From ritter at ist.psu.edu Tue Aug 2 14:47:45 2011 From: ritter at ist.psu.edu (Frank Ritter) Date: Tue, 2 Aug 2011 14:47:45 -0400 Subject: [ACT-R-users] CogModel notes: ICCM12/BRIMS12/BICA12/Prizes/Books/Jobs Message-ID: <821447.INOUBCHM@ist.psu.edu> This is based on the International Cognitive Modeling Conference mailing list that I maintain. I forward messages about twice a year. (this is the second one for ICCM 2012.) The first announcement is driving this email -- the schedule and web site for ICCM 2012 in Berlin are up. If you would like to be removed, please just let me know. I maintain it by hand to keep it small. cheers, Frank Ritter frank.e.ritter at gmail.com http://acs.ist.psu.edu http://www.frankritter.com 1. ICCM 2012, Berlin, Germany, 12-15 April 2012 http://www.iccm2012.com 2. ICCM 2012 tutorials call, Berlin, Germany, 12 April 2012, due 3 dec 11 http://www.iccm2012.com/tutorials/ 3. BRIMS 2012, 12-15 March 2012, submission deadline LIKELY early Jan 2012 http://www.brimsconference.org 4. Dissertation Prizes in Cognitive Science http://cognitrn.psych.indiana.edu/CogSciPrizes/index.htm 5. Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures 2011 (November 5-6, 2011), papers due by 27 july 2011 (but may have late breaking papers) http://bicasociety.org/2011/ 6. Call for Proposals for Symposia at AISB/IACAP World Congress 2012, 2-6 June 2012 Due 1 Sept 2011 http://events.cs.bham.ac.uk/turing12/ 7. Special issues of Simulation Journal, multiple deadlines http://www.scs.org/specialissues 8. New book on trust, Castelfranchi & Falcone 9. New book on modeling multi-tasking, Salvucci & Taatgen Discount code to order it 10. INNS Membership Progression Scheme 2011 11. Post-doc at U. of Melbourne on games, closing date in sept? 12. Junior Professorship for Psycho-/Neurolinguistics, closing date 8 sept 11 13. faculty position in computational linguistics at UCL, closing date 30 sep 11 14. Senior Scientist Position (hiring notice), no date given http://www.adcogsys.com/ 15. PhD student fellowship, U. of Lausaane, 15 jul 11 (but may be open) *************************************************** 1. ICCM 2012, Berlin, Germany, 12-15 April 2012 http://www.iccm2012.com The conference will be held from 13 to 15 April 2012 in Berlin at the Technische Universitat Berlin (Berlin Institute of Technology (TU/Berlin)). The conference web page is htpp://www.iccm2012.com The International Conference on Cognitive Modeling (ICCM) is the premier conference for research on computational models and computation-based theories of human behavior. ICCM is a forum for presenting, discussing, and evaluating the complete spectrum of cognitive modeling approaches, including connectionism, symbolic modeling, dynamical systems, Bayesian modeling, and cognitive architectures. ICCM includes basic and applied research, across a wide variety of domains, ranging from low-level perception and attention to higher-level problem-solving and learning. ICCM 2012 will be held in Berlin, Germany, on the campus of the Technische Universitat Berlin. The main conference will be held April 13-15, 2012 and the tutorials will be held April 12, 2012. We hope to see you in Berlin, The chairs are: "Nele Russwinkel" , "Uwe Drewitz" , "Hedderik van Rijn" , "Jeronimo Dzaak" *************************************************** 2. ICCM 2012 tutorials call, Berlin, Germany, 12 April 2012, due 3 dec 11 http://www.iccm2012.com/tutorials/ The Tutorials program at the International Conference on Cognitive Modeling (ICCM) 2012 will be held on 12 April 2012. It will provide conference participants with the opportunity to gain new insights, knowledge, and skills from a broad range of areas in the field of cognitive modeling. Tutorial topics will be presented in a taught format and are likely to range from practical guidelines to theoretical issues or software. Tutorials at ICCM have been held many times before, and this year's program will be modelled after them and after the series held at the Cognitive Science Conference. If you are interested, please see the web site for more details. *************************************************** 3. BRIMS 2012, 12-15 March 2012, submission deadline LIKELY early Jan 2012 http://www.brimsconference.org You are invited to participate in the 21st Conference on Behavior Representation in Modeling and Simulation (BRIMS), to be held at the Amelia Island Plantation, Amelia Island, Florida (near the Georgia / Florida border). BRIMS enables modeling and simulation research scientists, engineers, and technical communities across disciplines to meet, share ideas, identify capability gaps, discuss cutting-edge research directions, highlight promising technologies, and showcase the state-of-the-art in Department of Defense related applications. The BRIMS Conference will consist of many exciting elements in 2012, including special topic areas, technical paper sessions, special symposia/panel discussions, and government laboratory sponsor sessions. Highlights of BRIMS 2012 will include a fantastic lineup of keynote speakers spanning cognitive modeling, sociocultural modeling, and network science. The BRIMS Executive Committee invites papers, posters, demos, symposia, panel discussions, and tutorials on topics related to the representation of individuals, groups, teams and organizations in models and simulations. All submissions are peer-reviewed (see www.brimsconference.org for additional details on submission types). KEY DATES: [estimated] All submissions due: 6 Jan 2012 Tutorial Acceptance: 31 Jan 2012 Authors Notification 31 Jan 2012 Final version due: 18 Feb 2012 Tutorials: 12 March 2011 BRIMS 2010 Opens: 13 March 2011 BRIMS PROGAM COMMITTEE: William Kennedy (George Mason University) Bradley Best (Adaptive Cognitive Systems) Robert St. Amant (North Carolina State University) If you have any questions or concerns, please contact the BRIMS 2012 Conference Chair, Dr. Tiffany Jastrzembski (tiffany.jastrzembski at wpafb.af.mil). *************************************************** 4. Dissertation Prizes in Cognitive Science http://cognitrn.psych.indiana.edu/CogSciPrizes/index.htm [this is a repeat, but is new and worth attention] Call for Nominations The Robert J. Glushko Dissertation Prizes in Cognitive Science Nomination Deadline: January 15, 2011 The Cognitive Science Society and the Glushko-Samuelson Foundation seek nominations for up to five outstanding dissertation prizes in cognitive science. The goals of these prizes are to increase the prominence of cognitive science, and encourage students to engage in interdisciplinary efforts to understand minds and intelligent systems. The hope is that the prizes will recognize and honor young researchers conducting ground-breaking research in cognitive science. The eventual goal is to aid in efforts to bridge between the areas of cognitive science and create theories of general interest to the multiple fields concerned with scientifically understanding the nature of minds and intelligent systems. Promoting a unified cognitive science is consistent with the belief that understanding how minds work will require the synthesis of many different empirical methods, formal tools, and analytic theories. 2011 is the inaugural year of this annual prize. Up-to-date information on the prizes can be found at http://cognitrn.psych.indiana.edu/CogSciPrizes/index.htm . A Description of the Prizes 1) Up to five Robert J. Glushko Dissertation Prizes in Cognitive Science will be awarded annually. Each prize will be accompanied by a certificate and a $10,000 award to be used by the recipient without any constraints. Prize winners will also receive three years of complimentary membership in the Cognitive Science Society starting with the year in which they have won the prize. 2) Prize-winning dissertations are expected to transcend any one of the individual fields comprising cognitive science. They should centrally address issues of interest to multiple fields that comprise cognitive science, including: psychology, computer science, philosophy, linguistics, anthropology, neuroscience, and education. 3) Prize-winners must have received a PhD degree no more than two years before the January 15 nomination deadline. For the 2011 prizes, dissertations will be considered from individuals who received their PhD degrees during the period from January 15, 2009 to January 15, 2011. 4) The dissertation prizes are open to any student who has conducted dissertation research related to cognitive science, regardless of nationality or originating department. How to submit details are on the web site. The deadline for nominations is January 15, 2011. Awardees will be announced by April 15, 2011. *************************************************** 5. Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures 2011 (November 5-6, 2011), papers due by 27 july 2011 (but may have late breaking papers) http://bicasociety.org/2011/ Papers or abstracts are now accepted for Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures 2011 (November 5-6 in Washington DC, co-located with AAAI Fall Symposia). Submissions due by July 27th. More info at http://bicasociety.org/2011/. Please contact Alexei Samsonovich or Kamilla Johannsdottir with any questions. Venue: Holiday Inn, Arlington, VA 22203, USA Publication Venue: IOS Press, FAIA Series Format: One-track, 2-day interactive conference with intermittent paper presentations, panel discussions, exhibits, coffee breaks and 2 socials. Critical Dates - July 27th: paper or abstract submission deadline (need to use IOS Press template) - August 15th: notification of acceptance - August 29th: camera-ready papers due - November 4th, PM: workshop and reception - November 5-6: BICA 2011 CALL FOR PAPERS The challenge of creating a real-life computational equivalent of the human mind calls for our joint efforts to better understand at a computational level how natural intelligent systems develop their cognitive and learning functions. The scope of BICA 2011 includes: - BICA models of robust learning mechanisms; - models of perception, cognition and action; - emotional and social intelligence in artifacts; - vital constraints informed by neuroscience, - human-like episodic and semantic memory; - metacognition, human-like self-regulated learning, bootstrapped and meta-learning; - language acquisition and symbol grounding; - the "critical mass" for cognitive growth in a learning environment, scalability of learning; - the roadmap to solving the challenge. Confirmed speakers include Murray Shanahan, Christian Lebiere, Antonio Chella, Stuart Shapiro, Keith Downing, Brandon Minnery, David Noelle, Frank Ritter, Jeff Krichmar, David Vernon, Scott Fahlman, Amy Kruse, Art Pope, Brandon Rohrer. Submission categories are: abstracts, extended abstracts, position papers and research papers, up to 6 pages free. Information about the event, submission, format, registration, lodging, local arrangements, meals, socials, etc. can be found at http://bicasociety.org/2011/. We are looking forward to seeing you in Arlington in November, -- A.V.S. & K.R.J., BICA 2011 Chairs Second International Conference on Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures Arlington, Virginia: November 5-6 (Saturday-Sunday), 2011 