NA Digest Sunday, December 3, 1989 Volume 89 : Issue 47
Today's Editor: Cleve Moler
Today's Topics:
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From: Steve Hammond <hammonds@riacs.edu>
Date: Tue, 28 Nov 89 09:18:29 PST
Subject: 7th Parallel Circus
Announcing
the
Seventh Parallel Circus
March 30-31, 1990
Continuing the tradition that began at Yale in 1986, the
Research Institute for Advanced Computer Science (RIACS)
and Stanford University are jointly hosting the Seventh
Parallel Circus at Stanford on Friday and Saturday,
March 30-31, 1990.
This is the first time the Circus will be held outside of
the Northeast, and we hope to have many attendees from
around the country as well as those who have been
"regulars". The circus is unique in that it has one
and only one focus, scientific computing on parallel
machines. Another strength is that there has been lots
of informal discussion and a very healthy mix of indus-
trial and academic participants.
Organizers: Gene Golub, Steve Hammond and Rob Schreiber
For further information please contact:
Cathy Salazar
RIACS Mail Stop 230-5
NASA Ames Research Center
Moffett Field, CA 94035
(415)694-4877
salazar@riacs.edu
------------------------------
From: E. Gallopoulos <stratis@s6.csrd.uiuc.edu>
Date: Tue, 28 Nov 89 21:48:16 CST
Subject: 1990 ACM International Conference on Supercomputing
Here follows the updated call for papers for the 1990 ACM
International Conference on Supercomputing. It is hoped that
the dates (June 11-15) and location (Amsterdam) are convenient
for all those planning to attend the Householder Symposium
(due to take place June 18--22 in Sweden).
Stratis Gallopoulos
CALL FOR PAPERS
1990 ACM INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SUPERCOMPUTING
June 11-15, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Vrije Universiteit and Centrum voor Wiskunde en Informatica
Sponsored by ACM SIGARCH
in association with AICA, BCS-PPG, CTI, CSRD, CWI,
GI, INRIA, IPSJ, SBMAC and SIAM-SIAGS
Conference Co-Chairmen
Ahmed Sameh, Univ of Illinois
Henk van der Vorst, Delft Univ of Technology &CWI
Program Director
John R. Sopka, Digital Equipment Corporation, USA
Program Committee Organizers
J. R. Gurd Chairman Europe and Africa
Y. Muraoka Chairman Japan and Far East
E. Gallopoulos Chairman North and South America
Local Arrangements
H. TeRiele, CWI, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
The fourth ACM International Conference on Supercomputing
is soliciting papers on significant new research results
in the development and use of supercomputing systems.
Contributions should emphasize the novel aspects of the
work being reported and should discuss their implications
for future supercomputing development. Papers are solicited
in the following areas:
Architectural Design of Supercomputer Systems:
Heterogeneous use of MIMD, SIMD and Data Flow
Systems Designs, Memory System Organization
(Distributed, Shared or Hierarchical), Bus,
Network and Communication Systems, Instruction
Architecture (RISC, CISC, etc.)
Software Systems Support for Supercomputing.
Operating Systems Support Features,
Programming Languages, Compilers and Analysis Tools,
Performance Evaluation Tools, Methods and Modeling,
Programming Environments and High Level
Problem Solving Systems.
Applications of Supercomputing.
Circuit and Semiconductor Device Simulation,
Computational Chemistry,
Artificial Intelligence and Symbolic Computation,
Graphics and Visualization,
Other new or nontraditional applications.
Supercomputing Algorithms and Performance Analysis.
Numerical and Non-Numerical Algorithms,
Performance Studies.
Invited Presentations
The list of invited speakers includes:
Tony Chan (UCLA), Wolfgang Fichtner (ETH), Anthony Hey
(Southampton U.), Piet van der Houwen (CWI), Ahmed Noor
(George Washington U.), Burton Smith (TERA Inc.),
Toshitsugu Yuba (MITI), William Wulf (NSF).
Submissions
Conference proceedings, published by Springer-Verlag in 1987
and ACM in 1988 and 1989, will again be published by ACM in 1990.
Authors should send five (5) copies of the full manuscript to the
Program Chairman of their region.
The deadline for submissions is January 10, 1990.
