The booklet will be revised after the tutorial.
For post-tutorial information
please see the
"AFTER TUTORIAL" web site.
BOOKLET FOR TUTORIAL T9
REPRESENTATION AND LEARNING IN ROBOTS AND ANIMALS
Organised by
The EU FP6 CoSy Project
Saturday 30th July and Sunday 31st July, 2005
PDF files were made available for the printed tutorial booklet on 22nd
June. They are in the booklet given to participants at the tutorial,
which is now out of date!
Some of the files below were updated after the booklet was
printed. Further changes will be made after the tutorial, and will be
announced in the NEWS section below, and on the
"After Tutorial"
web page.
NOTE: Some of the files are in portrait format, some in landscape format
(derived from slide presentations, presented here 4 slides to a page).
A composite PDF file is referenced at the end.
NEWS
7 Sep 2005
Composite booklet revised to include the new submissions.
Table of contents updated.
24 Aug 2005
Ales Leonardis' tutorial presentation
now online:
"Problems of Representation and
Learning in Machine Vision." (8464879 Bytes)
8 Aug 2005
Jackie Chappell's tutorial presentation is now
available:
How do animals gather useful information about their environment and
act on it?
(Not yet included in large booklet).
NOTE (28 Jul 2005):
The PDF files were updated to include Jackie Chappell's abstract.
NOTE (26 Jul 2005):
The PDF version of
the first section of the booklet was
modified to reflect the change in the programme: Day 1 Session 4 now
includes two short presentations, one by Jackie Chappell and one by Ales
Leonardis, because Leslie Kaelbling cannot attend. The PDF version of
the whole (composite) booklet,
below,
has also been rebuilt.
It is hoped that additional comments, criticisms, suggestions relating
to topics of the tutorial, including criticisms or discussions of these
documents, will be added to this web site later. Anyone who would like
to submit comments to be added to this site should write to A.Sloman AT
cs.bham.ac.uk. For further details see the
"After Tutorial"
web page.
Booklet Contents (23 Jun 2005)
booklet-cover.pdf
Portrait file - 1 page - 1kbyte
-
ijcai-booklet.pdf
Portrait file - 35 pages - 166kbytes
includes
Table of Contents,
speaker bios and abstracts, and
Notes on AI in a New Millenium: Obstacles and Opportunities
(section 4)
By Aaron Sloman
-
tutorial-notes-1-a-cohen.pdf
Portrait file - 1 page - 1kbyte (Cohen cover page)
-
tutorial-notes-1-cohen.pdf
landscape 4-up slides - 13 pages - 4.7MB
Toward a Cognitive Architecture:
Chunking and Memory
By Paul Cohen
-
tutorial-notes-2-a-forsyth.pdf
Portrait file - 1 page - 1kbyte (Forsyth cover page)
-
tutorial-notes-2-forsyth.pdf
26 pages - WARNING 41.3Mb
Mostly landscape. Pages 22-26 portrait format
Some of the text is in yellow and will not show up when printed
in grayscale.
(landscape pages may need to be shrunk a bit)
Correspondence: Words and Pictures
By David Forsyth
-
tutorial-notes-3-dearden.pdf
portrait - 21 pages - 397kbytes
Planning and Learning in Hybrid Discrete-Continuous
Models
By Richard Dearden
-
tutorial-notes-4-a-steedman.pdf
Portrait file - 1 page - 1kbyte (Steedman cover page)
Plans and the
Computational Structure of Language
By Mark Steedman
-
tutorial-notes-4-steedman.pdf
landscape 4-up slides - 12 pages - 123kbytes
(will need to be shrunk a bit to leave margins)
-
tutorial-notes-chappell-2up.pdf
landscape 2-up slides - 10 pages - 1345535 bytes
How do animals gather useful information about their environment and
act on it?
By Jackie Chappell
-
tutorial-notes-leonardis.pdf
landscape 4-up slides - 21 pages - 8.4Mbytes
Problems of Representation and Learning in Machine Vision.
Bytes)
By Ales Leonardis
Composite PDF file
The whole collection (minus the booklet cover page) is
also available as a single PDF file, created
using pdftk, yet another
example of an excellent free, open source, tool for linux-users. The
(very large) composite file is
here (about 56 MBytes).
Note that it is a mixture of sections in portrait mode and sections in
landscape mode. Printers appear to cope with this by rotating the
landscape pages, though the results of two-sided printing may or may not
please you.
Last updated: 7 Sep 2005
Maintained by
Aaron Sloman
School of Computer Science,
The University of
Birmingham, UK