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A blog of all section with no images
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Written by Raúl Arrabales
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Monday, 31 October 2011 |
EAIS 2012
2012 IEEE Conference on Evolving and Adaptive Intelligent Systems
Deadline extended: February, 15. 2012.
This EAIS Edition will be held in Madrid, Spain, between May 17-18, 2012.
One of the important research challenges today is to develop new theoretical methods, algorithms, and implementations of systems with a higher level of flexibility and autonomy, we can say with higher level of intelligence. Intelligent systems should be dynamically evolving and be able to adapt and learn. That is, the system must be able to evolve, to self-develop, to self-organize, to self-evaluate and to self-improve. The emerging area of Evolving Intelligent Systems targets non-stationary processes by developing novel on-line learning methods and computationally efficient algorithms for real-time applications. Some of the natural implementation areas of Evolving and Adaptive Intelligent systems are: wireless sensor networks, assisted ambient intelligence, embedded soft computing diagnostics and prognostics algorithms, intelligent agents, smart evolving sensors, autonomous robotic systems etc.
EAIS 2012 continues the tradition established by the successful series of IEEE conferences starting with EFS’06 (Lake District, England), GEFS’08 (Witten-Bomerhoz, Germany), ESDIS’09 (Nashville, USA), EIS’10 (Leicester, England), and EAIS’11 (Paris, France). It will provide a friendly atmosphere and will be a leading international forum focusing on discussing problems, research, results and future directions in the area of Evolving and Adaptive Intelligent Systems.
More Information: www.uc3m.es/eais12
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 07 February 2012 )
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Written by Raul Arrabales
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Monday, 31 October 2011 |
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University of Birmingham is currently performing a search to find 50 world-class postdoctoral fellows in a variety of areas *including robotics and cognitive systems*. The post provides a 5-year research-only position followed by a permanent university position. Applicants that complement and enhance existing robotics and cognitive systems strengths will be very welcome. The full advert is below, but the relevant links are as follows:
Fellowship scheme: http://www.birmingham.ac.uk/staff/excellence/fellows/apply/index.aspx
Intelligent Robotics Lab: http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/go/irlab Centre for Computational Neuroscience and Cognitive Robotics : http://www.birmingham.ac.uk/research/activity/cncr/
School of Computer Science: http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk Be first to comment this article | Add as favourites (16) | Quote this article on your site | Views: 247 |
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Last Updated ( Monday, 31 October 2011 )
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Written by Raúl Arrabales
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Monday, 31 October 2011 |
ASSC16, Brighton, UK, July 02-06 2012
The 16th meeting of the Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness
http://www.theassc.org/conferences/assc_16 We are delighted to announce that the 16th meeting of the Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness will take place in Brighton, UK, from July 02-06, 2012.
The meeting will be organized by the Sackler Centre for Consciousness Science at the University of Sussex (www.sussex.ac.uk/sackler). Brighton, affectionately known as ‘London by the sea’ is a popular international conference destination. It is only 49 minutes by train from central London and just 30 minutes from Gatwick International Airport (LGW; there are also easy transport links from Heathrow). Brighton is a small city (population ~500,000) with conference facilities, hotels, restaurants, pubs, transport links, and the beach all within easy walking distance. The city is well known for its vibrant scientific, artistic, and digital communities, its café and pub society, and the beauty of the surrounding countryside (the South Downs National Park is just a couple of miles to the north). And in July, the weather is also usually very good as well! For more information on Brighton, see www.visitbrighton.org.
To ensure that ASSC16 is special, we have arranged for it to be held in the superb Dome and Corn Exchange theatre complex, in the heart of Brighton’s artistic quarter (http://www.brightondome.org/) and is only minutes from the beach. These heritage buildings date from the early 19th century and were recently refurbished in a £2,000,000 project to provide an unparalled combination of elegance and efficiency. With the support of the city, we are confident that ASSC16 will not only be a premier scientific meeting, but a citywide celebration of consciousness science.
We already have an exciting line-up of keynote speakers for 2012: Victor Lamme (University of Amsterdam), Tim Bayne (University of Oxford), Tania Singer (University of Zurich), Geraint Rees (University College London), and Josef Perner (University of Salzburg). We are also delighted to announce a ‘special lecture’ from Christof Koch (Caltech).
In a major change from previous ASSC meetings, ASSC16 will take place over four full days, plus one tutorial day, and will run from Monday to Friday instead of across a weekend. We have made these changes in order to ensure that excellent scientific content can be combined with enough time for discussion, poster viewing, and the like. We do not expect registration fees to be substantially affected. We should also point out that the ASSC16 dates do NOT clash with the London Olympics!Calls for proposals for tutorials and symposia will shortly be available on http://www.theassc.org/conferences/assc_16 with a submission deadline of October 30, 2011. On behalf of the local organizing committee, we look forward to welcoming you to Brighton in 2012!
Anil Seth Zoltan Dienes Jamie Ward Be first to comment this article | Add as favourites (41) | Quote this article on your site | Views: 238 |
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Last Updated ( Monday, 31 October 2011 )
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Written by Raúl Arrabales
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Monday, 31 October 2011 |
The Tower of Hanoi for Robotics
A contest in mobile manipulation for undergraduate and graduate robotics students
London Science Museum, London, UK. Dec. 2, 2011.
In association with the 1st European Robotics Week and the EU Robots Festival
www.robotics-challenge.eu Be first to comment this article | Add as favourites (30) | Quote this article on your site | Views: 219 |
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Written by Raúl Arrabales Moreno
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Tuesday, 15 February 2011 |
ReteCog.Net 2011 Workshop The Architectures of Mind
Workshop ReteCog.Net 2011: The architectures of Mind Dates: 4-6 July Venue: ASLab, Madrid, Spain
ReteCog 2011 is centered around the major topic of COGNITIVE ARCHITECTURE. Unveiling the architecture of the mind is a cornerstone of all our research programmes. The workshop aims to bring together leading scholars, scientists and engineers who use analytic and synthetic methods both to understand the astonishing processing properties of biological systems, specifically those of the living brain, and to exploit such knowledge to advance engineering methods for building artificial systems with higher levels of cognitive competence.
ReteCog 2011 is a meeting point of mind theorists, cognitive systems engineers and brain scientists where cross-domain ideas are fostered in the hope of getting new emerging insights on the nature, operation and extractable capabilities of brains and minds. This multiple approach is necessary because the progressively more accurate data about brains is producing a growing need of both a quantitative and deep theoretical understanding and an associated capacity to manipulate these data and translate it into engineering applications rooted in sound theories. ReteCog 2011 is intended for both i) life scientists who use and develop mathematical and engineering approaches for a better, system-level understanding of the cognitive behavior of complex biological systems and ii) technology researchers that aim to understand and build systems with higher cognitive competences. ReteCog 2011 is organized to foster collaboration patterns that encourage cross-fertilization across the workshop domains topics. This emphasizes the role of ReteCog.net as a major meeting point for researchers and practitioners in the areas of natural and artificial cognitive systems.
Debates across disciplines will enrich researchers with complementary perspectives from diverse scientific fields. To help in this direction of tight interaction, the workshop will accept a maximum of 50 communications. Be first to comment this article | Add as favourites (273) | Quote this article on your site | Views: 1452 |
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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 02 March 2011 )
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