With reception and a workshop on Nov 4th Sponsored by the BICA Society Co-located with AAAI Fall Symposium Series (Nov 4-6), AI Funding Seminar (Nov 3), and Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting *************************************************** 6. Call for Proposals for Symposia at AISB/IACAP World Congress 2012, 2-6 June 2012 Due 1 Sept 2011 http://events.cs.bham.ac.uk/turing12/ From: John Barnden CALL for PROPOSALS for SYMPOSIA =============================== to occur as the main content of the AISB/IACAP World Congress 2012 ============================== in honour of Alan Turing July 2nd to 6th, 2012 University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK http://events.cs.bham.ac.uk/turing12/ or http://www.aisb.org.uk/convention/aisb12/ organized by *** Society for the Study of Artificial Intelligence and Simulation of Behaviour (AISB) [http://www.aisb.org.uk/] *** International Association for Computing and Philosophy (IACAP) [http://www.ia-cap.org/] Preamble -------- AISB and IACAP are delighted to be joining forces to run the above Congress in 2012. The Congress serves both as the year's AISB Convention and the year's IACAP conference. The Congress has been inspired by a desire to honour Alan Turing and by the broad and deep significance of Turing's work to AI, to the philosophical ramifications of computing, and to philosophy and computing more generally. The Congress is one of the events forming the Alan Turing Year (http://www.mathcomp.leeds.ac.uk/turing2012/). The intent of the Congress is to stimulate a particularly rich interchange between AI and Philosophy on any areas of mutual interest, whether directly addressing Turing's own research output or not. The Congress will consist mainly of a number of collocated Symposia on specific research areas, interspersed with Congress-wide refreshment breaks, social events and invited Plenary Talks. This format borrows from the normal AISB Convention practice and the theme-session structure used in IACAP conferences. All papers other than the invited Plenaries will be given within Symposia. This format is perfect for encouraging new dialogue and collaboration both within and between research areas. Symposia are expected normally to last for one day or two days, but somewhat shorter or longer possibilities can be considered. They will probably each involve between ten and fifty participants but there are no particular limits. Symposia can include any type of event of academic benefit: talks, posters, panels, discussions, demonstrations, outreach sessions, etc. Each Symposium will be organized by its own programme committee. The committee proposes the Symposium, defines the area(s) for it, works out a structure for it, issues calls for abstracts/papers etc., manages the process of selecting submitted papers for inclusion, and compiles an electronic file on which the symposium proceedings will be based (locally produced, and not precluding publication of papers elsewhere). The Congress organizers are in charge of everything else: overall schedule, plenary talks, registration, creation of the individual symposium proceedings in print, creation of an overall electronic proceedings for the Conference, etc. Some Research Themes -------------------- Proposals for Symposia are welcomed in all areas of AI and cognitive science (as at normal AISB Conventions) and all areas of philosophy related to computing (as at normal IACAP conferences). We have identified some research areas as being especially appropriate for the Congress. These are as follows, BUT ARE IN NO WAY EXCLUSIVE: -- the fundamental nature and limits of computation -- computational theory of mind -- the nature and possibility of AI -- testing for intelligence (natural or artificial) -- consciousness (natural or artificial) -- creativity (artistic and otherwise), aesthetics, etc. -- people's attitudes towards and relationships with intelligent machines -- ethics of AI and computing in general, and how AI may ultimately affect ethics -- the philosophical nature & ramifications (e.g., for notions of person, self, agenthood, social cognition) of both intelligent software agents in cyberspace and people's virtual identities. Proposals for symposia touching on these themes will be especially welcome, but we will also very much welcome proposals in other areas relevant to AISB and/or IACAP. In particular, WE WELCOME SEQUELS to PREVIOUS AISB SYMPOSIA or IACAP THEME SESSIONS. Symposium Proposal Procedure ---------------------------- NB: -- Proposers are welcome to submit more than one proposal, or to be involved in some other way in more than one. -- Proposers need not already be members of either Society and will not be required to become members. They will of course be encouraged to join! The deadline for Symposium proposals is: *1 September 2011* .... Submitting The Proposal: -- Please visit http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=turing2012 in the role of an author and press the button "New Submission". Invited Plenary Speakers ------------------------ Four invited Plenary speakers have so far been secured, namely: COLIN ALLEN Provost Professor of Cognitive Science and of History & Philosophy of Science Department of Philosophy and Philosophy of Science Indiana University LUCIANO FLORIDI Research Chair in Philosophy of Information and UNESCO Chair of Information and Computer Ethics University of Hertfordshire, UK & Director, Information Ethics research Group and Fellow of St Cross College Oxford, UK AARON SLOMAN Honorary Professor School of Computer Science U. of Birmingham, UK STEPHEN WOLFRAM Founder and CEO Wolfram Research, Inc. http://www.stephenwolfram.com/ Congress Chairs --------------- Overall Chairs: Anthony Beavers Philosophy and Cognitive Science The University of Evansville Evansville, Indiana 47722 USA +1 812-488-2682 afbeavers at gmail.com (Tony is the President of IACAP) John Barnden School of Computer Science University of Birmingham Birmingham, B15 2TT +44 (0)121-414-3816 J.A.Barnden at cs.bham.ac.uk (John is currently Vice-Chair of AISB, and was Chair from 2003 to 2010) We expect to have selected the successful proposals by 15th September. We will be requiring the proposers of the successful proposals to put out a first call for abstracts/papers by 15th October, with a view to: :: submissions being in by 1 February 2012 :: inclusion decisions made by 1 March 2012 :: final abstract/paper versions for inclusion in proceedings delivered by 30 March 2012. (These dates are provisional and may be adjusted.) *************************************************** 7. Special issues of Simulation Journal, multiple deadlines http://www.scs.org/specialissues To: Date: Wed, 13 Apr 2011 15:20:38 -0400 From: vsim-conf at sce.carleton.ca Subject: [simu-conf] SIMULATION Journal Special Issues Dear Colleague: As a member of the Modeling and Simulation Community, you might be interested in the following upcoming call-for-papers for Special Issues to be published in http://sim.sagepub.com/ Simulation, Transactions of the Society of Modeling and Simulation International". M&S Optimization Applications in Industry and Engineering http://www.scs.org/simulation/specialissues?q=node/245 o Submission of papers due by: April 15, 2011 o Publication expected: Summer 2012 This Special Issue of the SIMULATION Journal aims to highlight academic foundations as well as real-world industrial applications focusing on lessons learned, experienced constraints, and proof of concepts and generalizability of implemented solutions. Authors of high quality, unpublished contributions to this field of Modeling and Simulation are invited to submit papers to this Special Issue. This special issue is aimed to solicit papers on the following topics of interest, but not limited to: Facility Layout Optimization Transportation Optimization Support of Environmental Science Optimization in Business Applications Optimization support in Engineering Domains (such as Biomedical, Chemical, Civil, Computer, Electrical, and Mechanical) Activity Driven Modeling and Simulation: Theory and Applications http://www.scs.org/simulation/specialissues?q=node/133 o Submission of papers due by: April 30, 2011 o Publication expected: Spring 2012 This special issue will highlight new research that uncovers and examines aspects of activity driven modeling and simulation that cut across domains of application. Submissions for the special issue should therefore focus on theory, methods, tools, and applications that have cross-disciplinary appeal. Specific topics of interest include, but are not limited to: Numerical issues and algorithms Modeling methods and tools Parallel simulation Algorithms for and uses of novel computer architectures Fundamental theory Inter-disciplinary applications and case studies Design and refactoring of simulators to support activity based M&S Modeling and Simulation of Aeronautical Systems http://www.scs.org/simulation/specialissues?q=node/255 o Submission of papers due by: May 30, 2011 o Publication expected: Fall 2012 As a showcase for multidisciplinary research, this special issue shall bring innovative approaches in composite material behaviors, diagnostic approaches, instrumentation and sensing, implementation of flight and systems models on computers. Authors of high quality, unpublished contributions are invited to submit papers to this Special Issue for a variety of topics including, but not limited to: Simulation of Complex Aeronautical Systems Aeronautical Systems of Systems Engineering Materials for Aeronautical and Aerospace vehicles Flight control and navigation systems CAT (Clear Air Turbulence) prediction and analysis Structural Analysis of air lifting bodies Aircraft material fatigue phenomenon Flight training simulators Flight safety analysis and design Modeling Sustainability for Third Millennium http://www.scs.org/simulation/specialissues?q=node/202 o Submission of papers due by: August 1, 2011 o Publication expected: Fall 2012 This special issue aims at providing the opportunity for authors to submit original and unpublished articles on innovative ways to use Modeling and Simulation as Enabling Technology for investigating Technical, Economic, Social and Environmental sustainability of Human Enterprises. Simulation represents probably the only methodology to provide to the human race a tool for enabling control of mankind evolution; in fact historical data for understanding the situation evolution in this context could be collected just when it is too late to react. Validated, verified and accredited models represent the cornerstone for anticipating future critical situations. Multidisciplinary approaches are encouraged to properly address the framework of complex system sustainability. Topics of interest include but are not limited to: Coupling economic, social, business and environmental models for studying sustainability Interoperable simulation for combining different models addressing sustainability issues Modeling and simulation as support risks and opportunities analysis within the new reference scenario characterized by the global financial crisis Modeling social and human factors and their influence in human enterprises and activities Modeling drivers and