------- Forwarded Message Follows -------
From: INFO-PSYLING moderator Kerry Kilborn <psyling(a)psy.gla.ac.uk>
Date sent: Thu, 29 Oct 98 15:38:32 GMT
To: distribute-psyling(a)psy.gla.ac.uk
Subject: InfoPsyling (2)
1. Distinguished Postdoctoral Fellowships at Johns Hopkins University
2. Two positions at Florida State University, Department of Psychology
3. Faculty Opening CNS-BU
4. Positions in Computer Science & Cognitive Science, University College Dublin
**************************************************
1. Distinguished Postdoctoral Fellowships at Johns Hopkins University
From: Karen McCumber <kmccumb(a)mri.jhu.edu>
Johns Hopkins University Biomedical Engineering Department invites
applications for the Distinguished Postdoctoral Fellowship Program.
This program is funded by the Whitaker Foundation. It aims to promote
an inter-disciplinary approach to the study of complex biomedical systems
and provide the very best of the recently graduated PhDs an opportunity
to perform independent research in a supportive environment. Each recipient
will be sponsored by two faculty, at least one of which must have a
primary appointment in BME.
Of particular interest are candidates with a background in computational
neuroscience who wish to pursue projects in laboratories of the Systems
Neuroscience or Theoretical and Computational Biology groups of faculty.
Salary of the fellows will start at $30,000 per year, with additional funds
to cover health insurance. The duration of the fellowship is two years.
Interested applicants should submit the following documents:
* CV
* Two letters of reference
* Two page summary of research interests
Send your application materials to:
Dr. Murray Sachs
Dept. of Biomedical Engineering,
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
720 Rutland Ave
Baltimore, MD 21205
Deadline for receipt of applications is Dec. 15, 1998.
For further information: http://www.bme.jhu.edu/postdoc/
The Johns Hopkins University is an Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action
Institution.
****************************************************
2. Two positions at Florida State University, Department of Psychology
From: "Rolf A. Zwaan" <zwaan(a)darwin.psy.fsu.edu>
The Department of Psychology at the Florida State University seeks to
make two tenure-track appointments all at the assistant professor level
in the following areas:
1) COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY: Preference will be given to applicants with
expertise in either: (a)
acquisition of skills and expert performance, (b) attention and
performance, or (c) computational models of cognition and performance.
Apply to Cognitive and Behavioral Science Search Committee
3) COMPUTATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY: Any area, but preference will be given to
candidates whose research interests complement those of our faculty in
either cognitive psychology or neuroscience. This position is part of a
College initiative to develop a program in computational science. The
successful candidate will have responsibilities to an interdisciplinary
program in Computational Science and Engineering as well as to the
Psychology Department. Apply to Computational Psychology Search
Committee.
Recruits will join a diverse research faculty with training programs in
Clinical, Cognitive and Behavioral Science, and
Psychobiology/Neuroscience. We seek candidates with strong evidence of
research potential and teaching ability. Applicants who can contribute
to more than one of the department's areas of strength will receive
special consideration. A curriculum vitae, a cover letter describing
research and teaching interests, and three letters of reference should
be sent by Dec. 1 to: (specify search committee), Department of
Psychology, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306-1270.
Florida State University is an Equal opportunity/Affirmative Action
Employer.</smaller>
Rolf A. Zwaan | Internet: zwaan(a)psy.fsu.edu
Psychology Dept. | Phone (office): 850-644-2768
Florida State University | Phone (lab):
850-644-1425/9868
Tallahassee, FL. 32306-1270 | Fax: 850-644-7739
http://freud.psy.fsu.edu:80/~zwaan/ (Homepage)
******************************************************
3. Faculty Opening CNS-BU
From: Boston University - Cognitive and Neural Systems <cns-cas(a)cns.bu.edu>
NEW FACULTY IN COGNITIVE AND NEURAL SYSTEMS
AT BOSTON UNIVERSITY
Boston University seeks an assistant or associate professor
for its graduate Department of Cognitive and Neural
Systems. The department offers an integrated curriculum of
psychological, neurobiological, and computational concepts,
models, and methods in the fields of computational
neuroscience, connectionist cognitive science, and neural
network technology in which Boston University is a leader.
Candidates should have an outstanding research profile,
preferably including extensive analytic or computational
research experience in modeling a broad range of nonlinear
neural networks, especially in one or more of the areas:
vision and image processing, adaptive pattern recognition,
cognitive information processing, speech and language,
adaptive-sensory motor control, and neural network
technology. Send a complete curriculum vitae and three
letters of recommendation to Search Committee, Department
of Cognitive and Neural Systems, 677 Beacon Street, Boston
University, Boston, MA 02215. Boston University is an Equal
Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer.
