Could you post this on the bulletin board please?

GERRY ORCHARD PYG0572 at VAX2.QUEENS-BELFAST.AC.UK
Fri May 22 08:33:00 EDT 1992


 
 
 
The Second Irish Neural Networks Conference: June 25th and 26th 1992
 
Guest Speakers:
 
Prof. John Taylor, Kings College, London
Prof. Dan Amit, INFN Rome and Racah Institute of Physics
Prof. Vicki Bruce, University of Nottingham
Prof. George Irwin, Queen's Belfast
 
 
Presentations: (alphabetical order)
 
A NEURAL NETWORK MODEL OF A HUMAN ATTENTION
SWITCHING ABILITY
John Andrews and Mark Keane, Department of Computer Science
O'Reilly Institute, Trinity College, Dublin 2
 
GENERATING OBJECT-ORIENTED CODE THROUGH ARTIFICIAL
NEURAL NETWORKS
J Brant Arseneau,  Gillian F Sleith**, C Tim Spracklen, Gary Whittington, John
MacRae*, Electronic Research Group, Department of Engineering, University of
Aberdeen
*Institute of Software Engineering, Island Street, Belfast
**Dept. of Information Systems, Faculty of Informatics, UU at Jordanstown
 
LEARNING TO LEARN: THE CONTRIBUTION OF
BEHAVIOURISM TO CONNECTIONIST MODELS OF
INFERENTIAL SKILLS IN HUMANS
Dermot Barnes and Peter Hampson, Department of Applied Psychology,
University College, Cork
 
NEURAL NETWORK TASK IDENTIFICATION FOR DISTRIBUTED
WORKING SUPPORT
Russel Beale, Alan Dix* and Janet Finlay*
School of Computer Science, University of Birmingham
*HCI Group, Dept of Computer Science, University of York
 
A NEURAL CONTROLLER FOR NAVIGATION OF NON-
HOLONOMIC MOBILE ROBOTS USING SENSORY INFORMATION
 Rene Biewald, Control System Centre, U.M.I.S.T.
 
USING CHAOS TO PREDICT COMMODITY MARKET PRICE
FLUCTUATIONS IN NEURAL NETWORKS
Christopher  Burdorf and John Fitch, School of Mathematical Sciences,
University of Bath
 
APPLICATION OF NEURAL NETWORKS TO MOTION PLANNING
FOR A ROBOT ARM TO GRASP MOVING OBJECTS
Conor Doherty, Educational Research Centre,
St Patrick's College, Dublin 9
 
SEMANTIC INTERACTION: A CONNECTIONIST MODEL OF
LEXICAL COMBINATION
George Dunbar*, Masja Kempen**, Noel Maessen**
*Department of Psychology, University of Warwick
**Department of Psychology, University of Leiden
 
GENERALISATION AND CONVERGENCE IN THE MULTI
-DIMENSIONAL ALBUS PERCEPTRON (CMAC)
D. Ellison, Dundee Institute of Technology,
Dundee, Scotland
 
ARTIFICAL NEURAL NETWORK BASED ELECTRONIC NOSE
E L Hines and J W Gardner, Dept of Engineering,
University of Warwick, Coventry
 
A CONNECTIONIST MODEL OF HUMAN MUSICAL SCORE
PROCESSING
James Hynan and Sean O Nuallian, Dublin City University, Glasnevin, Dublin 9
 
A  NONLINEAR SYSTOLIC FILTER WITH RADIAL BASIS
FUNCTION ESTIMATION
J. Kadlec, F. M. F. Gaston, G.W. Irwin, Control Research Group, Dept. of
Electrical and Electronic Engineering, The Queen's University of Belfast
 
HYPERCUBE CUTS AND KARNAUGH MAPS: TOWARDS AN
UNDERSTANDING OF BINARY FEEDFORWARD NEURAL
NETWORKS.
Brendan Kiernan, Dept. of Computer Science,
Trinity College Dublin.
 
A NEURAL NETWORK BASED DIAGNOSTIC TOOL FOR LIVER
DISORDERS
L Kilmartin, E Ambikairajah and *S M Lavelle
Department of Electronic Engineering, Regional Technical College, Athlone
*Department of Experimental Medicine, University College Galway
 
MODELLING MEMBRANE POTENTIALS IS MORE FLEXIBLE
THAN SPIKES
Peter Laming , Dept of Biology and Biochemistry,
The Queen's University of Belfast
 
A NEURAL MECHANISM FOR DIVERSE BEHAVIOUR
R Linggard, School of Information Systems,
University of East Anglia, Norwich
 
A NEURAL NETWORK APPROACH TO EQUALIZATION OF A
NON-LINEAR CHANNEL
E Luk and A D Fagan, Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering,
University College, Dublin.
 
