transfer, processing, storage,
and display. Image acquisition will be analysed in more detail and an outline
will be given of the characteristics of CCD-sensors, cameras, video signals
and frame grabbers that influence image quality and measurement accuracy.
Algorithmic aspects of image analysis and computer vision techniques for
processing image data for 3-D applications will be presented. The main
topics include: image enhancement, edge detection and segmentation,
morphological and geometric operations, feature detection and object
recognition, image and template matching, point determination and
optimisation, surface measurement and reconstruction.
The presentation will be supported by practical demonstrations of the
hardware and algorithmic performance of digital close-range photogram-
metric systems.
This tutorial is designed for engineers and applied researchers with interest
in image analysis, machine vision, robotics and digital photogrammetry.
Basic knowledge of photogrammetry and image processing will be assumed.
(B) Half-day tutorial "Computer Vision and Dynamic Scene Analysis"
Lecturer: Prof.Th.S. Huang (Univ. of Illinois, Urbana- Champaign, USA)
Time: 13.30 to 17.30
A half-day tutorial covering computer vision with the emphasis on dynamic
scene analysis will be presented. The goal is to expose to researchers in
photogrammetry some of the important results in dynamic scene analysis.
Photogrammetry and computer vision have many common problems such as
stereo, pose determination, and camera calibration. The two fields can
certainly learn much from each other.
After an overview of computer vision, several examples of motion detection
and high-level spatial-temporal reasoning will be given. Then a detailed
discussion will be presented on the use of feature matching for pose
determination, camera calibration, and 3D motion determination. The key
issues include: extracting and matching of point and line features in images,
minimum numbers of features required for unique solution, linear vs.
nonlinear (esp. polynomial) equations, and robust algorithms.
It is hoped that this tutorial will provide a forum for the exchange of ideas
between researchers in photogrammetry and computer vision.
Registration for a tutorial should be made on the attached Registration Form.
Since participation will be restricted due to space limitations, the organisers
reserve the right of refusal.
EXHIBITION
A scientific/commercial exhibition will feature the latest developments in
systems, components, software and algorithms in close-range photogram-
metry and machine vision. Application forms for interested exhibitors can be
obtained from the Symposium Secretariat.
REGISTRATION
Registration of all participants (including accompanying persons) should be
made on the Registration Form which can be obtained from the congress
organisation. Please note that a separate form must be used for the hotel
reservation.
Correspondence concerning registration should be mailed to the Symposium
Secretariat.
Registration Fees
Before June 1 after
+ June 1
Active Participants SFr. 350.-- SFr. 400.--
Accompanying Persons SFr. 150.-- SFr. 175.--
Tutorial (A) SFr. 250.-- SFr. 275.--
Tutorial (B) SFr. 150.-- SFr. 175.--
For active participants the registration fee includes admission to all sessions,
a copy of the Proceedings and the Welcome Party. Included in the regist-
ration fee for accompanying persons are the Opening and Closing Sessions,
the Welcome Party, and the right to participate in the program for
accompanying persons at the announced prices.
The registration fee and other charges payable to the Symposium Secretariat
should be enclosed with the Registration Form as a bank draft (drawn on a
Swiss bank, payable to the ISPRS-Symposium Secretariat) or a copy of a
bank transfer. Credit cards are not accepted.
CONFIRMATION
Confirmation of registration will be mailed to participants after receipt of the
Registration Form and payment.
INFORMATION
A reception desk will be open for registration and information on the ground
floor of the HIL-Building from September 3 to 7, 8.00-17.30.
ACCOMMODATION
The Verkehrsverein Zurich will arrange the hotel accommodation for all
participants. The Hotel Reservation Form should be mailed to the
Verkehrsverein Zurich (it can be obtained from the congress organisation).
The hotel will confirm the room reservations in the order in which the forms
and the hotel deposit payments are received. Please observe July 23, 1990
as the deadline for hotel reservation.
SOCIAL EVENTS
S1 Reception for Tutorial Participants
Monday, September 3, 17.30 free
S2 Welcome Party for Symposium Participants
Tuesday, September 4, 17.30 free
S3 An Evening on the Lake. Dinner Cruise on Lake Zurich
Wednesday, September 5, 19.00 SFr. 55.--
A 3 hour cruise on the Lake of Zurich. Whilst the boat takes you
along the beautiful shores, traditional Swiss dishes will be served
("Bauernbuffet") and you can enjoy the view of vineyards, villages and
some distinguished residential areas.