*************************************************
4. Positions in Computer Science & Cognitive Science, University College Dublin
From: mark.keane(a)ucd.ie
Post-Graduate & Post-Doctoral
Positions in Computer Science & Cognitive Science
University College Dublin,
Dublin, Ireland
The Department of Computer Science at UCD has energetic research groups
working in the areas of Intelligent Computing, Software Engineering,
Multi-Media Systems, and Hardware & Communications. The department has
been successful in winning many research projects at national and
international levels, has a strong publication record in the field and
won several international awards for its research. Several research
studentships are currently available to students with a first degree in
Computer Science or a cognate discipline (for application forms see
www.cs.ucd.ie/course/html/mscphd.htm). Candidates should contact the
person in their area of interest. The positions are available in the
following areas:
Learning Computational Grammars (Post-Doctoral) An EU-funded project on
the application of machine learning techniques to extending a variety of
computational grammars. The ideal candidate should have completed a PhD,
be a non-Irish EU national under 35 years with research experience in
neural networks and/or natural language processing. (contact: Dr. Ronan
Reilly, www.cs.ucd.ie/staff/rreilly/, ronan.reilly(a)ucd.ie,
+353-1-7062475).
The Roots of Plausibility (Post-Doctoral) A Cognitive Science project
designed to investigate the psychological and computational basis of
plausibility judgements. Candidates should have completed a PhD in
Psychology/ Cognitive Science/ Computer Science. (contact: Prof.=A0Mark
Keane, www.cs.ucd.ie/staff/mkeane/, mark.keane(a)ucd.ie, +353-1-7062470).
AI and the Internet: (Studentship) The use of Artificial Intelligence
techniques in integrating and gathering information on the internet.
(contact: Dr. Nick Kushmerick, www.cs.ucd.ie/staff/nick/research,
nick(a)ucd.ie, + 353 1 7062479).
Modelling Human Creativity (Studentship) The development and testingof
cognitive models of analogy; suitable for students with a degree in
Psychology or Cognitive Science (contact: Prof.=A0Mark Keane,
www.cs.ucd.ie/staff/mkeane/, mark.keane(a)ucd.ie, + 353 1 7062470).
Plotting the Web (Studentship) To develop automated methods for
analysing the structure of the WWW, to support intelligent search
methods (contact: Dr.=A0Barry Smyth, www.cs.ucd.ie/staff/barry,
barry.smyth(a)ucd.ie, + 353 1 7062473).
Speech Technology/Computational Linguistics. (Studentship) To develop
declarative models for speech recognition and speech synthesis
applications with an emphasis on architectures for spoken language
systems. (contact: Dr.=A0Julie Berndsen, www.cs.ucd.ie/staff/berndsen,
julie.berndsen(a)ucd.ie, + 353 1 7062493).
Hyper-Interaction in Physical Spaces. (Studentships) An ESPRIT-funded
project (HIPS) in the PRISM laboratory concerned with mobile computing
and the application of Multi-Agent Systems (MAS) to the delivery of
personal digital assistants hosted on palmtop devices (contact: Gregory
O'Hare www.cs.ucd.ie/staff/gohare, Gregory.OHare(a)ucd.ie, + 353 1
7062472).
Educational Hypermedia Online Systems. (Studentships) An ESPRIT-funded
project (ECHOES) in the PRISM laboratory, concerned with mobile
computing and the application of Multi-Agent Systems (MAS) to the
provision of a training support environment for engineers in the field.
(contact: Gregory O'Hare, www.cs.ucd.ie/staff/gohare,
Gregory.OHare(a)ucd.ie, + 353 1 7062472).
Educational Hypermedia Online Systems. (Studentship) An ESPRIT-funded
project (ECHOES) in the PRISM laboratory on the use hypermedia in online
educational systems. (contact: Greg O'Hare, www.cs.ucd.ie/staff/gohare,
gregory.ohare(a)ucd.ie, + 353 1 7062472).
The studentships attract a tax-free stipend and payment of fees. The
exact conditions of the post-doctoral positions are available on
application.
-----> Note that I have moved...new address... <------
Mark Keane, Department of Computer Science,
University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, IRELAND
E-mail: Mark.Keane(a)ucd.ie Phone: +353-1-7062470
WWW: www.cs.ucd.ie/staff/mkeane/
Csaba Pleh
associate professor
Dept General Psychology Eotvos Lorand U
Budapest 64 P.O. Box 4 Hungary 1378
T.: 36 13423130 Fax: 36 13423109 Home: 36 23 453932 or 453 933
Az MTA Filozofiai Intezete Nyelv es Tudomanyfilozofiai Kutatocsoportja es
a Magyar Wittgenstein Tarsasag kozos rendezeseben
1998. november 5-en, 14:00-kor a Filozofiai Intezetben kerul sor
Bekes Vera, _A hianyzo paradigma_ c. konyvenek vitajara,
melyen Feher Marta es Sandor Klara a felkert hozzaszolok.
Mindenkit szeretettel varunk.
Demeter Tamas
Kedves Kollegak !
A TYPOTEX Kiado oktober 30-an, penteken
11 orakor
a Muszaki Konyvaruhazban (Bp., Liszt Ferenc ter 9, az Oktogonnal)
bemutatja
Dennett: Darwin veszelyes ideaja
Lakatos: Bizonyitasok es cafolatok
Popper: Test es elme
cimu ujonnan megjelent konyveit.
Felvezetok: Kampis, Forrai, Pleh urak.
A bemutaton mindenkit szerettel latunk.
Zizi, ropi etc.
Votisky Zsuzsa
es
Pleh Csaba Csaba Pleh
associate professor
Dept General Psychology Eotvos Lorand U
Budapest 64 P.O. Box 4 Hungary 1378
T.: 36 13423130 Fax: 36 13423109 Home: 36 23 453932 or 453 933
Rejected message: sent to koglist(a)cogpsyphy.hu by CINDY(a)CNS.BU.EDU follows.
