SpringerLink - Publication Discrete computational Geometry is an international journal of mathematics and computer science, covering a broad range of topics in which geometry plays a fundamental role. http://link.springer.de/link/service/journals/00454/
Extractions: Publication Discrete and Computational Geometry Publisher: Springer-Verlag New York, LLC ISSN: 0179-5376 (Paper) 1432-0444 (Online) Subject: Computer Science Mathematics Issues in bold contain content you are entitled to view. Online First Volume 34 Number 3 / September 2005 Number 2 / August 2005 Number 1 / July 2005 Volume 33 Number 4 / April 2005 Number 3 / March 2005 Number 2 / February 2005 Number 1 / January 2005 ... Request a sample Volume 32 Number 4 / November 2004 Number 3 / September 2004 Number 2 / July 2004 Number 1 / May 2004 Volume 31 Number 4 / March 2004 Number 3 / February 2004 Number 2 / February 2004 Number 1 / January 2004 Volume 30 Number 4 / October 2003 Number 3 / September 2003 Number 2 / August 2003 Number 1 / May 2003 Volume 29 Number 4 / May 2003 Number 3 / February 2003 Number 2 / January 2003 Number 1 / December 2002 Volume 28 Number 4 / November 2002 Number 3 / August 2002 Number 2 / August 2002 Number 1 / July 2002 Volume 27 Number 4 / January 2002 Number 3 / January 2002 Number 2 / January 2002 Number 1 / January 2002 Volume 26 Number 4 / January 2001 Number 3 / January 2001 Number 2 / May 2001 Number 1 / January 2001 Volume 25 Number 4 / April 2001 Number 3 / January 2001 Number 2 / January 2001 Number 1 / January 2001 Volume 24 Number 4 / December 2000 Numbers 2-3 / June 2000 Number 1 / May 2000 Volume 23 Number 4 / April 2000 Number 3 / March 2000 Number 2 / February 2000 Number 1 / January 2000 Volume 22 Number 4 / December 1999 Number 3 / October 1999 Number 2 / September 1999 Number 1 / July 1999 Volume 21
International Society For Mathematical And Computational Aesthetics Detail and analysis on the development of CAD and other influences in contemporary design. A division of the International Society for Group Theory in Cognitive science. Contact information. http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~mleyton/ISMA.htm
Extractions: Society President: Michael Leyton (USA) The computational analysis of design is now a enormous discipline involving the interaction of high-level mathematics with advanced programming technologies. All design attempts to satisfy two constraints: functionality and aesthetics. Even a discipline as functionally oriented as structural engineering, in fact, involves aesthetic control over systems of non-linear equations. Aesthetics allows for (1) productive unification of perception, reasoning, and action, (2) understandability despite complexity, (3) generalization and re-usability, (4) axiomatic economy and principled prediction. Aesthetics is a major force in each of the following areas: Computer-Aided Design and Manufacturing, Robot Motion Design: There has been considerable convergence in mathematics across the different types of CAD (e.g., in architecture and mechanical design), as well as manufacturing by shape-sculpting technology, and robot motion design. We note that Frank Gehry's Guggenheim museum at Bilbao was possible because James Glymph imported into architecture a major program designed by the French for aerospace engineering. The reason for the converging unity is that each of the several disciplines involves analysis of spatial systems of movement, control, and shape deformation - whose natural description is Lie algebras, tensor geometry with exterior differential calculus, and algebraic geometry.
Chemistry@SUNY-ESF: Faculty Profile Dr. Dibble Laser spectroscopy and computational chemistry for investigations of atmospheric chemistry site by Ted Dibble. http://web.syr.edu/~tsdibble/dibble.html
Extractions: Research People Current Projects ... Links to other Sites The Dibble group uses lasers and high-end computers as tools to address questions such as: what are the degradation pathways of organic compounds in the polluted atmosphere? To what extent do particular compounds contribute to the formation of ozone, other air toxics, and particulates? (Answers to these questions are missing for most of the key compounds larger than butane!) The experimental work in Dr. Dibble's laboratory employs pulsed, tunable dye lasers to probe for stable and transient species. Both reaction kinetics and the spectroscopy of new species can be studied using two highly sensitive techniques: laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) and (soon) cavity ringdown spectroscopy . The computational work uses commercially available quantum chemistry programs to carry out ab initio and density functional calculations. These methods are used to map out thermochemical kinetics and to explore and interpret the spectroscopy of as-yet uncharacterized species. See the article about our computational work in Access , the magazine of the National Compuational Science Alliance.