S4 Medieval Night. Dinner at Castle Lenzburg
Thursday, September 6, 19.00 SFr. 98.--
Busses will take you to the impressive Lenzburg Castle. Set aloft
a precipitous base of rock, with its massive walls and profusion of
towers and battlements, Lenzburg Castle presents the classical picture
of a medieval fortress. Before having dinner at the Knight's Lodge,
drinks will be served in the courtyard and picturesque French
Gardens. A Swiss folk-music group will entertain you during and after
dinner. At midnight the busses will take you back to Zurich.
PROGRAM FOR ACCOMPANYING PERSONS
AP1 "Goldtimer Tram" ride: A nostalgia-awakening veteran tram
dating from 1928 takes you on a pleasure trip all through the city. An
excellent way to get a first impression (1 h).
Afterwards a hostess will take you for a stroll through the Old Town,
including a sight of the famous Chagall-windows (1 1/2 h).
Tuesday, September 4, 14.00 - 17.00 SFr. 25.--
AP2 Visit to the Lindt-Sprungli chocolate factory: A bus takes you
to Kilchberg where a hostess will welcome you and guide you through
the chocolate factory.
Wednesday, September 5, 9.00 - 12.30 SFr. 15.--
AP3 Half-day excursion to the Rhine waterfalls and Schaff-
hausen: Bus tour through Zurich's wine-growing districts to the falls
of the Rhine, which offer the visitor the glorious spectacle of the
largest waterfall in Europe. Transfer to the city of Schaffhausen, a
picturesque town with well preserved medieval architecture,
overlooking the upper reaches of the Rhine.
Wednesday, September 5, 13.00 - 17.00 SFr. 42.--
AP4 Full-day excursion to Rigi and Luzern: Bus tour through
beautiful countryside to Luzern, a picturesque old town right in the
heart of Switzerland, surrounded by Lake Luzern and highrising
mountains. Sightseeing tour by bus. Then you will have free time for
shopping and lunch. The bus takes you to Vitznau where a
cogwheel-railway takes you to the Rigi (5900 ft) with its spectacular
views of the Alps, their foothills and valleys. By bus back to Zurich.
Thursday, September 6, 8.30 - 17.00 SFr. 75.--
Visits to the Kunsthaus (Art Gallery), Landesmuseum (Museum of History)
and a full-day excursion to the Stein cheese-dairy, Appenzell can be booked
at the Verkehrsverein desk. In addition, the official tourist agency
Verkehrsverein Zurich will offer a great variety of interesting activities and
excursions to mountains, lakes and cultural places of interest, folklore,
dancing and nightclub entertainment, as well as diverse sports. Pre- and
postconference activities are also handled by this local tourist office. The
Verkehrsverein will operate an information and reservation desk next to the
registration desk.
GENERAL CONDITIONS FOR REGISTRATION AND TOURS
Registration and booking of social events and tours should be made on the
enclosed Registration Form. All payments must be made in full. All
payments will be refunded, after deduction of a 25% administration charge,
for all cancellations received before August 15, 1990. After this date no
refunds can be made for cancellation. No charge is made for children under
4 years for the social events and excursions.
SYMPOSIUM ORGANISATION
Director: Prof. Dr. A. Gruen
President of ISPRS Commission V
Secretary: Dipl. Ing. ETH H. Beyer
Secretary of ISPRS Commission V
Members of the organising committee:
Dipl.Ing. E. Baltsavias; Dipl.Ing. H.-G. Maas; Dipl.Ing. M. Meister,
Dipl.Ing. Z. Parsic; L. Steinbruckner (ETH Zurich)
Dipl.Ing. L. Cogan; Dr.T. Luhmann; M. Streit; Dr. R. Zumbrunn (Kern & Co.AG)
ADDRESS FOR CORRESPONDENCE AND INQUIRIES:
Symposium of ISPRS Commission V
Institute of Geodesy and Photogrammetry
ETH-Hoenggerberg
CH-8093 Zurich
Switzerland
Tel.: +41-1 377 3051 Telex: 823 474 ehpz ch
Fax: +41-1 371 55 48 email: chezpp@igpho.uucp
HOW TO GET TO THE ETH-HOENGGERBERG
Zurich International Airport, 11 km from the city centre, is served by most
International Airlines.