Reason for rejection: sender not subscribed.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
***** CALL FOR PAPERS *****
THIRD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COGNITIVE AND NEURAL SYSTEMS
May 26-29, 1999
Sponsored by Boston University's
Center for Adaptive Systems
and
Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems
with financial support from DARPA and ONR
How Does the Brain Control Behavior?
How Can Technology Emulate Biological Intelligence?
The conference will include invited tutorials and lectures, and
contributed lectures and posters by experts on the biology and
technology of how the brain and other intelligent systems adapt to a
changing world. The conference is aimed at researchers and students of
computational neuroscience, connectionist cognitive science,
artificial neural networks, neuromorphic engineering, and artificial
intelligence.
A single oral or poster session enables all presented work to be
highly visible.
Abstract submissions encourage submissions of the latest results.
Costs are kept at a minimum without compromising the quality of
meeting handouts and social events.
CONFIRMED INVITED SPEAKERS INCLUDE:
Andreas Andreou
Randolph Blake
Rodney Brooks
Gail Carpenter
Dario Floreano
Joaquin Fuster
Paolo Gaudiano
Charles Gilbert
Larry Gillick
Steven Greenberg
Stephen Grossberg
Michael Hasselmo
Joseph LeDoux
John Lisman
Ennio Mingolla
Tomaso Poggio
Daniel Schacter
Shihab Shamma
Richard Shiffrin
Nobuo Suga
David van Essen
Steven Zucker
There will be contributed oral and poster sessions on each day
of the conference.
CALL FOR ABSTRACTS
Session Topics:
* vision * spatial mapping and navigation
* object recognition * neural circuit models
* image understanding * neural system models
* audition * mathematics of neural systems
* speech and language * robotics
* unsupervised learning * hybrid systems (fuzzy, evolutionary, digital)
* supervised learning * neuromorphic VLSI
* reinforcement and emotion * industrial applications
* sensory-motor control * other
* cognition, planning, and
attention
Contributed Abstracts must be received, in English, by January 29,
1999. Notification of acceptance will be given by February 28, 1999.
A meeting registration fee of $45 for regular attendees and $30 for
students must accompany each Abstract. See Registration Information
for details. The fee will be returned if the Abstract is not accepted
for presentation and publication in the meeting proceedings. Registration
fees of accepted abstracts will be returned on request only until
April 15, 1999.
Each Abstract should fit on one 8.5" x 11" white page with 1" margins
on all sides, single-column format, single-spaced, Times Roman or
similar font of 10 points or larger, printed on one side of the page
only. Fax submissions will not be accepted. Abstract title, author
name(s), affiliation(s), mailing, and email address(es) should begin
each Abstract. An accompanying cover letter should include: Full title
of Abstract; corresponding author and presenting author name, address,
telephone, fax, and email address; and a first and second choice from
among the topics above, including whether it is biological (B) or
technological (T) work. Example: first choice: vision (T); second
choice: neural system models (B). (Talks will be 15 minutes
long. Posters will be up for a full day. Overhead, slide, and VCR
facilities will be available for talks.) Abstracts which do not meet
these requirements or which are submitted with insufficient funds will
be returned. Accepted Abstracts will be printed in the conference
proceedings volume. No longer paper will be required. The original and
3 copies of each Abstract should be sent to: Cynthia Bradford, Boston
University, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems, 677 Beacon
Street, Boston, MA 02215.
REGISTRATION INFORMATION: Early registration is recommended. To
register, please fill out the registration form below. Student
registrations must be accompanied by a letter of verification from a
department chairperson or faculty/research advisor. If accompanied by
an Abstract or if paying by check, mail to the address above. If
paying by credit card, mail as above, or fax to (617) 353-7755, or
email to cindy(a)cns.bu.edu. The registration fee will help to pay for a
reception, 6 coffee breaks, and the meeting proceedings.
STUDENT FELLOWSHIPS: Fellowships for PhD candidates and postdoctoral
fellows are available to cover meeting travel and living costs. The
deadline to apply for fellowship support is January 29, 1999. Applicants
will be notified by February 28, 1999. Each application should include
the applicant's CV, including name; mailing address; email address;
current student status; faculty or PhD research advisor's name, address,
and email address; relevant courses and other educational data; and a
list of research articles. A letter from the listed faculty or PhD advisor
on official institutional stationery should accompany the application and
summarize how the candidate may benefit from the meeting. Students who also
submit an Abstract need to include the registration fee with their
Abstract. Reimbursement checks will be distributed after the meeting.
REGISTRATION FORM
Third International Conference on Cognitive and Neural Systems
Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems
Boston University
677 Beacon Street
Boston, Massachusetts 02215
Tutorials: May 26, 1999
Meeting: May 27-29, 1999
FAX: (617) 353-7755
(Please Type or Print)
Mr/Ms/Dr/Prof: _____________________________________________________
Name: ______________________________________________________________
Affiliation: _______________________________________________________
Address: ___________________________________________________________
City, State, Postal Code: __________________________________________
Phone and Fax: _____________________________________________________
Email: _____________________________________________________________
The conference registration fee includes the meeting program,
reception, two coffee breaks each day, and meeting proceedings.