guidelines definition for human enterprise sustainability Modeling global or local sustainability Models for estimating medium and long term sustainability Advancing Simulation Theory and Practice with Distributed Computing http://www.scs.org/simulation/specialissues?q=node/274 o Submission of papers due by: November 30, 2011 o Publication expected: Spring 2013 The pursuit of high quality simulation experimentation and optimization can require non-trivial amounts of computing power. Having access to an increased number of computers usually enables "further and faster experimentation" of the models. Distributed computing concepts such as High Performance Computing (HPC), High Throughput Computing (HTC), grid and cloud computing can provide the required computing capacity for the execution of large and complex models. Further there has been a long tradition of adopting advances in distributed computing in simulation as evidenced by contributions from the parallel and distributed simulation community. There has arguably been a recent acceleration of innovation in distributed computing tools and techniques. This special issue presents the opportunity to showcase recent research that is assimilating these new advances in simulation. This special issue therefore solicits high quality papers on both computational and theoretical studies that further the extant literature on the application of distributed computing to simulation. Topics of interest include but are not limited to: Methodologies for creation of scalable simulation models. Methodologies and algorithms associated with distributed execution of models (e.g. algorithms for task-farming and load-balancing) Theoretical issues, methodology and software architectures for large scale distributed simulations (e.g. parallel and distributed simulation, multi-agent based distributed simulation, IEEE 1516 HLA architecture, Distributed Interactive Simulation). Algorithms for parallel and distributed simulation, including time synchronization, optimistic and conservative protocols. Ubiquitous computing architectures for development and experimentation of simulation models. Collaborative model development (e.g., shared workspace, shared manipulation of models) The above special issues are still open for submission of papers. Please see the SCS web site at www.scs.org for details. If you want to propose a special issue for SIMULATION, please see SPECIAL ISSUES: Principles & Guidelines on the SCS website at: [broken URL passed to me] If you want to obtain further details about SIMULATION and SCS publications, find more information in the following Frequently Asked Questions: http://www.scs.org/upload/FAQPublications.pdf [problems/issues: contact vsim-conf-owner at sce.carleton.ca] *************************************************** 8. New book on trust, Castelfranchi & Falcone If you think that it is appropriate, please send next time the announcement of this book (long or short). It is a Cognitive Science book on a crucial topic (the theory of trust, what is trust, and how it works) with a really interdisciplinary approach, centered on cognitive modeling. TRUST THEORY A SOCIO-COGNITIVE AND COMPUTATIONAL MODEL Cristiano Castelfranchi - http://www.istc.cnr.it/ Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies (ISTC) of the Italian National Research Council (CNR), Italy Rino Falcone - http://t3.istc.cnr.it/trustwiki/index.php/T3_Group_Home Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies (ISTC) of the Italian National Research Council (CNR), Italy A John Wiley and Sons, Ltd., Publication CHAPTERS 1 Definitions of Trust: From Conceptual Components to the General Core Two Intertwined Notions of Trust: Trust as Attitude vs. Trust as Act A Critique of Some Significant Definitions of Trust - Gambetta: Is Trust Only About Predictability? - Mayer, Davis, & Schoorman: Is Trust Only Willingness, for Any Kind of Vulnerability? - McKnight: The Black Boxes of Trust - Marsh: Is a Mere Expectation Enough for Modeling Trust? - Yamagishi: Mixing up the Act of Trusting and the Act of Cooperating - Trust as Based on Reciprocity 26 Hardin: Trust as Encapsulated Interest - Rousseau: What Kind of Intention is 'Trust'? 2 Socio-Cognitive Model of Trust: Basic Ingredients 3 Socio-Cognitive Model of Trust: Quantitative Aspects 4 The Negative Side: Lack of Trust, Implicit Trust, Mistrust, Doubts and Diffidence 5 The Affective and Intuitive Forms of Trust: The Confidence We Inspire 6 Dynamics of Trust 7 Trust, Control and Autonomy: A Dialectic Relationship 8 The Economic Reductionism and Trust (Ir)rationality 9 The Glue of Society 10 On the Trustee's Side: Trust As Relational Capital 11 A Fuzzy Implementation for the Socio-Cognitive Approach to Trust 12 Trust and Technology 13 Concluding Remarks and Pointers *************************************************** 9. New book on modeling multi-tasking, Salvucci & Taatgen Discount code to order it at http://www.oup.com/us , enter promo code 29475 for 20% off for books in the Oxford series on cognitive models and architectures Salvucci and Taatgen: The multitasking mind Anderson: HOW CAN HUM MIND OCCUR Bach: PRINCIP OF SYNTHETIC INTELLIG Ritter:IN ORDER TO LEARN Gray:INTEGRATED MODELS OF COG SYS **************************************************************** 10. INNS Membership Progression Scheme 2011 [from the ACT-R mailing list] INNS Membership Progression Scheme 2011 The International Neural Network Society (INNS) is the organization for individuals interested in a theoretical and computational understanding of the brain/mind and applying that knowledge to develop new and more effective forms of machine intelligence. INNS was formed in 1987 by the leading scientists in the neural network field. The field of neural networks encourages interdisciplinary perspectives, and INNS' membership reflects this diversity. Members represent a variety of fields, backgrounds and level of interest. INNS has introduced a new membership category of Senior Member (SM) to recognize INNS members for their contributions, and to allow for a progression of the INNS members to a higher recognition membership status. We call for 2011 Senior Member nominations. For 2011, on-line senior membership nomination and application can be made through the website at: or alternatively, you can sent via e-mail a nomination letter and a CV of the candidate to the INNS VP for Membership, Irwin King under the Subject line: "2011 INNS Senior Membership Nomination for [Applicant's Name]", on or before July 22, 2011. Final confirmation of the 2011 Senior Members will be made by the INNS Board of Governors and appropriate announcements will then be made, at least on the INNS website, www.inns.org, and in the Tri-Society Newsletter. INNS Membership Information: As of 2011, INNS has three types of confirmed membership categories: ? Student (payment 1 year $25; 2 years $35) ? Regular member (1 year $85; 2 years $125) ? Affiliate member (1 year $30; 2 years $40) for ENNS and JNNS members only Every INNS member receives, for example: ? A reduced fee to attend the annual IJCNN conference and the biennial INNS Symposia, as well as many other INNS co-sponsored conferences worldwide ? A subscription to the Tri-Society Newsletter ? A subscription to the flagship journal Neural Networks * Participation in many special interest groups and regional chapters, etc. etc. For further information, contact: INNS VP for Membership, Irwin King *************************************************** 11. Post-doc at U. of Melbourne on games, closing date in sept? Date: Fri, 29 Jul 2011 23:09:36 +1000 From: "Florian 'Floyd' Mueller" Subject: Job: More research post opportunities in Australia To: CHI-JOBS at LISTSERV.ACM.ORG Hi, If you are interested in HCI and games, and are interested in research-only (no teaching required) posts in Melbourne, Australia, please consider the RMIT vice-chancellor fellowship (see rmit.edu.au, then click on ad), deadline in 2 days, and also the following below: Thanks, Floyd FYI: The McKenzie Postdoctoral Fellowship Scheme has been established to attract outstanding recent doctoral graduates to the University in areas of research priority for the university and its faculties, and in particular to recruit new researchers who have the potential to build and lead cross-disciplinary collaborative research activities inside and across faculties. The University offers a leading and lively research environment that is internationally engaged, public-spirited, and with many outstanding areas of research strength. The objectives of the scheme are to: assist the university to build an ambitious program of research activity, and [to] attract outstanding postdoctoral researchers to be part of that and to begin to build the next generation of research activity. Applicants must have graduated or have completed all the required steps to be eligible to graduate with a PhD by the closing date of 7 October 2011, from a university other than the University of Melbourne. The PhD must have been awarded in the preceding 12 months, i.e. on or after 7 October 2010. The McKenzie Postdoctoral Fellowships are intended for applicants who do not hold a fixed term or continuing appointment at the University of Melbourne. Applicants may be drawn from any field in which the University of Melbourne has research strength, and must have an ability to contribute to research collaborations and programs across faculties or disciplines. Applicants will be required to provide a declaration of support from the department/school in which they would be located if successful but the criteria for selection will be university-based. International applications are welcomed. The applicant must have the right to work in Australia. Permanent residency or citizenship is not a requirement. Fellowships can be awarded for fractional appointments. Assessment will take account of achievement relative to opportunity. Outcomes are expected to be communicated first week of December 2011. The Fellowships will be funded by Melbourne Research to the value of a Level A academic salary including on costs. Fellows will be employed at Level A.6 in the University Salary Band. Fellows will receive an additional $15,000 to be spent on travel and/or equipment over the term of their Fellowship. Awards will be for a maximum of three years commencing (1 January 2012) but start date may be deferred up to (30 June 2012). Funding Guidelines along with the application form and FAQ are available at the following link: http://www.research.unimelb.edu.au/rgc/grants/find/schemes/uom/mckenzie_fellowships For further information in the first instance please email: McKenzie-application at unimelb.edu.au or you may phone the Office of the Executive Director, Research - Dr David Cookson: +61 (0)3 9035 4413. Candidates should submit their application directly to mckenzie-application at unimelb.edu.au but should also cc to gwenda at unimelb.edu.au on final application. Should MSE staff seek assistance in reviewing applications from candidates, please forward to Gwenda Pittaway no later than 26 September. Any other queries may be directed to Gwenda Pittaway, gwenda at unimelb.edu.au, x44421 (MSE) Gwenda Pittaway Research Officer MERIT Research Services