SIAM Activity Group On Imaging Science Offers discussion with scientists and engineers of mathematical and computational aspects of imaging, through the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, based in Philadelphia, PA. http://www.siam.org/siags/siagis.htm
Simulation Science At ORNL Simulation science programs at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Recent projects include Environmental Systems, Engineering Applications, Physical and Chemical sciences, Experimental Validation, computational Biology and Functional Genomics, and Nanotechnology and Neutron sciences. http://www.csm.ornl.gov/newSS.html
Materials Science Modeling Project at NIST, Applied and computational Mathematics Division, US gov. institute. http://math.nist.gov/mcsd/Reports/95/yearly/node8.html
Computer Physics Communications Program Library Contains over 1800 refereed programs in computational physics and physical chemistry which are described in the journal Computer Physics Communications published by Elsevier science. http://cpc.cs.qub.ac.uk/
CUC3 Home Page Condensed matter science, surface science and statistical mechanics of complex and disordered systems. http://www-theor.ch.cam.ac.uk/
Extractions: The Cambridge University Centre for Computational Chemistry groups theoretically-minded members of the Cambridge Department of Chemistry in premises on the recently refurbished third floor of the Department. Around 50 members, comprising staff, research fellows, postdoctoral associates, postgraduate students, and visiting scientists from all over the world, work on many aspects of theoretical and computational chemistry. ab initio MD, as well as global optimization algorithms for the exploration of multi-dimensional energy surfaces.
Pagina Nueva 1 Held in Alicante, Spain. http://www.ua.es/cmmse2002/
AIChE Computational Molecular Science And Engineering Forum (CoMSEF) A unit of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. Includes a listing of academic researchers and information on conferences sponsored or cosponsored by the forum. http://www.ecs.umass.edu/che/am3/AIChE.html
Extractions: Prepare now for the 2005 AIChE Annual Meeting in Cincinnati! Scope : CoMSEF is a forum for the combined community of engineers and scientists who are developing and applying molecularly based theories, modeling, and simulation. Its scope of technical interests includes chemical, biological, and materials processes and products. A key feature is joining molecularly based modeling with the other computational methodologies that are used in the chemical engineering sciences for research, development, operations, and education. Objectives: Provide a forum for communication and networking among those with an interest in the computational molecular sciences and engineering. Coordinate, sponsor, co-sponsor, and advertise relevant programming, including cross-cutting and special-initiative technical sessions and conferences. Promote interchange of ideas, concepts, know-how, and experiences in the computational molecular sciences and engineering, including their connections with experiment. Encourage educators at all levels, particularly in chemical engineering, to integrate concepts of computational molecular sciences and engineering.
TOCL Top Page This addition to ACM's Transactions Series is devoted to research concerned with all uses of logic in computer science. http://www.acm.org/pubs/tocl/
CITE Elsevier Science Online access to Elsevier science publications in computational intelligence, and related resources. http://www.elsevier.com/cite
Extractions: Home Site map Regional Sites Advanced Product Search ... Products Browse by subject All subjects Physical sciences Health sciences Social sciences ... Life sciences Browse by product type Books Journals Electronic products Bibliographic databases ... Advanced product search Catalogs Books price list Subscription price list New and forthcoming publications Product support Help and FAQ About Elsevier Select your view
Unbenanntes Dokument Discussion of life science research relating to genomics data, medical or phamacological observations, and computational simulations. Program of meeting held for two days in Switzerland. http://www.bc2.ch/
MS In Bioinformatics And Computational Biology, USF - Start Interdisciplinary program part of the College of Medicine. In cooperation with the math, biomedical engineering, and computer science departments. http://hsc.usf.edu/medicine/biochemistry/msbioinfocompbiol.html
Extractions: Medicine ... Search HSC Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Bioinformatics and Computational Biology Print Friendly USF Home HSC Home College of Medicine ... Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Master's of Science in Bioinformatics and Computational Biology The Masters Program in "Bioinformatics and Computational Biology" represents a multi-college partnership and a truly interdisciplinary collaboration. Participating departments include the Departments of in the College of Medicine, Mathematics in the College of Arts and Sciences, Computer Sciences and Engineering and the Division of Biomedical Engineering in the College of Engineering, in the College of Public Health and in the College of Business Administration. The Masters Program in Bioinformatics and Computational Biology was initiated and will be administered by the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology in the College of Medicine. The program development has been supported by a grant from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. The goal of the Masters Program in Bioinformatics and Computational Biology is to provide students enrolled in the program with high quality training and education that will prepare them for careers in science, industry, health care and education. The curriculum has been designed accordingly and provides the theoretical background, the practical training and, with the internships, the "real life" experience, which will equip students with the essential tools for a successful career in the field of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology.