The tutorial registration fee includes tutorial notes and two
coffee breaks.
CHECK ONE:
( ) $70 Conference plus Tutorial (Regular)
( ) $45 Conference plus Tutorial (Student)
( ) $45 Conference Only (Regular)
( ) $30 Conference Only (Student)
( ) $25 Tutorial Only (Regular)
( ) $15 Tutorial Only (Student)
METHOD OF PAYMENT (please fax or mail):
[ ] Enclosed is a check made payable to "Boston University".
Checks must be made payable in US dollars and issued by
a US correspondent bank. Each registrant is responsible
for any and all bank charges.
[ ] I wish to pay my fees by credit card
(MasterCard, Visa, or Discover Card only).
Name as it appears on the card: _____________________________________
Type of card: _______________________________________________________
Account number: _____________________________________________________
Expiration date: ____________________________________________________
Signature: __________________________________________________________
Rejected message: sent to koglist(a)cogpsyphy.hu by SARHANGI(a)JINX.SCKANS.EDU follows.
Reason for rejection: sender not subscribed.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CALL FOR PAPERS
SOUTHWESTERN COLLEGE
ANNOUNCES
=20
THE SECOND ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF
BRIDGES:
Mathematical Connections in Art, Music, and Science
JULY 30 - AUGUST 1, 1999
Suggested Topics:
Fractals, Math and Music, Tessellations, Geometry in Quilting
M.C. Escher Work, Math and 3-Dimensional Art, Origami
Mathematics and Architecture, Computer-Generated Art
Math and Art in Culture, Art in Hyperbolic Geometry
The Conference publishes a refereed proceedings of presented papers. Papers
accepted for publication should follow the proceedings format and be camera
ready; however, for review they don't need to follow a set format.
Interested authors must submit their papers by 1/15/99 for review. The
authors will be notified of their papers' status and in case of acceptance
will receive papers for revision by 3/15/99. Authors need to resubmit the
papers in formatted, revised form by 5/2/99. In this step, the original
clear figures and graphs should be submitted with the papers. If a
presenter is not able to submit a paper for presentation, he or she may send
an abstract (not more than 1 page) to be published in the Conference
Proceedings . There is no reviewing process for abstracts. The deadline
for abstracts is 4/23/99. There is a registration fee of $40.00 for each
day or $100.00 for the entire conference plus $25.00 for a Proceedings. The
1998 Bridges Proceedings is available for purchase (Barnes & Noble, Phone:
(316) 685-3600, Fax: (316) 685-7729).
Besides area motels, Southwestern College offers lodging and meals on
campus. For participants who fly to Wichita (the closest airport to
Winfield) and report their arrival and departure times in advance, there
will be transportation available for the evening of July 29 and for the
morning of August 2.=20
For more information (or if you want to add your e-mail to the mailing list)
you may contact: =20
Professor Reza Sarhangi, Bridges,
Southwestern College, 100 College Street, Winfield, KS, 67156. =20
E-mail: sarhangi(a)jinx.sckans.edu, (316) 221-8373, Home Page:
http://www.sckans.edu/~bridges/
You may also contact the following Bridges Advisory Board members regarding
the conference:
East: Professor Nat Friedman, Department of Mathematics and Statistics,
University At Albany, State University of New York, Albany, NY 12222,
E-mail: artmath(a)math.albany.edu, (518) 442-4621
West: Professor Carlo S=E9quin, Computer Science Division, EECS Department,
University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, E-mail:=
sequin(a)cs.berkeley.edu,=20
(510) 642-5103 =20
=20
=20
Reza Sarhangi, Ph.D.
Chair, Mathematics Department =20
Southwestern College =20
100 College Street =20
Winfield, KS 67156 =20
=20
E-mail: sarhangi(a)jinx.sckans.edu =20
Tel: (316) 221-8373 =20
Fax: (316) 221-8224 =20
http: //www.sckans.edu/~math/ =20
http://www.sckans.edu/~bridges/
=20
Kedves Mindenki,
mint bizonyara tudjatok, a Kognitiv Doktori diakok szakmai
beszamoloja november 16-an, hetfon 1 orakor kezdodik. Helyszin a
Tanari Klub a Szerb utcaban. korulbelul 13-16 emberre szamitunk, igy
mindenkire 15 perc jut kerdesekkel egyutt. Ez eleg arra, hogy
munkatok kontextusat es nehany konkret eredmenyt bemutassatok. A
Tanari Klubban mindenfele segedeszkoz megtalalhato.
Meghivot kuldunk a tobbi pszichologia program vezetoinek es az osszes
PhD-s diaknak.
Arra kerek mindenkit, hogy nov. 6.-ig kuldje el eloadasa
figyelemfelkelto! cimet es abstractjat az
aszalos(a)alpha0.iki.kfki.hu
cimre (tehat NE replayjal valaszoljatok!).
A figyelemfelkelto cim pl.
Ovodas gyermekek vizelesenek kondicionalasa aramutessel (Csabatol)
vagy
A kartezianus ego megjelenese es eltunese generativ halozatok eseten
(ez tolem)
A hataridot tartsatok be es sok sikert:
PeterCsaba Pleh
associate professor
Dept General Psychology Eotvos Lorand U
Budapest 64 P.O. Box 4 Hungary 1378
T.: 36 13423130 Fax: 36 13423109 Home: 36 23 453932 or 453 933
Ime a CEU filozofiai doctoral support programjanak
leirasa.