HANDWRITTEN SIGNATURE VERIFICATION USING THE
BACKPROPAGATION NEURAL NETWORK
D K R McCormack, Department of Computing Mathematics
University of Wales College of Cardiff
 
USING A 2-STAGE ARTIFICIAL NEURAL NETWORK TO
DETECT ABNORMAL CERVICAL CELLS FROM THEIR
FREQUENCY DOMAIN IMAGE.
McKenna S, Ricketts IV, Cairns AY, Hussein KA*
MicroCentre, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science The University,
DUNDEE. *Dept. Pathology, Ninewells Hospital, Dundee.
 
COMPARING FEEDFORWARD NEURAL NETWORK MODELS FOR
TIME SERIES PREDICTION.
John Mitchell, Hitachi Dublin Laboratory,
O'Reilly Institute, Trinity College, Dublin
 
HAND-WRITTEN DIGIT RECOGNITION EXPLORATIONS IN
CONNECTIONISM
Michal Morciniec, Computer Science Department,
University College, Dublin
 
THE EFFECT OF ALL-CONNECTIVE BACK-PROPAGATION
ALGORITHM ON THE LEARNING CHARACTERISTIC OF A
NEURAL NETWORK
S Namasivayam and J T McMullen*
Applied Physical Science, Univeristy of Ulster at Coleraine
*Centre for Energy Research, University of Ulster at Coleraine
 
INFORMATION THEORY AND NEURAL NETWORK LEARNING
ALGORTIHMS: AN OVERVIEW
M. D. Plumbley, Centre for Neural Networks
King's College London
 
AN EXPLORATION OF CLAUSE BOUNDARY EFFECTS IN
SIMPLE RECURRENT NETWORK REPRESENTATIONS
Ronan Reilly, Department of Computer Science,
University College Dublin.
 
A MODEL FOR THE ORGANISATION OF OCULAR DOMINANCE
STRIPES
Craig R Renfrew, Dept of Computer Science,
University of Strathclyde
 
APPLICATION OF NEURAL NETWORKS TO ATMOSPHERIC
CHERENKOV IMAGING DATA FROM THE CRAB BEBULA
Paul T Reynolds, University College Dublin, Bellfield, Dublin 4
 
ARTIFICIAL REWARDS
Tony Savage, School of Psychology,
The Queen's University of Belfast
 
A MODULAR NETWORK MODEL FOR SEGMENTING VISUAL
TEXTURES BASED ON ORIENTATION CONTRAST
Andrew J Schofield and David H Foster, Dept of Communication and
Neuroscience, University of Keele
 
PRESTRUCTURES NEURAL NETS AND THE TRANSFER OF
KNOWLEDGE
Amanda J.C. Sharkey and Noel E. Sharkey, Centre for Connection Science,
Department of Computer Science, University of Exeter, Exeter, Devon
 
HYBRID SYSTEMS - NEURAL NETWORKS IN PROBLEM-SOLVING
ENVIRONMENTS
P. Sims, D.A. Bell, Dept. of Information Systems
University of Ulster at Jordanstown
 
DESIGN OF AN INTEGRATED-CIRCUIT ANALOGUE NEURAL
NETWORK
Winand G van  Sloten, School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
The Queen's University of Belfast
 
SYNAPTIC CORRELATES OF SHORT-AND LONG-TERM
MEMORY FORMATION IN THE CHICK FOREBRAIN FOLLOWING
ONE-TRIAL PASSIVE AVOIDANCE LEARNING
M G Stewart, Brain and Behaviour Research Group, Dept of Biology,
Open University, Milton Keynes
 
WHY CONNECTIONIST NETWORKS PROVIDE NATURAL
MODELS OF THE WAY SENTENCE CONTEXT AFFECTS
IDENTIFICATION OF A WORD.
Eamonn Strain, Department of Psychology, University of Nottingham
Roddy Cowie, School of Psychology, Queen's University, Belfast
 
A NEW ALGORITHM FOR CORRECTING SLANT IN
HANDWRITTEN NUMERALS
S Sunthankar, School of Computer Science & Electronic Systems,
Kingston Polytechnic
 
AN ALGORITHM FOR SEGMENTING HANDWRITTEN NUMERAL
STRINGS
S Sunthankar, School of Computer Science & Electronic Systems,
Kingston Polytechnic
 
USING NEURAL NETWORKS TO FIND GOLD
Peter M Williams, School of Cognitive and Computing Sciences
University of Sussex
 
NEURAL LEARNING ROBOT CONTROL:
A NEW APPROACH VIA THE THEORY OF COGNITION
A M S Zalzala, Control Engineering Research Group,
Department of Electrical & Electronic Engineering
The Queen's University of Belfast
 
 
Registration 65 pounds sterling including lunches and coffe/tea
 
 
FURTHER INFORMATION FROM:
Dr. Gerry Orchard
Cognitive and Computational Modelling Group
School of Psychology
Queen's University
Belfast
 
Tel 0232 245133 Ext 4354/4360
Fax 0232 664144
Email g.orchard@ uk.ac.qub.v2
 
 


More information about the Connectionists mailing list