The Swiss Federal Railways run a feeder service to the main railway station
in Zurich by means of its Airport Line. During airport operational hours
trains run every 20 to 30 minutes between the underground station at the
Airport and the Main Station and vice versa.
Public transport City - ETH-Hoenggerberg: Tram Nos. 11 and 15 to Buch-
eggplatz or tram Nos. 7, 9, 10 and 14 to Milchbuck and then from each, Bus
69 to ETH-Hoenggerberg. (The printed version contains a map of the symposium
and Zurich)
ABSTRACT FORMS and REGISTRATION MATERIAL can be obtained from
the Symposium organisation.
------------------------------
Date: 10 Jan 90 05:57:44 GMT
From: news%beta@LANL.GOV (Usenet News)
Subject: RMCAI 90
Organization: NMSU Computer Science
Updated CFP:
PRAGMATICS IN AI PRAGMATICS IN AI PRAGMATICS IN AI PRAGMATICS IN AI PRAGMATICS
Cut---------------------------------------------------------------------------
SUBJECT: Please post the following in your Laboratory/Department/Journal:
CALL FOR PAPERS
Pragmatics in Artificial Intelligence
5th Rocky Mountain Conference on Artificial Intelligence (RMCAI-90)
Las Cruces, New Mexico, USA, June 28-30, 1990
PRAGMATICS PROBLEM:
The problem of pragmatics in AI is one of developing theories, models,
and implementations of systems that make effective use of contextual
information to solve problems in changing environments.
CONFERENCE GOAL:
This conference will provide a forum for researchers from all
subfields of AI to discuss the problem of pragmatics in AI.
The implications that each area has for the others in tackling
this problem are of particular interest.
COOPERATION:
American Association for Artificial Intelligence (AAAI)
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Special Interest Group in Artificial Intelligence (SIGART)
IEEE Computer Society
U S WEST Advanced Technologies and the Rocky Mountain Society
for Artificial Intelligence (RMSAI)
SPONSORSHIP:
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Special Interest Group in Artificial Intelligence (SIGART)
U S WEST Advanced Technologies and the Rocky Mountain Society
for Artificial Intelligence (RMSAI)
INVITED SPEAKERS:
The following researchers have agreed to present papers
at the conference:
*Martin Casdagli, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos USA
*Arthur Cater, University College Dublin, Ireland EC
*Jerry Feldman, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley USA
& International Computer Science Institute, Berkeley USA
*Barbara Grosz, Harvard University, Cambridge USA
*James Martin, University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder USA
*Derek Partridge, University of Exeter, United Kingdom EC
*Philip Stenton, Hewlett Packard, United Kingdom EC
*Robert Wilensky, University of California at Berkeley Berkeley USA
THE LAND OF ENCHANTMENT:
Las Cruces, lies in THE LAND OF ENCHANTMENT (New Mexico),
USA and is situated in the Rio Grande Corridor with the scenic
Organ Mountains overlooking the city. The city is
close to Mexico, Carlsbad Caverns, and White Sands National Monument.
There are a number of Indian Reservations and Pueblos in the Land Of
Enchantment and the cultural and scenic cities of Taos and Santa Fe
lie to the north. New Mexico has an interesting mixture of Indian, Mexican
and Spanish culture. There is quite a variation of Mexican and New
Mexican food to be found here too.
GENERAL INFORMATION:
The Rocky Mountain Conference on Artificial Intelligence is a major
regional forum in the USA for scientific exchange and presentation
of AI research.
The conference emphasizes discussion and informal interaction
as well as presentations.
The conference encourages the presentation of completed research,
ongoing research, and preliminary investigations.
Researchers from both within and outside the region
are invited to participate.
Some travel awards will be available for qualified applicants.
FORMAT FOR PAPERS:
Submitted papers should be double spaced and no more than 5 pages
long. E-mail versions will not be accepted. Papers will be published
in the proceedings and there is the possibility of a published book.