----------
> Feladó: Jason Kelleher <Kellehej(a)CEU.HU>
> Címzett: European.Society.of.Analytic.Philosophy(a)orion.ceu.hu
> Tárgy: Central European University
> Dátum: 1998. október 19. 17:56
>
> Dear Members of the Central European Section of the European Society
> of Analytic Philosophy:
>
> Prof. Robert M. Harnish, who participated in your organization's
> August meeting, suggested that I contact you with regards to a new
> program he will be offering here at Central European University in
> Budapest.
>
> From January 1999, Prof. Harnish will be leading a doctoral support
> program in Philosophy, focusing on the theme of "Social Reality: Its
> Nature and Knowability." Participants in the program will be doctoral
> students from other universities who would like to utilize CEU's
> library and faculty for purposes of assisting them in writing their
> dissertation.
>
> Full fellowships are available for students from Central and Eastern
> Europe and the former Soviet Union.
>
> If you would not mind posting the attached program description in
> your department, Prof. Harnish and I would very much appreciate your
> assistance. In the event your system has difficulties with attached
> files, I have also included the text within the body of this email.
>
> Thank you in advance for your assistance, and please do not hesitate
> to contact me if I can return the favor.
>
> Best wishes,
> Jason Kelleher
>
>
>
>
> Central European University
> Budapest, Hungary
> _____________________________________
>
>
> Central European University
> is now accepting applications for the
>
> **********
>
> PHILOSOPHY DOCTORAL SUPPORT PROGRAM
>
> **********
>
> for Academic Year 1998/1999, Semester II
> and Academic Year 1999/2000, Semesters I and II
>
>
>
> THE PROGRAM
> The doctoral support program in Philosophy was introduced in 1997 to
> assist students enrolled in philosophy PhD programs at other
> universities in developing their dissertations. During their term at
> CEU, students receive consultation and supervision from CEU faculty
> and attend seminars. Participants are encouraged to interact with the
> other students and faculty, presenting their work in informal
> workshops and contributing to the CEU community. While students in
> the program are not obliged to participate in classes outside of the
> core colloquium, they may at their discretion.
>
> Each year, a different academic theme is chosen as a point of focus;
> during the 1998/99 academic year, the topic will be Social Reality:
> Its Nature and Knowability.
>
> Candidates from Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet
> Union are eligible for full Soros Fellowships, which provide a full
> tuition waiver, living and travel expenses. Additional financial
> aid programs including full and half academic merit tuition waivers
> and student loans are also available on a competitive basis.
>
> FACULTY
> Program Director
> Robert M. Harnish (PhD, Philosophy and Linguistics, Massachusetts
> Institute of Technology) is a professor of philosophy and
> linguistics, and research professor of cognitive science at the
> University of Arizona (Tucson). His research interests include
> language, cognitive science and early analytic philosophy. He has
> co-authored both Linguistic Communication and Speech Acts, MIT Press
> (1979) an Linguistics: An Introduction to Language and Communication,
> 4ed., MIT Press (1995). He is co-editor of The Representation of
> Knowledge and Belief, University of Arizona Press (1986); Neural
> Connections, Mental Computation, MIT Press (1989) and editor of
> Basic Topics in the Philosophy of Language, Prentice-Hall (1994).
> His most recent book, Minds, Brains and Computers will be published
> by Blackwelll. He has been a visiting professor in Aix-en-Provence,
> Paris, Graz, Melbourne, and Pecs.
>
> In addition, over 100 professors from around the world teach at CEU,
> hailing from countries including Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina,
> Bulgaria, Canada, Croatia, the Czech Republic, the Federal Republic
> of Yugoslavia, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, India, Israel,
> Italy, Latvia, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Poland, Romania, Russia,
> Slovakia, Slovenia, Switzerland, Spain, Ukraine, the United
> Kingdom and the United States. Additionally, CEU hosts a number of
> visiting professors who give frequent lectures and seminars, thus
> giving students access to highly respected academics from other
> institutions.
>
> LIBRARY RESOURCES
> CEU's Budapest Library holds the largest collection of
> English-language materials in the social sciences and humanities in
> Central and Eastern Europe. New materials are constantly acquired,
> particularly within the disciplines of CEU's academic departments and
> programs. Recently published English-language monographs and serials
> in economics, environmental sciences, history, international
> relations and European studies, law and political science can be
> found in the collection, many of which are unique to Hungary. The
> basic literature of specialized fields such as gender studies,
> nationalism and Southeast European history is also richly
> represented. The Budapest Library aims to become a leading research
> and information center in the region using all available means of
> information technology.
>
> The library currently holds more than 100,000 volumes of monographs
> and 1000 periodical titles. In addition, the libraries are equipped
> with the latest data-retrieval technology. Several CD-ROM databases
> are available to users through CEU's local network. These include
> Academic Search (full text elite edition), Business Source Elite,
> Environmental Abstracts, Geobase, CAB International, Justis Celex,
> Legaltrac, PAIS International, Sociofile, Econlit NPA (database of
> periodicals available in Hungary), Bookfind and Library of Congress
> CD-MARC Bibliographies, etc...