Authors will be notified of acceptance by March 10.
Final versions of accepted submissions will be due by April 15, 1990.
The addresses for submissions are:
Program Chair for Europe and Africa:
Dr. John R. Gurd,
Dept Computer Science, Univ of Manchester, Oxford Road,
Manchester M13 9PL, UNITED KINGDOM.
E-mail: jgurd@unix.computer-science.manchester.ac.uk
Program Chair for North and South America:
Dr. E. Gallopoulos,
CSRD, Univ of Illinois, 305 Talbot Laboratory,
104 South Wright St, Urbana, IL61801-2932, USA.
E-mail: stratis@uicsrd.csrd.uiuc.edu
Program Chair for Japan and the Far East:
Dr. Yoichi Muraoka,
Dept. of Elect. Eng., Waseda University,
3-4-1 Okubo, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, JAPAN
E-mail: muraoka@jpnwas00.bitnet
------------------------------
From: Alle-Jan van der Veen <dutentb!allejan@relay.EU.net>
Date: Wed, 29 Nov 89 13:08:42 -0100
Subject: Int. Workshop Algorithms/Architectures
International Workshop on
ALGORITHMS AND PARALLEL VLSI ARCHITECTURES
June 10--16, 1990
Pont-a-Mouson, France
Announcement and Call for Papers
CONFERENCE COMMITTEE
Ed Deprettere Patrick Dewilde
Dept. of Electrical Engineering Dept. of Electrical Engineering
Delft University of Technology Delft University of Technology
Delft, The Netherlands Delft, The Netherlands
email: ed@dutentb email: dewilde@dutentb
Thomas Kailath Sun-Yuan Kung
Information Systems Laboratory Dept. of Electrical Engineering
Stanford University, USA Princeton University, USA
email: tk@isl.stanford.edu email: kung@princeton.edu
C.V.K. Prabhakara Rao Yves Robert
Dept. of Electrical Engineering Laboratoire LIP/IMAG
Drexel University Ecole Normale Superieure de Lyon
Philadelphia, USA Lyon, France
email: rao@drexel e-mail: yrobert@ensl.ens-lyon.fr
The goal of the International Workshop on Algorithms and Parallel VLSI
Architectures is to bring together researchers, active in the fields
indicated below. The workshop is sponsored by EURASIP in cooperation with
the IEEE.
COURSES
Schur's Algorithm and its Applications
Large Scale Modeling
Multiscale Signal Processing
Solving Large Systems of Linear Equations
Array Forms of Fast Signal Processing Algorithms
Architecture Design
WORKSHOPS
Signal Estimation Architectures for Control & Communications
Eigenvalues and Singular Values Systolic Architectures
Adaptive & Orthogonal Filtering Artificial Neural Nets
Modeling with Finite Elements Microcoded Architectures
Computer Graphics Video Architectures
The courses will be given by eminent lecturers in the field (names
yet to be announced). The workshops will consist of both plenary talks
by invited speakers and poster presentations.
At this moment, papers that contribute to the poster sessions are
solicited. Authors are invited to submit four copies of a 4-page summary
of the paper to the workshop secretariat for review.
Papers will be severely reviewed -- the number of accepted papers is limited.
Authors of accepted papers will be asked to prepare a version for publication.
Please note that participation in the workshop is open to authors only.
AUTHORS' SCHEDULE
Submission of 4-page summary: February 19, 1990
Notification of Acceptance: March 30, 1990
WORKSHOP SECRETARIAT
Alle-Jan van der Veen
Dept. of Electrical Engineering
Delft University of Technology
2628 CD Delft
The Netherlands
email: allejan@dutentb
tel.: +3115781442
------------------------------
From: Stefan Farestam <FARESTAM%FRTLS12.BITNET@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU>
Date: Fri, 01 Dec 89 13:36:11 GMT
Subject: Research Grant/CERFACS
C E N T R E E U R O P E E N
D E R E C H E R C H E E T D E F O R M A T I O N
A V A N C E E E N
C A L C U L S C I E N T I F I Q U E
( C . E . R . F . A . C . S . )
(EUROPEAN CENTRE FOR RESEARCH AND ADVANCED
TRAINING IN SCIENTIFIC COMPUTATION)
The Centre Europeen de Recherche et de Formation Avancee
en Calcul Scientifique (C.E.R.F.A.C.S) aims at developing
new tools in parallel computing with a view to applying
them to large scientific problems and techniques and to
offer an advanced training in scientific computation.
