Tisztelt Kollegak!
Koszonjuk a szamos jelentkezest a januari IBRO 2004 Workshopra. Az
aktualisan feldolgozott regisztracios listat megtalalhatjak a konferencia
honlapjan (http://ibro2004.elte.hu). Kerjuk azokat, akik jelentkeztek ugyan, de
megsem szerepelnek a listan, e-mailben jelezzek a detarineu(a)ludens.elte.hu
cimen, hogy korigalni tudjuk az esetleges tevedeseket.
Azok szamara, akik szamlat kertek, folyamatban van azok kikuldese is, nehany
nap turelmet kerunk.
Minden kedves kolleganak Kellemes Unnepeket es Boldog Ujevet kivanunk!
A Szervezo Bizottsag
(neveben Bardos Gyorgy)
********************************************************
Gyorgy Bardos, PhD, CSc
dr.habil, associate professor/lecturer
Department of Physiology and Neurobiology
E÷tv÷s Loránd University, Faculty of Sciences
Pázmány Péter sétány 1/C, Budapest H-1117, Hungary
Phone:2090-555/8373
Fax: (36-1) 381-2182
E-mail: bardosgy(a)ludens.elte.hu
********************************************************
Kedves Kollegak!
Nagy szuksegem lenne egy rovid idore Gallon: The Psychosomatic Approach
to Illness (Elsevier, 1982) cimu konyvere. Kerem, akinek megvan, vagy tud
ilyenrol valahol, jelezze nekem (esetleg ha valaki birtokaban van a tolunk
kolcsonadott peldanynak, megkoszonnem, ha visszajuttatna...).
Elore is koszonom!
Bardos Gyorgy
********************************************************
Gyorgy Bardos, PhD, CSc
dr.habil, associate professor/lecturer
Department of Physiology and Neurobiology
E÷tv÷s Loránd University, Faculty of Sciences
Pázmány Péter sétány 1/C, Budapest H-1117, Hungary
Phone:2090-555/8373
Fax: (36-1) 381-2182
E-mail: bardosgy(a)ludens.elte.hu
********************************************************
P h i l o s o p h y o f S c i e n c e C o l l o q u i u m
Department of History and Philosophy of Science
Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest
Room 6.54 (6th floor) Monday 4:00 PM
Pázmány P. sétány 1/A Budapest, Hungary
Phone/Fax: (36-1) 372 2924
8 December 4:00 PM 6th floor 6.54
I s t v a n J u h a s z
Alfred Renyi Institute of Mathematics
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Erdemes-e uj halmazelmeleti axiomakat keresni?
(Does it make sense to look for new set-theoretic axioms?)
Abstract: http://hps.elte.hu/seminar/2003/December/#2
___________________________________
The 60-minute lecture is followed by a 10-minute break. Then we hold a
30-60-minute discussion. The participants may comment on the talks and
are encouraged to initiate discussion through the Internet. The
comments should be written in the language of the presentation.
The organizer of the colloquium for the academic year 2003/2004: Miklós Rédei
(email: redei(a)hps.elte.hu)
--
L a s z l o E. S z a b o
Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study (NIAS)
phone:(31)70 512 2700 fax:(31)70 511 7162 http://www.nias.knaw.nl
on leave from
Theoretical Physics Research Group of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Department of History and Philosophy of Science
Eotvos University, Budapest
http://hps.elte.hu/leszabo
Tisztelt Kollégák,
KÉNYSZERŰ PAZARLÁS A SÉRÜLT NYELVTANBAN --
A grammatika gazdaságossági elvei az agrammatikus afáziában
Bánréti Zoltán előadása
2003. december 9-én, kedden 11 órától
az MTA Nyelvtudomanyi Intézetében.
Hely. Bp. VI. Benczúr u. 33.
földszinti előadóterem
Az érdeklődőket szeretettel várjuk.
Bánréti Zoltán
Abstract
Economy principles of grammar in agrammatic aphasia:
I would like to show that agrammatic aphasia closely related to the
impairments in the formal economy principle of grammar. When
computational resources are extremely limited because of aphasia, the
formal economy principles of grammar (the minimal sets of features
needed, non-insertion of PF, etc) are not available in a normal way.