Depts Electrical and Electronic Engineering, CSSE and Mechanical Engineering Melbourne School of Engineering THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE Parkville campus, Victoria 3010 Australia Tel: +61 3 83444421 gwenda at unimelb.edu.au **************************************************************** 12. Junior Professorship for Psycho-/Neurolinguistics, closing date 8 sept 11 From: "Angela Schwering" Subject: Junior Professorship for Psycho-/Neurolinguistics, University of Osnabrueck Date: Fri, 29 Jul 2011 10:14:07 +0200 Junior Professorship for Psycho-/Neurolinguistics The interdisciplinary Institute of Cognitive Science of the University of Osnabruck offers a junior professorship for Psycho-/Neurolinguistics (salary level W1) to be filled as soon as possible. The contract will be initially for three years with the possibility of an extension for a further period of three years, provided the intermediate evaluation has been passed successfully. The successful applicant will represent the discipline of Neurolinguistics or Psycholinguistics within Cognitive Science with regard to both teaching and research in his or her own responsibility and will act independently also with regard to the acquisition of external research funds. The position involves research in the areas of Neuro-/Psycholinguistics. Candidates are expected to interdisciplinarily collaborate with several of the other research groups at the Institute of Cognitive Science (Artificial Intelligence, Cognitive Psychology, Computational Linguistics, Neurobiopsychology, Neurocybernetics, Neuroinformatics, and Philosophy of Cognition). Furthermore, the position involves teaching with a focus on neuro- /psycholinguistic approaches in the international BSc, MSc, and PhD programs of Cognitive Science. Requirements are a doctorate in Neuro-/Psycholinguistics or closely related subject area; excellent research qualifications documented by an outstanding dissertation and publications in international reviewed journals; interest and documented experience in interdisciplinary work; thorough familiarity with linguistic theory, brain research, and experimental methods. Very good knowledge of English as well as very good teaching qualifications are required. Applicants should have completed their doctorate within the past five years. Classes taught by the successful applicant are offered to foreign and German students of the international BSc., MSc., and PhD programs ?Cognitive Science?. All classes are taught in English. Further information on the Cognitive Science programs and the Institute of Cognitive Science can be found at http://www.cogsci.uni-osnabrueck.de) Osnabruck University is an equal opportunity employer. Women are therefore particularly encouraged to apply. Disabled applicants with equivalent qualification will be treated preferentially. Candidates are invited to send their applications with the usual documentation (including CV, lists of publications and taught courses, names and addresses of three referees, and a sketch of a research program) no later than 8th September 2011 to the Director of the Institute of Cognitive Science, University of Osnabruck, Albrechtstrasse 28, 49076 Osnabruck, Germany. **************************************************************** 13. faculty position in computational linguistics at UCL, closing date 30 sep 11 Faculty Position in Computational Linguistics Closing date: 30-Sep-2011 Further details at: https://atsv7.wcn.co.uk/search_engine/jobs.cgi?owner=5041178&ownertype=fair&jcode=1200111 **************************************************************** 14. Senior Scientist Position (hiring notice), no date given http://www.adcogsys.com/ From: To: act-r-users at act-r.psy.cmu.edu Date: Mon, 11 Jul 2011 10:29:43 -0700 Subject: [ACT-R-users] Senior Scientist Position (hiring notice) Adaptive Cognitive Systems LLC (http://www.adcogsys.com) is a stable small company, founded in 2006, seeking an exceptionally reliable and diligent senior scientist to conduct human-computer interaction research. ACS has a current contract with the Naval Air Warfare Center (NAVAIR), and ongoing collaborations with university partners, positioning ACS as a leader in the emerging cognitive modeling software domain. The work is fascinating! Requirements: -Ph.D. in Computer Science, Mathematics, Psychology, Machine Learning, Linguistics, or a related field. -Minimum 5 years experience industry experience as a senior scientist (with excellent references) -Experience in analysis of very large data sets, experimental design, and software development -Proven ability to successfully and quickly write all levels and types of funding proposals -A track record of high quality journal publications and established industry contacts -Works effectively with research assistants and research programmers -The ability to present complex technical information in a clear and concise manner -Comfortable with change, learning and novelty Bonus: -Interest in virtual environments, gaming, and artificial intelligence Responsibilities: -Performs all aspects of senior scientist research and documentation -Co-writes all levels and types of funding proposals Location: Downtown Fairhaven located in Bellingham, Washington Compensation: Salary Depends on Experience Interested applicants - please send a cover letter and CV to dlunt at adcogsys.com. Thank you, Diane Lunt Adaptive Cognitive Systems, LLC Executive Assistant 1942 Broadway Street, Suite 314 Boulder, CO 80302 Office Phone: 303-413-3472 **************************************************************** 15. PhD student fellowship, U. of Lausaane, 15 jul 11 (but may be open) From: "Marewski, Julian" To: Cc: marewski at act-r.psy.cmu.edu Subject: [ACT-R-users] Doctoral student position at the University ofLausanne Faculty for Business and Economics (HEC): Cognitive modeling of decision making processes Dear all, I seek candidates for a doctoral student position at the Department of Organizational Behavior of the Faculty for Business and Economics at the University of Lausanne, Switzerland. Since the position can start as early as the summer/fall 2011, I'd like to spread the word quickly. I would appreciate it if this email could be passed on to potentially interested students. The student will have virtually no tasks other than doing her/his research. There are no teaching obligations. Parts of the research should focus on the mathematical or computational modeling of human cognitive decision processes and/or on the cognitive mechanisms underlying bounded rationality in organizations in business, industry, and/or political contexts. Candidates with an interest in heuristic decision making and/or ACT-R modeling are especially encouraged to apply (but prior knowledge of these is not necessary.) Swiss salaries are competitive. Best wishes and many thanks, Julian The Department of Organizational Behavior of the Faculty for Business and Economics at the University of Lausanne seeks applicants for Doctoral Student Fellowship The position (60%) is to begin August 1st, 2011 or later. The contract is limited to 1 year, and can be prolonged for 2x2 years. The maximum funding period is 5 years. Successful candidates will obtain a Ph.D. in Management. The work location is Lausanne Dorigny. Job description We seek applicants to work on the cognitive modeling of decision making processes in organizations in business, industry, and/or political contexts. We expect Ph.D. candidates to publish their research in top-tier journals. The candidate is expected to devote at the very least 50% of her/his time to her/his research project, and at the very most 50% (and only if necessary) to support other research, administrative, and teaching activities. Excellent candidates will be freed as much as possible to devote their time exclusively to research. Requirements Applicants should be interested in the mathematical or computational modeling of human cognitive decision processes as well as in the cognitive mechanisms underlying bounded rationality in organizations in business, industry, and/or political contexts. Knowledge of quantitative research methods, and ideally, programming skills (e.g., MATLAB, R, ACT-R) is helpful but not required. A university degree in psychology, business, economics, mathematics, computer sciences, physics, biology, or another quantitatively-oriented discipline as well as very good English skills are required. Application materials and deadline Please submit applications by July 15th, 2011. Applications include a cover letter describing research interests and a potential thesis project, curriculum vitae, university transcripts, two letters of recommendation, previous work transcripts (if available), and up to two publications (if available). The preferred method of submission are PDF files e-mailed to the responsible professor, Julian Marewski (marewski at mpib-berlin.mpg.de). The Department of Organizational Behavior and Lausanne The Department of Organizational Behavior of the Faculty for Business and Economics at the University of Lausanne provides a stimulating, interdisciplinary research environment. We value the diversity of the expertise of the members of the department (we have Ph.D.s in business, management, psychology, and economics) as well as the diversity of the departments at the Faculty of Business and Economics. We publish in top-tier journals in different disciplines, including Science, Psychological Review, and the American Economic Review. Our department's members come from different countries, and the working language of the department is English. Located near Lake Geneva and surrounded by the Jura Mountains and the French Alps, Lausanne is a beautiful and cosmopolitan spot to live and work. We have a collegial atmosphere that makes it easy for us to carry out our research. Information about the Department of Organizational Behavior is available at http://www.hec.unil.ch/hec/recherche/unite?set_language=en&unite_id=239& cl=en . Information about the University of Lausanne's Ph.D. program can be found at http://www.hec.unil.ch/hec/doctorats/phdmanagement/why/welcome . More information about the position can be inquired directly from Julian Marewski (marewski at mpib-berlin.mpg.de and http://www.mpib-berlin.mpg.de/en/staff/julian-marewski Disclaimer: This ad stills requires final official approval from the University of Lausanne. -30- From utebachmeier at gmail.com Thu Aug 18 17:13:07 2011 From: utebachmeier at gmail.com (Sabrina Friedman) Date: Fri, 19 Aug 2011 00:13:07 +0300 Subject: [ACT-R-users] CogModel notes: ICCM12/BRIMS12/BICA12/Prizes/Books/Jobsfrom Sabrina Message-ID: This is based on the International Cognitive Modeling Conference mailing list that I maintain. I forward messages about twice a year. (this is the second one for ICCM 2012.) The first announcement is driving this email -- the schedule and web site for ICCM 2012 in Berlin are up. If you would like to be removed, please just let me know. I maintain it by hand to keep it small. cheers, Frank Ritter frank.e.ritter at gmail.com http://acs.ist.psu.edu http://www.frankritter.com 1. ICCM 2012, Berlin, Germany, 12-15 April 2012 http://www.iccm2012.com 2. ICCM 2012 tutorials call, Berlin, Germany, 12 April 2012, due 3 dec 11 http://www.iccm2012.com/tutorials/ 3. BRIMS 2012, 12-15 March 2012, submission deadline LIKELY early Jan 2012 http://www.brimsconference.org 4. Dissertation Prizes in Cognitive Science http://cognitrn.psych.indiana.edu/CogSciPrizes/index.htm 5. Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures 2011 (November 5-6, 2011), papers due by 27 july 2011 (but may have late breaking papers) http://bicasociety.org/2011/ 6. Call for Proposals for Symposia at AISB/IACAP World Congress 2012, 2-6 June 2012 Due 1 Sept 2011 http://events.cs.bham.ac.uk/turing12/ 7. Special issues of Simulation Journal, multiple deadlines http://www.scs.org/specialissues 8. New book on trust, Castelfranchi & Falcone 9. New book on modeling multi-tasking, Salvucci & Taatgen Discount code to order it 10. INNS Membership Progression Scheme 2011 11. Post-doc at U. of Melbourne on games, closing date in sept? 12. Junior Professorship for Psycho-/Neurolinguistics, closing date 8 sept 11 13. faculty position in computational linguistics at UCL, closing date 30 sep 11 14. Senior Scientist Position (hiring notice), no date given http://www.adcogsys.com/ 15. PhD student fellowship, U. of Lausaane, 15 jul 11 (but may be open) *************************************************** 1. ICCM 2012, Berlin, Germany, 12-15 April 2012 http://www.iccm2012.com The conference will be held from 13 to 15 April 2012 in Berlin at the Technische Universitat Berlin (Berlin Institute of Technology (TU/Berlin)). The conference web page is htpp://www.iccm2012.com The International Conference on Cognitive Modeling (ICCM) is the premier conference for research on computational models and computation-based theories of human behavior. ICCM is a forum for presenting, discussing, and evaluating the complete spectrum of cognitive modeling approaches, including connectionism, symbolic modeling, dynamical systems, Bayesian modeling, and cognitive architectures. ICCM includes basic and applied research, across a wide variety of domains, ranging from low-level perception and attention to higher-level problem-solving and learning. ICCM 2012 will be held in Berlin, Germany, on the campus of the Technische Universitat Berlin. The main conference will be held April 13-15, 2012 and the tutorials will be held April 12, 2012. We hope to see you in Berlin, The chairs are: "Nele Russwinkel" , "Uwe Drewitz" , "Hedderik van Rijn" , "Jeronimo Dzaak" *************************************************** 2. ICCM 2012 tutorials call, Berlin, Germany, 12 April 2012, due 3 dec 11 http://www.iccm2012.com/tutorials/ The Tutorials program at the International Conference on Cognitive Modeling (ICCM) 2012 will be held on 12 April 2012. It will provide conference participants with the opportunity to gain new insights, knowledge, and skills from a broad range of areas in the field of cognitive modeling. Tutorial topics will be presented in a taught format and are likely to range from practical guidelines to theoretical issues or software. Tutorials at ICCM have been held many times before, and this year's program will be modelled after them and after the series held at the Cognitive Science Conference. If you are interested, please see the web site for more details. *************************************************** 3. BRIMS 2012, 12-15 March 2012, submission deadline LIKELY early Jan 2012 http://www.brimsconference.org You are invited to participate in the 21st Conference on Behavior Representation in Modeling and Simulation (BRIMS), to be held at the Amelia Island Plantation, Amelia Island, Florida (near the Georgia / Florida border). BRIMS enables modeling and simulation research scientists, engineers, and technical communities across disciplines to meet, share ideas, identify capability gaps, discuss cutting-edge research directions, highlight promising technologies, and showcase the state-of-the-art in Department of Defense related applications. The BRIMS Conference will consist of many exciting elements in 2012, including special topic areas, technical paper sessions, special symposia/panel discussions, and government laboratory sponsor sessions. Highlights of BRIMS 2012 will include a fantastic lineup of keynote speakers spanning cognitive modeling, sociocultural modeling, and network science. The BRIMS Executive Committee invites papers, posters, demos, symposia, panel discussions, and tutorials on topics related to the representation of individuals, groups, teams and organizations in models and simulations. All submissions are peer-reviewed (see www.brimsconference.org for additional details on submission types). KEY DATES: [estimated] All submissions due: 6 Jan 2012 Tutorial Acceptance: 31 Jan 2012 Authors Notification 31 Jan 2012 Final version due: 18 Feb 2012 Tutorials: 12 March 2011 BRIMS 2010 Opens: 13 March 2011 BRIMS PROGAM COMMITTEE: William Kennedy (George Mason University) Bradley Best (Adaptive Cognitive Systems) Robert St. Amant (North Carolina State University) If you have any questions or concerns, please contact the BRIMS 2012 Conference Chair, Dr. Tiffany Jastrzembski (tiffany.jastrzembski at wpafb.af.mil). *************************************************** 4. Dissertation Prizes in Cognitive Science http://cognitrn.psych.indiana.edu/CogSciPrizes/index.htm [this is a repeat, but is new and worth attention] Call for Nominations The Robert J. Glushko Dissertation Prizes in Cognitive Science Nomination Deadline: January 15, 2011 The Cognitive Science Society and the Glushko-Samuelson Foundation seek nominations for up to five outstanding dissertation prizes in cognitive science. The goals of these prizes are to increase the prominence of cognitive science, and encourage students to engage in interdisciplinary efforts to understand minds and intelligent systems. The hope is that the prizes will recognize and honor young researchers conducting ground-breaking research in cognitive science. The eventual goal is to aid in efforts to bridge between the areas of cognitive science and create theories of general interest to the multiple fields concerned with scientifically understanding the nature of minds and intelligent systems. Promoting a unified cognitive science is consistent with the belief that understanding how minds work will require the synthesis of many different empirical methods, formal tools, and analytic theories. 2011 is the inaugural year of this annual prize. Up-to-date information on the prizes can be found at http://cognitrn.psych.indiana.edu/CogSciPrizes/index.htm . A Description of the Prizes 1) Up to five Robert J. Glushko Dissertation Prizes in Cognitive Science will be awarded annually. Each prize will be accompanied by a certificate and a $10,000 award to be used by the recipient without any constraints. Prize winners will also receive three years of complimentary membership in the Cognitive Science Society starting with the year in which they have won the prize. 2) Prize-winning dissertations are expected to transcend any one of the individual fields comprising cognitive science. They should centrally address issues of interest to multiple fields that comprise cognitive science, including: psychology, computer science, philosophy, linguistics, anthropology, neuroscience, and education. 3) Prize-winners must have received a PhD degree no more than two years before the January 15 nomination deadline. For the 2011 prizes, dissertations will be considered from individuals who received their PhD degrees during the period from January 15, 2009 to January 15, 2011. 4) The dissertation prizes are open to any student who has conducted dissertation research related to cognitive science, regardless of nationality or originating department. How to submit details are on the web site. The deadline for nominations is January 15, 2011. Awardees will be announced by April 15, 2011. *************************************************** 5. Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures 2011 (November 5-6, 2011), papers due by 27 july 2011 (but may have late breaking papers) http://bicasociety.org/2011/ Papers or abstracts are now accepted for Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures 2011 (November 5-6 in Washington DC, co-located with AAAI Fall Symposia). Submissions due by July 27th. More info at http://bicasociety.org/2011/. Please contact Alexei Samsonovich or Kamilla Johannsdottir with any questions. Venue: Holiday Inn, Arlington, VA 22203, USA Publication Venue: IOS Press, FAIA Series Format: One-track, 2-day interactive conference with intermittent paper presentations, panel discussions, exhibits, coffee breaks and 2 socials. Critical Dates - July 27th: paper or abstract submission deadline (need to use IOS Press template) - August 15th: notification of acceptance - August 29th: camera-ready papers due - November 4th, PM: workshop and reception - November 5-6: BICA 2011 CALL FOR PAPERS The challenge of creating a real-life computational equivalent of the human mind calls for our joint efforts to better understand at a computational level how natural intelligent systems develop their cognitive and learning functions. The scope of BICA 2011 includes: - BICA models of robust learning mechanisms; - models of perception, cognition and action; - emotional and social intelligence in artifacts; - vital constraints informed by neuroscience, - human-like episodic and semantic memory; - metacognition, human-like self-regulated learning, bootstrapped and meta-learning; - language acquisition and symbol grounding; - the "critical mass" for cognitive growth in a learning environment, scalability of learning; - the roadmap to solving the challenge. Confirmed speakers include Murray Shanahan, Christian Lebiere, Antonio Chella, Stuart Shapiro, Keith Downing, Brandon Minnery, David Noelle, Frank Ritter, Jeff Krichmar, David Vernon, Scott Fahlman, Amy Kruse, Art Pope, Brandon Rohrer. Submission categories are: abstracts, extended abstracts, position papers and research papers, up to 6 pages free. Information about the event, submission, format, registration, lodging, local arrangements, meals, socials, etc. can be found at http://bicasociety.org/2011/. We are looking forward to seeing you in Arlington in November, -- A.V.S. & K.R.J., BICA 2011 Chairs Second International Conference on Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures Arlington, Virginia: November 5-6 (Saturday-Sunday), 2011 With reception and a workshop on Nov 4th Sponsored by the BICA Society Co-located with AAAI Fall Symposium Series (Nov 4-6), AI Funding Seminar (Nov 3), and Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting *************************************************** 6. Call for Proposals for Symposia at AISB/IACAP World Congress 2012, 2-6 June 2012 Due 1 Sept 2011 http://events.cs.bham.ac.uk/turing12/ From: John Barnden CALL for PROPOSALS for SYMPOSIA =============================== to occur as the main content of the AISB/IACAP World Congress 2012 ============================== in honour of Alan Turing July 2nd to 6th, 2012 University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK http://events.cs.bham.ac.uk/turing12/ or http://www.aisb.org.uk/convention/aisb12/ organized by *** Society for the Study of Artificial Intelligence and Simulation of Behaviour (AISB) [http://www.aisb.org.uk/] *** International Association for Computing and Philosophy (IACAP) [http://www.ia-cap.org/] Preamble Sabrina Friedman Billige Fl?ge Marketing GmbH Emanuelstr. 