Send 3 copies of your paper to:
Paul Mc Kevitt,
Program Chairperson, RMCAI-90,
Computing Research Laboratory (CRL),
Dept. 3CRL, Box 30001,
New Mexico State University,
Las Cruces, NM 88003-0001, USA.
DEADLINES:
Paper submission: April 1st, 1990
Pre-registration: April 1st, 1990
Notice of acceptance: May 1st, 1990
Final papers due: June 1st, 1990
LOCAL ARRANGEMENTS:
Local Arrangements Chairperson, RMCAI-90.
(same postal address as above).
INQUIRIES:
Inquiries regarding conference brochure and registration form
should be addressed to the Local Arrangements Chairperson.
Inquiries regarding the conference program should be addressed
to the Program Chairperson.
Local Arrangements Chairperson: E-mail: INTERNET: rmcai@nmsu.edu
Phone: (+ 1 505)-646-5466
Fax: (+ 1 505)-646-6218.
Program Chairperson: E-mail: INTERNET: paul@nmsu.edu
Phone: (+ 1 505)-646-5109
Fax: (+ 1 505)-646-6218.
TOPICS OF INTEREST:
You are invited to submit a research paper addressing Pragmatics
in AI, with any of the following orientations:
Philosophy, Foundations and Methodology
Knowledge Representation
Neural Networks and Connectionism
Genetic Algorithms, Emergent Computation, Nonlinear Systems
Natural Language and Speech Understanding
Problem Solving, Planning, Reasoning
Machine Learning
Vision and Robotics
Applications
PROGRAM COMMITTEE:
*John Barnden, New Mexico State University
(Connectionism, Beliefs, Metaphor processing)
*Hans Brunner, U S WEST Advanced Technologies
(Natural language interfaces, Dialogue interfaces)
*Martin Casdagli, Los Alamos National Laboratory
(Dynamical systems, Artificial neural networks, Applications)
*Mike Coombs, New Mexico State University
(Problem solving, Adaptive systems, Planning)
*Thomas Eskridge, Lockheed Missile and Space Co.
(Analogy, Problem solving)
*Chris Fields, New Mexico State University
(Neural networks, Nonlinear systems, Applications)
*Roger Hartley, New Mexico State University
(Knowledge Representation, Planning, Problem Solving)
*Victor Johnson, New Mexico State University
(Genetic Algorithms)
*Paul Mc Kevitt, New Mexico State University
(Natural language interfaces, Dialogue modeling)
*Joe Pfeiffer, New Mexico State University
(Computer Vision, Parallel architectures)
*Keith Phillips, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs
(Computer vision, Mathematical modelling)
*Yorick Wilks, New Mexico State University
(Natural language processing, Knowledge representation)
*Scott Wolff, U S WEST Advanced Technologies
(Intelligent tutoring, User interface design, Cognitive modeling)
REGISTRATION:
Pre-Registration: Professionals: $50.00; Students $30.00
(Pre-Registration cutoff date is April 1st 1990)
Registration: Professionals: $70.00; Students $50.00
(Copied proof of student status is required).
Registration form (IN BLOCK CAPITALS).
Enclose payment made out to New Mexico State University.
(ONLY checks in US dollars will be accepted).
Send to the following address (MARKED REGISTRATION):
Local Arrangements Chairperson, RMCAI-90
Computing Research Laboratory
Dept. 3CRL, Box 30001, NMSU
Las Cruces, NM 88003-0001, USA.
Name:_______________________________ E-mail_____________________________ Phone__________________________
Affiliation: ____________________________________________________
Fax: ____________________________________________________
Address: ____________________________________________________
____________________________________________________
____________________________________________________
COUNTRY__________________________________________
Organizing Committee RMCAI-90:
Paul Mc Kevitt Yorick Wilks
Research Scientist Director
CRL CRL
cut------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
Paul Mc Kevitt,
Computing Research Laboratory,
Dept. 3CRL, Box 30001,
New Mexico State University,
Las Cruces, NM 88003-0001, USA.
E-mail: INTERNET: paul@nmsu.edu
Fax: (+1 505)-646-6218
Phone: (+1 505)-646-5109/5466
Nil an la an gaothaithe la na scolb!!
------------------------------
End of VISION-LIST
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