>
> The Budapest Library subscribes to 4 on-line databases and several
> major international databases and the World Wide Web for all users.
> The library plans to expand and develop its multimedia capabilities
> in order to utilize more fully this rapidly developing technology.
>
> CENTRAL EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY
> Central European University (CEU) is an internationally recognized
> institution of post-graduate education in the social sciences. It
> seeks to contribute to the development of open societies in
> Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union by promoting a
> system of education in which ideas are creatively, critically, and
> comparatively examined. CEU serves as an advanced center of
> research and policy analysis and facilitates academic dialogue while
> preparing its graduates to serve as the region's next generation of
> leaders and scholar.
>
> CEU has an absolute charter from the Board of Regents of the State of
> New York (US) and is a member of the Association of European
> Universities.
>
> STUDENT BODY
> During the 1998/99 academic year, CEU enrolled 700 students drawn
> from over 40 countries including those of Central and Eastern Europe
> and the former Soviet Union (CEE/fSU), Western Europe, North
> America and Asia.
>
> APPLYING TO THE PROGRAM
> Applicants to the program in Philosophy should complete the special
> CEU application form (or the standard CEU application form, writing
> in Philosophy as their program of choice) and include all
> requested attachments. In addition, participants are expected to
> include a 3-5 page summary of their dissertation project, a 1-2 page
> summary of what the applicant hopes to obtain during the course of
> studies at CEU, as well as a letter of support from his/her
> dissertation advisor.
>
> Candidates must be currently enrolled as PhD students pursuing
> studies in philosophy and will be required to sit for the Test of
> English as a Foreign Language and the CEU Test of Essay Writing
> Skills.
>
>
> APPLICATION DEADLINES
> For entry to Semester II, 1998/1999:
> ** November 15, 1998 and December 1, 1998 **
> Candidates for admission are strongly encouraged
> to submit their documents by the earlier
> deadline to receive early notification of
> admissions decisions.
>
> For entry to Semester I or II, 1999/2000:
> ** February 15, 1999 **
>
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> case-by-case basis. Late applicants must demonstrate outstanding
> potential to be considered for admission.
>
> For additional information and application materials, please
> contact:
> CEU Admissions Office
> Nador u. 9
> 1051 Budapest
> HUNGARY
>
> Tel: (36-1) 327-3009; Fax: (36-1) 327-3211
> Email: admissions(a)ceu.hu; Web Site: http://www.ceu.hu
>
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> *********************************************************
Below is the abstract of a forthcoming BBS target
article (see also 4 important announcements about new
BBS policies and address change at the bottom of this message)
A THEORY OF IMPLICIT AND EXPLICIT KNOWLEDGE
by Zoltan Dienes and Josef Perner
This article has been accepted for publication in Behavioral and Brain
Sciences (BBS), an international, interdisciplinary journal providing
Open Peer Commentary on important and controversial current research in
the biobehavioral and cognitive sciences.
Commentators must be BBS Associates or nominated by a BBS Associate. To
be considered as a commentator for this article, to suggest other
appropriate commentators, or for information about how to become a BBS
Associate, please send EMAIL to:
bbs(a)cogsci.soton.ac.uk
or write to:
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
ECS: New Zepler Building
University of Southampton
Highfield, Southampton
SO17 1BJ UNITED KINGDOM
http://www.princeton.edu/~harnad/bbs/http://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/bbs/ftp://ftp.princeton.edu/pub/harnad/BBS/
ftp://ftp.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/pub/bbs/
gopher://gopher.princeton.edu:70/11/.libraries/.pujournals
If you are not a BBS Associate, please send your CV and the name of a
BBS Associate (there are currently over 10,000 worldwide) who is
familiar with your work. All past BBS authors, referees and
commentators are eligible to become BBS Associates.
To help us put together a balanced list of commentators, please give
some indication of the aspects of the topic on which you would bring
your areas of expertise to bear if you were selected as a commentator.
An electronic draft of the full text is available for inspection
with a WWW browser, anonymous ftp or gopher according to the
instructions that follow after the abstract.
_____________________________________________________________
A THEORY OF IMPLICIT AND EXPLICIT KNOWLEDGE
Zoltan Dienes
Experimental Psychology
University of Sussex
Brighton
Sussex BN1 9QG
England
dienes(a)epunix.susx.ac.uk
and
Josef Perner
Institut fuer Psychologie
Universitaet Salzburg
Hellbrunnerstrasse 34
A-5020 Salzburg
Austria
josef.perner(a)sbg.ac.at
KEYWORDS:Implicit knowledge, consciousness, automaticity,
memory, cognitive development, visual perception, artificial
grammar learning
ABSTRACT: The implicit-explicit distinction is applied to
knowledge representations. Knowledge is taken to be an attitude
towards a proposition which is true. The proposition itself
predicates a property to some entity. Number of ways in which
knowledge can be implicit or explicit emerge. If a higher
aspect is known explicitly then each lower one must also be
known explicitly; this parital hierarchy reduces the number of
ways in which knowledge can be explicit. In most important type
of implicit knowledge, representations merely reflect the
property of objects or events without predicating them of any
particular entity. The clearest case of explicit knowledge of a
fact are reflective representations of one's own attitude of
knowing that fact. These distinctions are discussed in their
relationship to similar distinctions like procedural-
declarative, conscious-unconscious, verbalizable-
nonverbalizable, direct-indirect tests, and automatic-voluntary
control. This is followed by an outline of how these
distinctions can be used to integrate and relate the often
divergent uses of the implicit-explicit distinction in
different research areas. We illustrate this for visual
perception, memory, cognitive development, and artificial
grammar learning.