3, 10317 Berlin Deutschland Telefon: +49 (33) 5310967 Email: utebachmeier at gmail.com Site: http://flug.airego.de - Billige Fl?ge vergleichen From woozydude at gmail.com Wed Aug 24 07:28:49 2011 From: woozydude at gmail.com (Woozy) Date: Wed, 24 Aug 2011 14:28:49 +0300 Subject: [ACT-R-users] CogModel notes: ICCM12/BRIMS12/BICA12/Prizes/Books/Jobs Message-ID: This is based on the International Cognitive Modeling Conference mailing list that I maintain. I forward messages about twice a year. (this is the second one for ICCM 2012.) The first announcement is driving this email -- the schedule and web site for ICCM 2012 in Berlin are up. If you would like to be removed, please just let me know. I maintain it by hand to keep it small. cheers, Frank Ritter frank.e.ritter at gmail.com http://acs.ist.psu.edu http://www.frankritter.com 1. ICCM 2012, Berlin, Germany, 12-15 April 2012 http://www.iccm2012.com 2. ICCM 2012 tutorials call, Berlin, Germany, 12 April 2012, due 3 dec 11 http://www.iccm2012.com/tutorials/ 3. BRIMS 2012, 12-15 March 2012, submission deadline LIKELY early Jan 2012 http://www.brimsconference.org 4. Dissertation Prizes in Cognitive Science http://cognitrn.psych.indiana.edu/CogSciPrizes/index.htm 5. Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures 2011 (November 5-6, 2011), papers due by 27 july 2011 (but may have late breaking papers) http://bicasociety.org/2011/ 6. Call for Proposals for Symposia at AISB/IACAP World Congress 2012, 2-6 June 2012 Due 1 Sept 2011 http://events.cs.bham.ac.uk/turing12/ 7. Special issues of Simulation Journal, multiple deadlines http://www.scs.org/specialissues 8. New book on trust, Castelfranchi & Falcone 9. New book on modeling multi-tasking, Salvucci & Taatgen Discount code to order it 10. INNS Membership Progression Scheme 2011 11. Post-doc at U. of Melbourne on games, closing date in sept? 12. Junior Professorship for Psycho-/Neurolinguistics, closing date 8 sept 11 13. faculty position in computational linguistics at UCL, closing date 30 sep 11 14. Senior Scientist Position (hiring notice), no date given http://www.adcogsys.com/ 15. PhD student fellowship, U. of Lausaane, 15 jul 11 (but may be open) *************************************************** 1. ICCM 2012, Berlin, Germany, 12-15 April 2012 http://www.iccm2012.com The conference will be held from 13 to 15 April 2012 in Berlin at the Technische Universitat Berlin (Berlin Institute of Technology (TU/Berlin)). The conference web page is htpp://www.iccm2012.com The International Conference on Cognitive Modeling (ICCM) is the premier conference for research on computational models and computation-based theories of human behavior. ICCM is a forum for presenting, discussing, and evaluating the complete spectrum of cognitive modeling approaches, including connectionism, symbolic modeling, dynamical systems, Bayesian modeling, and cognitive architectures. ICCM includes basic and applied research, across a wide variety of domains, ranging from low-level perception and attention to higher-level problem-solving and learning. ICCM 2012 will be held in Berlin, Germany, on the campus of the Technische Universitat Berlin. The main conference will be held April 13-15, 2012 and the tutorials will be held April 12, 2012. We hope to see you in Berlin, The chairs are: "Nele Russwinkel" , "Uwe Drewitz" , "Hedderik van Rijn" , "Jeronimo Dzaak" *************************************************** 2. ICCM 2012 tutorials call, Berlin, Germany, 12 April 2012, due 3 dec 11 http://www.iccm2012.com/tutorials/ The Tutorials program at the International Conference on Cognitive Modeling (ICCM) 2012 will be held on 12 April 2012. It will provide conference participants with the opportunity to gain new insights, knowledge, and skills from a broad range of areas in the field of cognitive modeling. Tutorial topics will be presented in a taught format and are likely to range from practical guidelines to theoretical issues or software. Tutorials at ICCM have been held many times before, and this year's program will be modelled after them and after the series held at the Cognitive Science Conference. If you are interested, please see the web site for more details. *************************************************** 3. BRIMS 2012, 12-15 March 2012, submission deadline LIKELY early Jan 2012 http://www.brimsconference.org You are invited to participate in the 21st Conference on Behavior Representation in Modeling and Simulation (BRIMS), to be held at the Amelia Island Plantation, Amelia Island, Florida (near the Georgia / Florida border). BRIMS enables modeling and simulation research scientists, engineers, and technical communities across disciplines to meet, share ideas, identify capability gaps, discuss cutting-edge research directions, highlight promising technologies, and showcase the state-of-the-art in Department of Defense related applications. The BRIMS Conference will consist of many exciting elements in 2012, including special topic areas, technical paper sessions, special symposia/panel discussions, and government laboratory sponsor sessions. Highlights of BRIMS 2012 will include a fantastic lineup of keynote speakers spanning cognitive modeling, sociocultural modeling, and network science. The BRIMS Executive Committee invites papers, posters, demos, symposia, panel discussions, and tutorials on topics related to the representation of individuals, groups, teams and organizations in models and simulations. All submissions are peer-reviewed (see www.brimsconference.org for additional details on submission types). KEY DATES: [estimated] All submissions due: 6 Jan 2012 Tutorial Acceptance: 31 Jan 2012 Authors Notification 31 Jan 2012 Final version due: 18 Feb 2012 Tutorials: 12 March 2011 BRIMS 2010 Opens: 13 March 2011 BRIMS PROGAM COMMITTEE: William Kennedy (George Mason University) Bradley Best (Adaptive Cognitive Systems) Robert St. Amant (North Carolina State University) If you have any questions or concerns, please contact the BRIMS 2012 Conference Chair, Dr. Tiffany Jastrzembski (tiffany.jastrzembski at wpafb.af.mil). *************************************************** 4. Dissertation Prizes in Cognitive Science http://cognitrn.psych.indiana.edu/CogSciPrizes/index.htm [this is a repeat, but is new and worth attention] Call for Nominations The Robert J. Glushko Dissertation Prizes in Cognitive Science Nomination Deadline: January 15, 2011 The Cognitive Science Society and the Glushko-Samuelson Foundation seek nominations for up to five outstanding dissertation prizes in cognitive science. The goals of these prizes are to increase the prominence of cognitive science, and encourage students to engage in interdisciplinary efforts to understand minds and intelligent systems. The hope is that the prizes will recognize and honor young researchers conducting ground-breaking research in cognitive science. The eventual goal is to aid in efforts to bridge between the areas of cognitive science and create theories of general interest to the multiple fields concerned with scientifically understanding the nature of minds and intelligent systems. Promoting a unified cognitive science is consistent with the belief that understanding how minds work will require the synthesis of many different empirical methods, formal tools, and analytic theories. 2011 is the inaugural year of this annual prize. Up-to-date information on the prizes can be found at http://cognitrn.psych.indiana.edu/CogSciPrizes/index.htm . A Description of the Prizes 1) Up to five Robert J. Glushko Dissertation Prizes in Cognitive Science will be awarded annually. Each prize will be accompanied by a certificate and a $10,000 award to be used by the recipient without any constraints. Prize winners will also receive three years of complimentary membership in the Cognitive Science Society starting with the year in which they have won the prize. 2) Prize-winning dissertations are expected to transcend any one of the individual fields comprising cognitive science. They should centrally address issues of interest to multiple fields that comprise cognitive science, including: psychology, computer science, philosophy, linguistics, anthropology, neuroscience, and education. 3) Prize-winners must have received a PhD degree no more than two years before the January 15 nomination deadline. For the 2011 prizes, dissertations will be considered from individuals who received their PhD degrees during the period from January 15, 2009 to January 15, 2011. 4) The dissertation prizes are open to any student who has conducted dissertation research related to cognitive science, regardless of nationality or originating department. How to submit details are on the web site. The deadline for nominations is January 15, 2011. Awardees will be announced by April 15, 2011. *************************************************** 5. Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures 2011 (November 5-6, 2011), papers due by 27 july 2011 (but may have late breaking papers) http://bicasociety.org/2011/ Papers or abstracts are now accepted for Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures 2011 (November 5-6 in Washington DC, co-located with AAAI Fall Symposia). Submissions due by July 27th. More info at http://bicasociety.org/2011/. Please contact Alexei Samsonovich or Kamilla Johannsdottir with any questions. Venue: Holiday Inn, Arlington, VA 22203, USA Publication Venue: IOS Press, FAIA Series Format: One-track, 2-day interactive conference with intermittent paper presentations, panel discussions, exhibits, coffee breaks and 2 socials. Critical Dates - July 27th: paper or abstract submission deadline (need to use IOS Press template) - August 15th: notification of acceptance - August 29th: camera-ready papers due - November 4th, PM: workshop and reception - November 5-6: BICA 2011 CALL FOR PAPERS The challenge of creating a real-life computational equivalent of the human mind calls for our joint efforts to better understand at a computational level how natural intelligent systems develop their cognitive and learning functions. The scope of BICA 2011 includes: - BICA models of robust learning mechanisms; - models of perception, cognition and action; - emotional and social intelligence in artifacts; - vital constraints informed by neuroscience, - human-like episodic and semantic memory; - metacognition, human-like self-regulated learning, bootstrapped and meta-learning; - language acquisition and symbol grounding; - the "critical mass" for cognitive growth in a learning environment, scalability of learning; - the roadmap to solving the challenge. Confirmed speakers include Murray Shanahan, Christian Lebiere, Antonio Chella, Stuart Shapiro, Keith Downing, Brandon Minnery, David Noelle, Frank Ritter, Jeff Krichmar, David Vernon, Scott Fahlman, Amy Kruse, Art Pope, Brandon Rohrer. Submission categories are: abstracts, extended abstracts, position papers and research papers, up to 6 pages free. Information about the event, submission, format, registration, lodging, local arrangements, meals, socials, etc. can be found at http://bicasociety.org/2011/. We are looking forward to seeing you in Arlington in November, -- A.V.S. & K.R.J., BICA 2011 Chairs Second International Conference on Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures Arlington, Virginia: November 5-6 (Saturday-Sunday), 2011 With reception and a workshop on Nov 4th Sponsored by the BICA Society Co-located with AAAI Fall Symposium Series (Nov 4-6), AI Funding Seminar (Nov 3), and Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting *************************************************** 6. Call for Proposals for Symposia at AISB/IACAP World Congress 2012, 2-6 June 2012 Due 1 Sept 2011 http://events.cs.bham.ac.uk/turing12/ From: John Barnden CALL for PROPOSALS for SYMPOSIA =============================== to occur as the main content of the AISB/IACAP World Congress 2012 ============================== in honour of Alan Turing July 2nd to 6th, 2012 University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK http://events.cs.bham.ac.uk/turing12/ or http://www.aisb.org.uk/convention/aisb12/ organized by *** Society for the Study of Artificial Intelligence and Simulation of Behaviour (AISB) [http://www.aisb.org.uk/] *** International Association for Computing and Philosophy (IACAP) [http://www.ia-cap.org/] Preamble Torsten Schwab Marketing GmbH Emanuelstr. 