Based in Toulouse, C.E.R.F.A.C.S. has researchers and
engineers from many countries in Europe.
C. E. R. F. A. C. S. o f f e r s, for February 1990
a r e s e a r c h g r a n t
for building interactive interface systems for sculptured
surfaces and mesh generation.
RECRUITING CONDITIONS FINANCIAL CONDITIONS
The applicant should show a high The research grant covers
level of proficiency in some of a period of 1 year minimum
the following topics: (renewable) and the salary
* Interactive Graphics is open for discussion.
* CAD-systems
* Geometrical design
* Solid modelling
He, or she, should also have a
strong knowledge of C and object
oriented programming.
Applications including your CV and copies of your publication
must be made before the 1st of January 1990 to:
C.E.R.F.A.C.S.
42, avenue G. Coriolis * 31057 TOULOUSE CEDEX (France)
Tel.: (33) 61 07 96 96 * Telefax: (33) 61 07 96 13
E-mail: CROS @ FRTLS12
------------------------------
From: Michael Cohen <mike@bucasb.BU.EDU>
Date: Thu, 30 Nov 89 02:21:02 EST
Subject: Neural Networks Conference at Wang Institute
CALL FOR PAPERS
NEURAL NETWORKS FOR AUTOMATIC TARGET RECOGNITION
MAY 11--13, 1990
Sponsored by the Center for Adaptive Systems,
the Graduate Program in Cognitive and Neural Systems,
and the Wang Institute of Boston University
with partial support from
The Air Force Office of Scientific Research
This research conference at the cutting edge of neural network science and
technology will bring together leading experts in academe, government, and
industry to present their latest results on automatic target recognition
in invited lectures and contributed posters. Invited lecturers include:
JOE BROWN, Martin Marietta, "Multi-Sensor ATR using Neural Nets"
GAIL CARPENTER, Boston University, "Target Recognition by Adaptive
Resonance: ART for ATR"
NABIL FARHAT, University of Pennsylvania, "Bifurcating Networks for
Target Recognition"
STEPHEN GROSSBERG, Boston University, "Recent Results on Self-Organizing
ATR Networks"
ROBERT HECHT-NIELSEN, HNC, "Spatiotemporal Attention Focusing by
Expectation Feedback"
KEN JOHNSON, Hughes Aircraft, "The Application of Neural Networks to the
Acquisition and Tracking of Maneuvering Tactical Targets in High Clutter
IR Imagery"
PAUL KOLODZY, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, "A Multi-Dimensional ATR System"
MICHAEL KUPERSTEIN, Neurogen, "Adaptive Sensory-Motor Coordination
using the INFANT Controller"
YANN LECUN, AT&T Bell Labs, "Structured Back Propagation Networks for
Handwriting Recognition"
CHRISTOPHER SCOFIELD, Nestor, "Neural Network Automatic Target Recognition
by Active and Passive Sonar Signals"
STEVEN SIMMES, Science Applications International Co., "Massively Parallel
Approaches to Automatic Target Recognition"
ALEX WAIBEL, Carnegie Mellon University, "Patterns, Sequences and Variability:
Advances in Connectionist Speech Recognition"
ALLEN WAXMAN, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, "Invariant Learning and
Recognition of 3D Objects from Temporal View Sequences"
FRED WEINGARD, Booz-Allen and Hamilton, "Current Status and Results of Two
Major Government Programs in Neural Network-Based ATR"
BARBARA YOON, DARPA, "DARPA Artificial Neural Networks Technology
Program: Automatic Target Recognition"
CALL FOR PAPERS---ATR POSTER SESSION: A featured poster session on ATR
neural network research will be held on May 12, 1990. Attendees who wish to
present a poster should submit 3 copies of an extended abstract
(1 single-spaced page), postmarked by March 1, 1990, for refereeing. Include
with the abstract the name, address, and telephone number of the corresponding
author. Mail to: ATR Poster Session, Neural Networks Conference, Wang
Institute of Boston University, 72 Tyng Road, Tyngsboro, MA 01879. Authors
will be informed of abstract acceptance by March 31, 1990.