____________________________________________________________
To help you decide whether you would be an appropriate commentator for
this article, an electronic draft is retrievable from the World Wide
Web or by anonymous ftp from the US or UK BBS Archive.
Ftp instructions follow below. Please do not prepare a commentary on
this draft. Just let us know, after having inspected it, what relevant
expertise you feel you would bring to bear on what aspect of the
article.
The URLs you can use to get to the BBS Archive:
http://www.princeton.edu/~harnad/bbs/http://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/bbs/Archive/bbs.dienes.htmlftp://ftp.princeton.edu/pub/harnad/BBS/bbs.dienes
ftp://ftp.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/pub/bbs/Archive/bbs.dienes
To retrieve a file by ftp from an Internet site, type either:
ftp ftp.princeton.edu
or
ftp 128.112.128.1
When you are asked for your login, type:
anonymous
Enter password as queried (your password is your actual userid:
yourlogin(a)yourhost.whatever.whatever - be sure to include the "@")
cd /pub/harnad/BBS
To show the available files, type:
ls
Next, retrieve the file you want with (for example):
get bbs.dienes
When you have the file(s) you want, type:
quit
____________________________________________________________
FOUR IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENTS
------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) There have been some extremely important developments in the
area of Web archiving of scientific papers very recently.
Please see:
Science:
http://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/science.html
Nature:
http://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/nature.html
American Scientist:
http://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/amlet.html
Chronicle of Higher Education:
http://www.chronicle.com/free/v45/i04/04a02901.htm
---------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) All authors in the biobehavioral and cognitive sciences are
strongly encouraged to archive all their papers (on their
Home-Servers as well as) on CogPrints:
http://cogprints.soton.ac.uk/
It is extremely simple to do so and will make all of our papers
available to all of us everywhere at no cost to anyone.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
(3) BBS has a new policy of accepting submissions electronically.
Authors can specify whether they would like their submissions
archived publicly during refereeing in the BBS under-refereeing
Archive, or in a referees-only, non-public archive.
Upon acceptance, preprints of final drafts are moved to the
public BBS Archive:
ftp://ftp.princeton.edu/pub/harnad/BBS/.WWW/index.htmlhttp://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/bbs/Archive/
--------------------------------------------------------------------
(4) BBS has expanded its annual page quota and is now appearing
bimonthly, so the service of Open Peer Commentary can now be be
offered to more target articles. The BBS refereeing procedure is
also going to be considerably faster with the new electronic
submission and processing procedures. Authors are invited to submit
papers to:
Email: bbs(a)cogsci.soton.ac.uk
Web: http://cogprints.soton.ac.ukhttp://bbs.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/
Paper/Disk: [NOTE ADDRESS CHANGE]
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
Department of Electronics and Computer Science
New Zepler Building
University of Southampton
Highfield, Southampton
SO17 1BJ UNITED KINGDOM
INSTRUCTIONS FOR AUTHORS:
http://www.princeton.edu/~harnad/bbs/instructions.for.authors.htmlhttp://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/bbs/instructions.for.authors.html
3 important announcements, followed by
BBS Call for Commentators
(Gold/Stoljar: Neuron Doctrine):
------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) There have been some very important developments in the area of
Web archiving of scientific papers in this last month. Please see:
Science:
http://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/science.html
Nature:
http://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/nature.html
American Scientist:
http://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/amlet.html
Chronicle of Higher Education:
http://www.chronicle.com/free/v45/i04/04a02901.htm
---------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) All authors in the biobehavioral and cognitive sciences are
strongly encouraged to archive all their papers on their
Home-Servers as well as on CogPrints:
http://cogprints.soton.ac.uk/
It is extremely simple to do so and will make all of our papers
available to all of us everywhere at no cost to anyone.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
(3) BBS has a new policy of accepting submissions electronically.
Authors can specify whether they would like their submissions
archived publicly during refereeing in the BBS under-refereeing
Archive, or in a referees-only, non-public archive.
Upon acceptance, preprints of final drafts are moved to the public
BBS Archive:
ftp://ftp.princeton.edu/pub/harnad/BBS/.WWW/index.htmlhttp://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/bbs/Archive/
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Below is the abstract of a forthcoming BBS target article on:
A NEURON DOCTRINE IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF NEUROSCIENCE
by Ian Gold & Daniel Stoljar
This article has been accepted for publication in Behavioral and Brain
Sciences (BBS), an international, interdisciplinary journal providing
Open Peer Commentary on important and controversial current research in
the biobehavioral and cognitive sciences.