3, 10317 Berlin Deutschland Telefon: +49 (33) 5310967 Email: woozydude at gmail.com Site: http://flug.prexxis.de/ From toebsen at hotmail.com Wed Aug 24 08:04:12 2011 From: toebsen at hotmail.com (toebsen b) Date: Wed, 24 Aug 2011 12:04:12 +0000 Subject: [ACT-R-users] ActR multiple Agents In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Hello ACT-R Community, Im currently trying to embed a C++ Simulation with ACT-R. I have a running Async TCP Server (via BOOST-ASIO) for the Communication with ACT-R via a device ( like in http://www.zmms.tu-berlin.de/kogmod/tools/hello-java.html Framework). The Communication works nicely. And now comes the not-so easy part: the Modeling in ACT-R: Ok, I'm trying to get it right: I need multiple "Agents", which communicate with the C++ Simulation (TCP) , and all should have the same ACT-R Model. How can i do that? My first guess would be to start as many ACT-R environments as I have agents and just set different Ports for Communication and parse them in C++ to the correct instance of my c++ agent. But this seems quite an overkill if the ACT-R Instances go into the 10+ Since I'm quite new to ACT-R, I do not know its complete capabilities. There has to be another Solution to this sort of problem? with best regards, Tobias Bichlmaier University of Techology, Munich -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From db30 at andrew.cmu.edu Wed Aug 24 10:20:22 2011 From: db30 at andrew.cmu.edu (Dan Bothell) Date: Wed, 24 Aug 2011 10:20:22 -0400 Subject: [ACT-R-users] ActR multiple Agents In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <6B8931A964E7D702929C7DFF@[192.168.1.10]> --On Wednesday, August 24, 2011 12:04 PM +0000 toebsen b wrote: > > Hello ACT-R Community, > > Im currently trying to embed a C++ Simulation with ACT-R. I have a running Async TCP Server (via > BOOST-ASIO) for the Communication > with ACT-R via a device ( like in http://www.zmms.tu-berlin.de/kogmod/tools/hello-java.html > Framework). The Communication works nicely. > > And now comes the not-so easy part: the Modeling in ACT-R: > Ok, I'm trying to get it right: > I need multiple "Agents", which communicate with the C++ Simulation (TCP) , and all should have > the same ACT-R Model. > How can i do that? > My first guess would be to start as many ACT-R environments as I have agents and just set > different Ports for Communication and > parse them in C++ to the correct instance of my c++ agent. > But this seems quite an overkill if the ACT-R Instances go into the 10+ > > Since I'm quite new to ACT-R, I do not know its complete capabilities. > > There has to be another Solution to this sort of problem? > It's possible to run multiple models simultaneously within a single instance of ACT-R. There is a section in the reference manual (found in the docs directory of the distribution) which describes how to do so, and there are some examples found in the examples directory of the distribution. Since you mention that you are new to ACT-R, I would also recommend working through the tutorial if you haven't already. The tutorial doesn't cover multiple models, but should give you a solid understanding of how to use ACT-R for modeling which you won't get from the reference manual. I can't really offer much in the way of specific advice because exactly how you want/need to set things up for multiple models depends on a couple of technical issues with how the simulation and models are expected to interact: - Will the models communicate over the same channel sharing the device or does each model need a separate device? - Are the models always going to be running together synchronously or will they need to be run individually? One thing I can offer however is that since you say they are all going to be the same model, there is a way to create them that doesn't require writing the code again for each one. The define-model command can be provided with a list of code to define the model. Thus, if you create a list with the code for the model in it you can just pass that list to define-model to create more. Again, the exact details will depend on what you need for the sim, but generally something like this could be done: (defvar *model-code* '((sgp :v t) (p test ?goal> buffer empty ==>) ...)) (define-model-fct 'model-1 *model-code*) (define-model-fct 'model-2 *model-code*) ... Hope that helps, and if you have other questions feel free to let me know. Dan From toebsen at hotmail.com Thu Aug 25 07:07:01 2011 From: toebsen at hotmail.com (toebsen b) Date: Thu, 25 Aug 2011 11:07:01 +0000 Subject: [ACT-R-users] ActR multiple Agents In-Reply-To: <6B8931A964E7D702929C7DFF@[192.168.1.10]> References: , , <6B8931A964E7D702929C7DFF@[192.168.1.10]> Message-ID: hey Dan, Thanks for your fast reply! Creating a model with a defined List will come in handy, thanks! Perhabs I give some further details about the Simulation. The recorded simulation contains cars driving on a highway. The simulation and Act-R are connected via TCP. Every Car should be controlled by an Cognitive "Agent", which models the lane changing behaviour, for example indicator on -> high Probability. For starters this model will be quite simple, but will get more develloped. For the scenario it would be nice, if the models can be created during runtime. For now a communication between the agents is not needed. Every Agent should mind only its own "business" i.e. the only the cars directly around it. About your questions: > - Will the models communicate over the same channel sharing the device > or does each model need a separate device? I think a common device should suffice, for the agents. > - Are the models always going to be running together synchronously or > will they need to be run individually? They will run individually. I guess cycling through the existing models will do the trick. There aren't any timing deadlines, so far. Do you guys have any tips, how this could be achieved ? Every hint is welcome. Thanks in advance, Tobias > Date: Wed, 24 Aug 2011 10:20:22 -0400 > From: db30 at andrew.cmu.edu > To: toebsen at hotmail.com; act-r-users at act-r.psy.cmu.edu > Subject: Re: [ACT-R-users] ActR multiple Agents > > > > --On Wednesday, August 24, 2011 12:04 PM +0000 toebsen b wrote: > > > > > Hello ACT-R Community, > > > > Im currently trying to embed a C++ Simulation with ACT-R. I have a running Async TCP Server (via > > BOOST-ASIO) for the Communication > > with ACT-R via a device ( like in http://www.zmms.tu-berlin.de/kogmod/tools/hello-java.html > > Framework). The Communication works nicely. > > > > And now comes the not-so easy part: the Modeling in ACT-R: > > Ok, I'm trying to get it right: > > I need multiple "Agents", which communicate with the C++ Simulation (TCP) , and all should have > > the same ACT-R Model. > > How can i do that? > > My first guess would be to start as many ACT-R environments as I have agents and just set > > different Ports for Communication and > > parse them in C++ to the correct instance of my c++ agent. > > But this seems quite an overkill if the ACT-R Instances go into the 10+ > > > > Since I'm quite new to ACT-R, I do not know its complete capabilities. > > > > There has to be another Solution to this sort of problem? > > > > > It's possible to run multiple models simultaneously within a single instance > of ACT-R. There is a section in the reference manual (found in the docs > directory of the distribution) which describes how to do so, and there are > some examples found in the examples directory of the distribution. Since > you mention that you are new to ACT-R, I would also recommend working through > the tutorial if you haven't already. The tutorial doesn't cover multiple > models, but should give you a solid understanding of how to use ACT-R for > modeling which you won't get from the reference manual. > > I can't really offer much in the way of specific advice because exactly > how you want/need to set things up for multiple models depends on a couple > of technical issues with how the simulation and models are expected to interact: > > - Will the models communicate over the same channel sharing the device > or does each model need a separate device? > > - Are the models always going to be running together synchronously or > will they need to be run individually? > > One thing I can offer however is that since you say they are all going to be > the same model, there is a way to create them that doesn't require writing > the code again for each one. The define-model command can be provided with > a list of code to define the model. Thus, if you create a list with the > code for the model in it you can just pass that list to define-model to > create more. Again, the exact details will depend on what you need for > the sim, but generally something like this could be done: > > (defvar *model-code* '((sgp :v t) (p test ?goal> buffer empty ==>) ...)) > (define-model-fct 'model-1 *model-code*) > (define-model-fct 'model-2 *model-code*) > ... > > > Hope that helps, and if you have other questions feel free to let me > know. > > Dan -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From wangjunchao at yahoo.com Mon Aug 29 21:49:03 2011 From: wangjunchao at yahoo.com (Wang Junchao) Date: Mon, 29 Aug 2011 18:49:03 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [ACT-R-users] Hello,everyone. New ideas are flushing my head. Message-ID: <1314668943.78063.YahooMailNeo@web121720.mail.ne1.yahoo.com> Hello,everyone. As I am a freshman in the area of Artificial Intelligence, I got a lot of things unclear. But I think that it both has advantages and disadvantages. For the good part, I can think of questions freely without the constraint of the available knowledge. For the bad part, I don't know whether some methods have been proposed or applied by others. Recently, new ideas are flushing my head. So I'd like to share it with you. As ACT-R is designed to simulate the behavior of human beings, so there must be a question that can not be neglected??humans can forget something. I think that's why humans can store so much information. For example, I remember that once I've been to a room. However, when others asked me to describe the room, then maybe I can only remember the main layout of it. A lot of details such as the color of the furniture have been forgotten. I think this forgeting is quite natural. With the explosion of the state and knowledge, some unimportant information must be negelected. I am asking that whether this mechenism has been realized in ACT-R and is it worth researching? Looking forward for your reply. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From db30 at andrew.cmu.edu Tue Aug 30 15:26:54 2011 From: db30 at andrew.cmu.edu (db30 at andrew.cmu.edu) Date: Tue, 30 Aug 2011 15:26:54 -0400 Subject: [ACT-R-users] Hello,everyone. New ideas are flushing my head. In-Reply-To: <1314668943.78063.YahooMailNeo@web121720.mail.ne1.yahoo.com> References: <1314668943.78063.YahooMailNeo@web121720.mail.ne1.yahoo.com> Message-ID: <0DCC5F23DBA2338175736B4E@act-r6.cmu.edu> Instead of trying to answer your question directly, I think it might be more useful to provide you with information on some places where you can investigate that for yourself. First, for a general description of ACT-R I would suggest reading the paper "An Integrated Theory of the Mind", which is available from the ACT-R web site at: , and also looking at the book "How Can the Human Mind Occur in the Physical Universe?" . For information on specific research which has been done with ACT-R, there are many published papers available on the ACT-R web site under the publications link: . There you can look for research which is related to the issues in which you are interested. Then, if you want to actually try ACT-R and see how it works you can download it from the Software page of the ACT-R web site: . There is a set of tutorial units included with the software which will introduce how to use it. Those tutorial units are also available on their own from the Software page if you would like to look at them first, and here is a direct link to a .zip of the tutorial texts: . Hope that helps, Dan --On Monday, August 29, 2011 6:49 PM -0700 Wang Junchao wrote: > > Hello,everyone. As I am a freshman in the area of Artificial Intelligence, I > got a lot of things unclear. > But I think that it both has advantages and disadvantages. > For the good part, I can think of questions freely without the constraint of > the available knowledge. > For the bad part, I don't know whether some methods have been proposed or > applied by others. > Recently, new ideas are flushing my head. So I'd like to share it with you. > As ACT-R is designed to simulate the behavior of human beings, so there must > be a question that can not be neglected??humans can forget something. I think > that's why humans can store so much information. For example, I remember that > once I've been to a room. However, when others asked me to describe the room, > then maybe I can only remember the main layout of it. A lot of details such > as the color of the furniture have been forgotten. I think this forgeting is > quite natural. > > With the explosion of the state and knowledge, some unimportant information > must be negelected. I am asking that whether this mechenism has been realized > in ACT-R and is it worth researching? > Looking forward for your reply. > From yliu at zju.edu.cn Wed Aug 31 09:43:42 2011 From: yliu at zju.edu.cn (yliu) Date: Wed, 31 Aug 2011 21:43:42 +0800 Subject: [ACT-R-users] How to do Rich GUI with ACT-R ? Message-ID: Hello ACT-R Community, I'm applying ACT-R to model some driving tasks, meanwhile these works require rich GUI. As we know the AGI(ACT-R GUI Interface) provide simple functions for GUI, so I want to use the Project module to build rich interface in Alegro Common Lisp platform. My questions are: 1. Is there anyone has used ACT-R to build models with Project module in Alegro Common Lisp platform? 2. Is it possible to do so and how to do it ? 3. Can anyone give an example or some instructions? Thanks for your replay in advance. With kind regards, Yanfei Zhejiang SCI-TECH Univ. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From db30 at andrew.cmu.edu Wed Aug 31 11:40:55 2011 From: db30 at andrew.cmu.edu (db30 at andrew.cmu.edu) Date: Wed, 31 Aug 2011 11:40:55 -0400 Subject: [ACT-R-users] How to do Rich GUI with ACT-R ? In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: --On Wednesday, August 31, 2011 9:43 PM +0800 yliu wrote: > > Hello ACT-R Community, > > > I'm applying ACT-R to model some driving tasks, meanwhile these works require > rich GUI. As we know the AGI(ACT-R GUI Interface) provide simple functions > for GUI, so I want to use the Project module to build rich interface in > Alegro Common Lisp platform. > > My questions are: > > 1. Is there anyone has used ACT-R to build models with Project module in > Alegro Common Lisp platform? > > 2. Is it possible to do so and how to do it ? > > 3. Can anyone give an example or some instructions? > > The ACL Project Manager is essentially just a tool for organizing and working with a set of files. It is integrated with the ACL Form Builder (the GUI building interface in the ACL IDE) so that the code which gets automatically generated by the Form Builder for an interface can be maintained within a "project", but really there's nothing which the Project Manager and Form Builder do that can't be done without them. They are not going to affect how one builds an ACT-R model. That is still going to require writing the model code along with functions to run the model as needed in one or more source files. Those files could then be added to an ACL "project" just like any other source file if one wanted to maintain things that way. For information on how to use the Project Manager and the Form Builder you will have to consult the documentation which comes with ACL, and the "Allegro CL Documentation" entry under the Help menu will take you to that. Now, a related question is how can the model interact with an interface built using the ACL Form Builder? The answer to that is that it would do so the same way it interacts with all other interfaces (like those built using the AGI) through the use of a device for the model. The ACT-R code comes with a basic device for interacting with ACL's "Common Graphics" GUI interface when running on a Windows machine. So, calling the install-device command with an instance of a window built through the Form Builder would be required for the model just like it is in the models with interfaces built with the AGI. That included device for an ACL Common Graphics window is capable of producing "real" keyboard and mouse inputs to the interface from the model's motor actions (they're generated as OS events thus to the window they're basically indistinguishable from a user's actions), and it is able to see static text, buttons, and text entry boxes. If you want to have the model perceive additional interface elements then you will have to add appropriate methods to the device code to do so. The ACL device code can be found in the devices/acl/device.lisp file of the ACT-R distribution and basic information on how to create devices can be found in the slides named "extending-actr" in the docs directory. Hope that helps, Dan PS One final note just to make sure there's no confusion. There is no relation between modules in the ACT-R software and modules as it is used in the Project Manager tool in ACL. From yliu at zju.edu.cn Wed Aug 31 19:06:19 2011 From: yliu at zju.edu.cn (yliu) Date: Thu, 01 Sep 2011 07:06:19 +0800 Subject: [ACT-R-users] How to do Rich GUI with ACT-R ? Message-ID: >From: db30 at andrew.cmu.edu >Reply-To: >To: ACT-R >Subject: Re: [ACT-R-users] How to do Rich GUI with ACT-R ? >Date: Wed, 31 Aug 2011 11:40:55 -0400 > > > >--On Wednesday, August 31, 2011 9:43 PM +0800 yliu wrote: > >> >> Hello ACT-R Community, >> >> >> I'm applying ACT-R to model some driving tasks, meanwhile these works require >> rich GUI. As we know the AGI(ACT-R GUI Interface) provide simple functions >> for GUI, so I want to use the Project module to build rich interface in >> Alegro Common Lisp platform. >> >> My questions are: >> >> 1. Is there anyone has used ACT-R to build models with Project module in >> Alegro Common Lisp platform? >> >> 2. Is it possible to do so and how to do it ? >> >> 3. Can anyone give an example or some instructions? >> >> > > > >The ACL Project Manager is essentially just a tool for organizing and >working with a set of files. It is integrated with the ACL Form Builder >(the GUI building interface in the ACL IDE) so that the code which gets >automatically generated by the Form Builder for an interface can be >maintained within a "project", but really there's nothing which the >Project Manager and Form Builder do that can't be done without them. >They are not going to affect how one builds an ACT-R model. That is >still going to require writing the model code along with functions to >run the model as needed in one or more source files. Those files could >then be added to an ACL "project" just like any other source file if >one wanted to maintain things that way. For information on how to use >the Project Manager and the Form Builder you will have to consult the >documentation which comes with ACL, and the "Allegro CL Documentation" >entry under the Help menu will take you to that. > >Now, a related question is how can the model interact with an interface >built using the ACL Form Builder? The answer to that is that it would >do so the same way it interacts with all other interfaces (like those >built using the AGI) through the use of a device for the model. The >ACT-R code comes with a basic device for interacting with ACL's "Common >Graphics" GUI interface when running on a Windows machine. So, calling >the install-device command with an instance of a window built through the >Form Builder would be required for the model just like it is in the >models with interfaces built with the AGI. > >That included device for an ACL Common Graphics window is capable of >producing "real" keyboard and mouse inputs to the interface from the model's >motor actions (they're generated as OS events thus to the window they're >basically indistinguishable from a user's actions), and it is able to see >static text, buttons, and text entry boxes. If you want to have the model >perceive additional interface elements then you will have to add >appropriate methods to the device code to do so. The ACL device code can >be found in the devices/acl/device.lisp file of the ACT-R distribution and >basic information on how to create devices can be found in the slides >named "extending-actr" in the docs directory. > >Hope that helps, >Dan > >PS >One final note just to make sure there's no confusion. There is no >relation between modules in the ACT-R software and modules as it is >used in the Project Manager tool in ACL. >_______________________________________________ >ACT-R-users mailing list >ACT-R-users at act-r.psy.cmu.edu >http://act-r.psy.cmu.edu/mailman/listinfo/act-r-users > > Thank you Dan, it is great help. Let me try it. kind regards. Yanfei