This indicates: economy principles in normal system are based on the
limited resources for a normal grammar. If the sufficient amount of
computational resources is not available, the economy principles do
not work. Some of the language impairments in agrammatic aphasia
(among others) can be interpreted as the impairments in the economy
principles of the grammar.
email: banreti(a)nytud.hu
Cognition at Christmas III
Symposium on Face Processing
Budapest University of Technology and Economics
1111 Budapest, Muegyetem rkp. 3-9.
'K' Building, 'Tanari Klub'
Friday, 19 December 2003
***
A fenti szimpozium eloadasanak absztraktjai megtalalhatok a kovetkezo
cimen:
http://www.itm.bme.hu/ktk/cogchris/index.htm
Korlatozott szamban meg lehet jelentkezni a szimpoziumra. A terem kis
befogadokepessege miatt a szimpoziumon csak azok vehetnek reszt, akik
elozetesen regisztraltak e szandekukat. Regisztracio: Kovacs Gyula
(g.kovacs(a)itm.bme.hu).
Csibra Gergely
The Philosophy Department cordially invites you to a lecture
by
Ted Sider (PhD University of Massachusetts, Amherst)
on
Parthood
5.00 PM, Tuesday, 9. December, Zrinyi 14/room 412
Ted Sider is associate professor at the Department of Philosophy of
Rutgers University. He is author of the book Four-Dimensionalism: An
Ontology of Persistence and Time (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2001), which
won the APA Book Prize.
Kriszta Biber
Department Coordinator
Philosophy Department
Tel: 36-1-327-3806
Fax: 36-1-327-3072
E-mail: biberk(a)ceu.hu
P h i l o s o p h y o f S c i e n c e C o l l o q u i u m
Department of History and Philosophy of Science
Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest
Room 6.54 (6th floor) Monday 4:00 PM
Pázmány P. sétány 1/A Budapest, Hungary
Phone/Fax: (36-1) 372 2924
1 December 4:00 PM 6th floor 6.54
M i k l o s M a r t o n
Department of Philosophy, Faculty of Law, Eotvos Lorand University,
Budapest
Lehetseges-e hegelianus termeszetfilozofia?
(Can there be a Hegelian philosophy of science?)
Abstract: http://hps.elte.hu/seminar/2003/December/#1
___________________________________
The 60-minute lecture is followed by a 10-minute break. Then we hold a
30-60-minute discussion. The participants may comment on the talks and
are encouraged to initiate discussion through the Internet. The
comments should be written in the language of the presentation.
The organizer of the colloquium for the academic year 2003/2004: Miklós
Rédei
(email: redei(a)hps.elte.hu)
--
L a s z l o E. S z a b o
NIAS, Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences
phone:(31)70 512 2700 fax:(31)70 511 7162 http://www.nias.knaw.nl
on leave from
Theoretical Physics Research Group of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Department of History and Philosophy of Science
Eotvos University, Budapest
http://hps.elte.hu/leszabo
P h i l o s o p h y o f S c i e n c e C o l l o q u i u m
Department of History and Philosophy of Science
Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest
Room 6.54 (6th floor) Monday 4:00 PM
Pázmány P. sétány 1/A Budapest, Hungary
Phone/Fax: (36-1) 372 2924
Program: December
1 December 4:00 PM 6th floor 6.54
M i k l o s M a r t o n
Department of Philosophy, Faculty of Law, Eotvos Lorand University, Budapest
Lehetseges-e hegelianus termeszetfilozofia?
(Can there be a Hegelian philosophy of science?)
Abstract: http://hps.elte.hu/seminar/2003/December/#1
8 December 4:00 PM 6th floor 6.54
I s t v a n J u h a s z
Alfred Renyi Institute of Mathematics
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Erdemes-e uj halmazelmeleti axiomakat keresni?
(Does it make sense to look for new set-theoretic axioms?)