SITE: The Wang Institute possesses excellent conference facilities on a
beautiful 220-acre campus. It is easily reached from Boston's Logan
Airport and Route 128.
REGISTRATION FEE: Regular attendee--$90; full-time student--$70.
Registration fee includes admission to all lectures and poster session,
one reception, two continental breakfasts, one lunch, one dinner, daily
morning and afternoon coffee service. STUDENTS FELLOWSHIPS are available.
For information, call (508) 649-9731.
TO REGISTER: By phone, call (508) 649-9731; by mail, write for further
information to: Neural Networks, Wang Institute of Boston University, 72 Tyng
Road, Tyngsboro, MA 01879.
------------------------------
From: Michael Cohen <mike@bucasb.BU.EDU>
Date: Thu, 30 Nov 89 02:24:17 EST
Subject: Neural Networks Short Course at Wang Institute
NEURAL NETWORKS:
FROM FOUNDATIONS TO APPLICATIONS
May 6--11, 1989
Sponsored by the Center for Adaptive Systems,
the Graduate Program in Cognitive and Neural Systems,
and the Wang Institute of Boston University
with partial support from
The Air Force Office of Scientific Research
This in-depth, systematic, 5-day course is based upon the world's leading
graduate curriculum in the technology, computation, mathematics, and biology
of neural networks. Developed at the Center for Adaptive Systems (CAS) and
the Graduate Program in Cognitive and Neural Systems (CNS) of Boston
University, twenty-eight hours of the course will be taught by six CAS/CNS
faculty. Three distinguished guest lecturers will present eight hours of
the course.
COURSE OUTLINE
MAY 7, 1990
Morning Session (Professor Stephen Grossberg)
Historical Overview, Content Addressable Memory, Competitive Decision Making,
Associative Learning
Afternoon Session (Professors Michael Jordan (MIT) and Ennio Mingolla)
Combinational Optimization, Perceptrons, Introduction to Back Propagation,
Recent Developments of Back Propagation
MAY 8, 1990
Morning Session (Professors Gail Carpenter and Stephen Grossberg)
Adaptive Pattern Recognition, Introduction to Adaptive Resonance Theory,
Analysis of ART 1
Afternoon Session (Professor Gail Carpenter)
Analysis of ART 2, Analysis of ART 3, Self-Organization of Invariant Pattern
Recognition Codes, Neocognitron
MAY 9, 1990
Morning Session (Professors Stephen Grossberg and Ennio Mingolla)
Vision and Image Processing
Afternoon Session (Professors Daniel Bullock, Michael Cohen, and
Stephen Grossberg)
Adaptive Sensory-Motor Control and Robotics, Speech Perception and Production
MAY 10, 1990
Morning Session (Professors Michael Cohen, Stephen Grossberg, and
John Merrill)
Speech Perception and Production, Reinforcement Learning and Prediction
Afternoon Session (Professors Stephen Grossberg and John Merrill and
Dr. Robert Hecht-Nielsen, HNC)
Reinforcement Learning and Prediction, Recent Developments in the
Neurocomputer Industry
MAY 11, 1990
Morning Session (Dr. Federico Faggin, Synaptics Inc.)
VLSI Implementation of Neural Networks
TO REGISTER: By phone, call (508) 649-9731; by mail, write for further
information to: Neural Networks, Wang Institute of Boston University,
72 Tyng Road, Tyngsboro, MA 01879. For further information about registration
and STUDENT FELLOWSHIPS, see below.
REGISTRATION FEE: Regular attendee--$950; full-time student--$250.
Registration fee includes five days of tutorials, course notebooks, one
reception, five continental breakfasts, five lunches, four dinners, daily
morning and afternoon coffee service, evening discussion sessions.
STUDENT FELLOWSHIPS supporting travel, registration, and lodging for the
Course are available to full-time graduate students in a PhD program.
Applications must be postmarked by March 1, 1990. Send curriculum vitae,
a one-page essay describing your interest in neural networks, and a letter
from a faculty advisor to: Student Fellowships, Neural Networks Course,
Wang Institute of Boston University, 72 Tyng Road, Tyngsboro, MA 01879.
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End of NA Digest
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