Jon Oberlander University of Edinburgh computational linguistics, cognitive science, discourse generation. http://www.cogsci.ed.ac.uk/~jon/
Extractions: My School of Informatics homepage is gradually moving to http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/jon My main interests lie in the intersection of computational linguistics and cognitive science. The primary aim is to develop cognitively-motivated computational and formal models of the ways in which differing people produce fluent discourse. Such models underpin the proper design of systems presenting data and teledata to users, tailoring it to their individual needs and interests. There are three main strands to my current research: discourse generation, individual differences, and multimodality.
Extractions: Work in theoretical computer science seeks to uncover and to explain the structures underlying computational processes. Theoretical work can inspire new approaches to the design of hardware and software, or it can try to model the difficulties encountered in existing designs in an attempt to understand them. The gap between theory and practice is narrowed when theoreticians apply their insights to real-world problems, or when they work with practitioners on experimental and/or practical projects; these activities are encouraged at Waterloo. Topics in theoretical computer science being studied at Waterloo within the Algorithms and Complexity group (formerly the Theory group) can be loosely categorized into two major areas: The design and analysis of algorithms on general-purpose models of computation draws inspiration from basic building-block problems (data structures, graph theory and graph-theoretic algorithms), problems in other areas of computer science (theory of programming languages, program methodology, theory of databases, learning theory, VLSI theory), and from computational problems arising in other disciplines (computational biology, algorithmic number theory, computational geometry). Defining special models of computation and using mathematical tools to demonstrate the consequences of those definitions (as is done in formal languages, theory of automata, structural and computational complexity, parameterized complexity, theory of asynchronous circuits and hardware testing, parallel computation, Kolmogorov complexity) can lead to new insights into particular problems, or into the structure of a whole class of problems.
WSEAS Conferences Promotes the development of new mathematical methods and computational techniques as well as their applications in science and engineering. http://www.worldses.org/announcement.htm
Gene Boggess Mississippi State University Cognitive science, neural networks, computational linguistics, genetic algorithms. http://www.cs.msstate.edu/~gboggess
Extractions: Gene Boggess Associate Professor of Computer Science Dr. Gene Boggess Computer Science Department Mississippi State University P. O. Box 9637 Mississippi State, MS 39762 Phone: (662) 325-2079 Main office phone: (662) 325-2758 Fax: (662) 325-8997 email: gboggess@cse.msstate.edu web site: www.cse.msstate.edu/~gboggess Identification of roads in satellite imagery using artificial neural networks: A contextual approach (PostScript) The Application of Genetic Algorithms to the Scheduling of Engineering Units (MS Word) Evolving Engineering Mission Schedules: A Machine-Learning Approach to Scheduling (Naecon '97 paper (PostScript)) Scheduling Engineering Missions: A Genetic Algorithm Approach (AI Exchange [1996] paper (PostScript)) ... Using a Neural Network for Syntactic Classification of Words in Technical Text (ACM-SE '93) (PostScript) Brief description of my research interests Artificial Intelligence Web Resources: Courses in Artificial Intelligence and Related Areas Artificial Intelligence Related Links Around the World Artificial Intelligence at the University of Washington Artificial Neural Networks Web Resources: NevProp (Backprop Simulator) FTP Site UIUC AI WWW Library Centre for Neural Systems IEEE Neural Network Council ... Neural Nets FAQ, HTML version [5/98] (or see below for local copy)
CVC Home Page Includes faculty from Computer science, Electrical Engineering, Psychology, Neuroscience and the Yale Medical School. http://cvc.yale.edu/