Abstract: http://hps.elte.hu/seminar/2003/December/#2
15 December 4:00 PM 6th floor 6.54
S a a d y a S t e r n b e r g
Department of Philosophy, Central European University, Budapest
on leave from
Ben Gurion University, Beersheva, Israel
The Macroevolution of Signaling
(A jelzorendszer makroevolucioja)
Abstract: http://hps.elte.hu/seminar/2003/December/#3
___________________________________
The 60-minute lecture is followed by a 10-minute break. Then we hold a
30-60-minute discussion. The participants may comment on the talks and
are encouraged to initiate discussion through the Internet. The
comments should be written in the language of the presentation.
The organizer of the colloquium for the academic year 2003/2004: Miklós Rédei
(email: redei(a)hps.elte.hu)
--
L a s z l o E. S z a b o
NIAS, Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences
phone:(31)70 512 2700 fax:(31)70 511 7162 http://www.nias.knaw.nl
on leave from
Theoretical Physics Research Group of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Department of History and Philosophy of Science
Eotvos University, Budapest
http://hps.elte.hu/leszabo
On Tue, 25 Nov 2003, [identity deleted] wrote:
> Dear Prof. Harnad,
>
> Do you have any notes that go with your Open Access PowerPoint presentation
> http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/Temp/openaccess.ppt
> - specifically in the slide 25/52 (Quo usque tandem
> patientia nostra?) where does the data come from for the 2 graphs -
> "What we stand to gain" and "Yearly, Monthly, Daily Impact Losses" come
> from and how has it been calculated?
> http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/Temp/self-archiving_files/Slide0025.gif
It is based on the 336% impact-loss estimate from the Lawrence study
(bottom-left corner). It simply cumulates that impact-loss to show how
big it really is, and how it is growing with time.
With collaborators at UQaM, Southampton, Oldenburg and Loughborough
we are now extending the Lawrence study (which was on a sample from
computer science) to the entire 10-year ISI database from 1992-2002
(about ten million articles) across all disciplines, in order (1) to
show the relative growth of open access across time, by discipline, and
(2) to estimate the relative impact advantage (in terms of citation counts)
that open access provides, across time, by discipline.
Our method is first to compute the citation count for each of the
ten million articles indexed in the ISI database (using an algorithm
that takes each indexed article's reference list and fuzzy-matches
each cited article to the article it cites, whenever that too is in
the database). Then we send a software agent to the web to check, for
each of those ten million articles (again by fuzzy-matching), whether
a full-text of it is accessible toll-free on the web.
We then compare, display and extrapolate, year by year, field by field,
journal by journal, (1) the number and (2) citation counts for articles
that are and are not openly accessible.
These will be the actual data, replacing the Lawrence estimate in that
slide. We will then convert those impact losses into research income
losses for universities and research institutions, and use those data
to show university administrators, quantitatively, why it is that they
need to extend existing "publish or perish" policy to "publish *and*
provide open access to your publications" (in order to maximize research
impact -- and income).
The hypothesis is that the only thing holding back immediate universal
open-access provision by researchers and their institutions today is
ignorance about (1) the magnitude of the needless accumulating impact
losses, and about (2) the simple, legal, and virtually cost-free way that
those losses can be immediately reversed through the dual open-access
strategy of (i) publishing in an open-access journal wherever a suitable
one exists (5%), and (ii) self-archiving all toll-access publications
otherwise (95%).
Meanwhile, keep using those powerpoints to encourage open-access provision!
Stevan Harnad
NOTE: A complete archive of the ongoing discussion of providing open
access to the peer-reviewed research literature online is available at
the American Scientist September Forum (98 & 99 & 00 & 01 & 02 & 03):
http://amsci-forum.amsci.org/archives/september98-forum.htmlhttp://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/Hypermail/Amsci/index.html
Post discussion to: september98-forum(a)amsci-forum.amsci.org
Dual Open-Access Strategy:
BOAI-2 ("gold"): Publish your article in a suitable open-access
journal whenever one exists.
BOAI-1 ("green"): Otherwise, publish your article in a suitable
toll-access journal and also self-archive it.
http://www.soros.org/openaccess/read.shtmlhttp://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/Temp/berlin.htmhttp://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/Temp/self-archiving_files/Slide0026.gifhttp://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/Temp/self-archiving_files/Slide0021.gifhttp://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/Temp/self-archiving_files/Slide0024.gifhttp://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/Temp/self-archiving_files/Slide0028.gif