Commentators must be BBS Associates or nominated by a BBS Associate. To
be considered as a commentator for this article, to suggest other
appropriate commentators, or for information about how to become a BBS
Associate, please send EMAIL to:
bbs(a)cogsci.soton.ac.uk
or write to:
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
ECS: New Zepler Building
University of Southampton
Highfield, Southampton
SO17 1BJ UNITED KINGDOM
http://www.princeton.edu/~harnad/bbs/http://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/bbs/ftp://ftp.princeton.edu/pub/harnad/BBS/
ftp://ftp.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/pub/bbs/
gopher://gopher.princeton.edu:70/11/.libraries/.pujournals
If you are not a BBS Associate, please send your CV and the name of a
BBS Associate (there are currently over 10,000 worldwide) who is
familiar with your work. All past BBS authors, referees and
commentators are eligible to become BBS Associates.
To help us put together a balanced list of commentators, please give
some indication of the aspects of the topic on which you would bring
your areas of expertise to bear if you were selected as a commentator.
An electronic draft of the full text is available for inspection
with a WWW browser, anonymous ftp or gopher according to the
instructions that follow after the abstract.
_____________________________________________________________
A NEURON DOCTRINE IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF NEUROSCIENCE
Ian Gold
Institute of Advanced Studies,
Australian National University,
Canberra ACT 0200,
Australia
iangold(a)coombs.anu.edu.au
Daniel Stoljar
Department of Philosophy and Institute of Cognitive Science,
University of Colorado,
Boulder 80309
stoljar(a)colorado.edu
and
Institute of Advanced Studies,
Australian National
University Canberra ACT 0200,
Australia
dstoljar(a)coombs.anu.edu.au
KEYWORDS: Churchlands, classical conditioning, cognitive
neuroscience, Kandel, learning, materialism, mind, naturalism,
neurobiology, neurophilosophy, philosophy of neuroscience,
psychology, reduction, theoretical unification
ABSTRACT: Many neuroscientists and philosophers endorse a view
about the explanatory reach of neuroscience which we will call
the neuron doctrine to the effect that the framework for
understanding the mind will be developed by neuroscience; or,
as we will put it, that a successful theory of the mind will be
solely neuroscientific. It is a consequence of this view that
the sciences of the mind that cannot be expressed by means of
neuroscientific concepts alone count as indirect sciences that
will be discarded as neuroscience matures. This consequence is
what makes the doctrine substantive, indeed, radical. We ask,
first, what the neuron doctrine means and, second, whether it
is true. In answer to the first question, we distinguish two
versions of the doctrine. One version, the trivial neuron
doctrine, turns out to be uncontroversial but unsubstantive
because it fails to have the consequence that the
non-neuroscientific sciences of the mind will eventually be
discarded. A second version, the radical neuron doctrine, does
have this consequence, but, unlike the first doctrine, is
highly controversial. We argue that the neuron doctrine appears
to be both substantive and uncontroversial only as a result of
a conflation of these two versions. We then consider whether
the radical doctrine is true. We present and evaluate three
arguments for it, based either on general scientific and
philosophical considerations or on the details of neuroscience
itself; arguing that all three fail. We conclude that the
evidence fails to support the radical neuron doctrine.
____________________________________________________________
To help you decide whether you would be an appropriate commentator for
this article, an electronic draft is retrievable from the World Wide
Web or by anonymous ftp from the US or UK BBS Archive.
Ftp instructions follow below. Please do not prepare a commentary on
this draft. Just let us know, after having inspected it, what relevant
expertise you feel you would bring to bear on what aspect of the
article.
The URLs you can use to get to the BBS Archive:
http://www.princeton.edu/~harnad/bbs/http://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/bbs/Archive/bbs.gold.htmlftp://ftp.princeton.edu/pub/harnad/BBS/bbs.gold
ftp://ftp.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/pub/bbs/Archive/bbs.gold
To retrieve a file by ftp from an Internet site, type either:
ftp ftp.princeton.edu
or
ftp 128.112.128.1
When you are asked for your login, type:
anonymous
Enter password as queried (your password is your actual userid:
yourlogin(a)yourhost.whatever.whatever - be sure to include the "@")
cd /pub/harnad/BBS
To show the available files, type:
ls
Next, retrieve the file you want with (for example):
get bbs.gold
When you have the file(s) you want, type:
quit
Rejected message: sent to koglist(a)cogpsyphy.hu by KMCCUMB(a)MRI.JHU.EDU follows.
Reason for rejection: sender not subscribed.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Johns Hopkins University Biomedical Engineering Department invites
applications for the Distinguished Postdoctoral Fellowship Program.
This program is funded by the Whitaker Foundation. It aims to promote
an inter-disciplinary approach to the study of complex biomedical systems
and provide the very best of the recently graduated PhDs an opportunity
to perform independent research in a supportive environment. Each recipient
will be sponsored by two faculty, at least one of which must have a
primary appointment in BME.
Of particular interest are candidates with a background in computational
neuroscience who wish to pursue projects in laboratories of the Systems
Neuroscience or Theoretical and Computational Biology groups of faculty.
Salary of the fellows will start at $30,000 per year, with additional funds
to cover health insurance. The duration of the fellowship is two years.
Interested applicants should submit the following documents:
* CV
* Two letters of reference
* Two page summary of research interests
Send your application materials to:
Dr. Murray Sachs
Dept. of Biomedical Engineering,
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
720 Rutland Ave
Baltimore, MD 21205
Deadline for receipt of applications is Dec. 15, 1998.
For further information: http://www.bme.jhu.edu/postdoc/
The Johns Hopkins University is an Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action
Institution.