Conference Committees
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Activity Training Introduction
Contents Activity Training Introduction ............................................................................................................................................. 40 First Cycle Studies; First-and-Second Cycle Studies; Second Cycle Studies; Own Degrees ......................................................................................... 43 General Data ...................................................................................................................................... 43 Faculty of Economics and Business Studies ...................................................................... 44 Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences ............................................................ 47 Faculty of Law and Political Science ...................................................................................... 49 Faculty of Humanities and Language and Literature ....................................................... 51 Faculty of Computer Science and Multimedia ................................................................... 53 Faculty of Information and Communications Sciences .................................................. 56 Third Cycle Studies ............................................................................................................................. 58 Doctoral Programme ...................................................................................................................... 58 Postgraduate Education ................................................................................................................... -
Dorchester Pope Family
A HISTORY OF THE Dorchester Pope Family. 1634-1888. WITH SKETCHES OF OTHER POPES IN ENGLAND AND AMERICA, AND NOTES UPON SEVERAL INTERMARRYING FAMILIES, 0 CHARLES HENRY POPE, MllMBIUl N. E. HISTOalC GENIIALOGlCAl. SOCIETY. BOSTON~ MASS.: PUBLISHED BY THE AUTHOR, AT 79 FRANKLIN ST. 1888 PRESS OF L. BARTA & Co., BOSTON. BOSTON, MA88,,.... (~£P."/.,.. .w.;,.!' .. 190 L.. - f!cynduLdc ;-~,,__ a.ut ,,,,-Mrs. 0 ~. I - j)tt'"rrz-J (i'VU ;-k.Lf!· le a, ~ u1--(_,fl.,C./ cU!.,t,, u,_a,1,,~{a"-~ t L, Lt j-/ (y ~'--? L--y- a~ c/4-.t 7l~ ~~ -zup /r,//~//TJJUJ4y. a.&~ ,,l E kr1J-&1 1}U, ~L-U~ l 6-vl- ~-u _ r <,~ ?:~~L ~ I ~-{lu-,1 7~ _..l~ i allll :i1tft r~,~UL,vtA-, %tt. cz· -t~I;"'~::- /, ~ • I / CJf:z,-61 M, ~u_, PREFACE. IT was predicted of the Great Philanthropist, "He shall tum the hearts of the fathers to the children, and the hearts of children to their fathers." The writer seeks to contribute something toward the development of such mutual afiection between the members of the Pope Family. He has found his own heart tenderly drawn toward all whose names he has registered and whose biographies he has at tempted to write. The dead are his own, whose graves he has sought to strew with the tributes of love ; the living are his own, every one of whose careers he now watches with strong interest. He has given a large part of bis recreation hours and vacation time for eight years to the gathering of materials for the work ; written hundreds of letters ; examined a great many deeds and wills, town journals, church registers, and family records ; visited numerous persons and places, and pored over a large number of histories of towns and families ; and has gathered here the items and entries thus discovered. -
The Commencement of Michigan State University
,TUESDAY, DECEMBER EIGHTH NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIFTY-NINE The Fall Commencement of Michigan State University UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM EAST LANSING The -Fall Commencement of Michigan State University ACADEMIC COSTUME The pageantry and color at commencement of the institution conferring the degree. If the exercises reveal a record of academic achievement institution has more than one color, the chevron is of the various individuals taking part in the exer used to introduce the second color. Colored velvet cises. The following brief description is given that or velveteen binds the hoods and indicates the the audience might more readily interpret such department or faculty to which the degree pertains. achievement. Historical associations of color have been In 1894, the Intercollegiate Commission, a continued to signify the various faculties. Art and group of leading American educators met at letters cali be recognized by the white, taken from Columbia University to draft a code which would the traditional white fur trimming of the Oxford serve to regulate the design of gowns and hoods and Cambridge Bachelor of Arts hoods. Red, long indicating the various degrees as well as the colors traditional of the church, indicates theology. The to indicate the various faculties. This code has been royal purple of the King's court signifies law. The adopted by most of the colleges and universities green of medicinal herbs immediately identifies a in America and its use has made identification of medical degree. Philosophy is signified by the color scholastic honors an immediate activity. of wisdom and truth, blue. Because through re Three types of gowns are indicated by the search untold wealth has been released to the world, code. -
Max Pellert: CV
Updated: March 28, 2018 PDF version of online CV Max Pellert, M.Sc. Schönbrunner Schlossstraße 16/12 · 1120 Wien · Austria, Europe Q [email protected] Ó +43 680 40 31 255 mpellert.at Education Medical University of Vienna, cand. PhD Present PhD Program Medical Informatics, Biostatistics & Complex Systems Complexity Science Hub Vienna Working Title: Digital traces of individual emotional behaviour (PhD Thesis, supervised by Dr. David Garcia, Complexity Science Hub Vienna and Medical University of Vienna) University of Vienna, M.Sc. (with distinction) 11/2017 Middle European interdisciplinary master programme in Cognitive Science (MEi:CogSci) Collective Dynamics of Multi-Agent Networks: Simulation Studies in Probabilistic Reasoning (Master Thesis, supervised by Univ.-Lektor Dipl.-Ing. Dr. Paolo Petta, OFAI) University of Vienna, Bakk. rer. soc. oek. 10/2014 Bachelor programme in Economics Some Remarks on the Genesis of the Neoclassical Paradigm In Economics (Bachelor Thesis I, supervised by ao. Univ.-Prof. Mag. Dr. Reinhard Pirker, Vienna University of Economics and Business) Popper and McCloskey. Logic or Rhetoric of Science? (Bachelor Thesis II, supervised by ao. Univ.-Prof. Mag. Dr. Karl Milford, University of Vienna) Additional Academic Qualifications ERASMUS mobility semester at the University of Ljubljana, Slovenia Sep 2016 – Feb 2017 Collaboration with Borut Trpin on simulations in formal epistemology Master study in History and Philosophy of Science (HPS), University of Vienna 2014 – 2015 Bachelor study in Psychology, University -
26Th International Symposium on Temporal Representation and Reasoning
26th International Symposium on Temporal Representation and Reasoning TIME 2019, October 16–19, 2019, Málaga, Spain Edited by Johann Gamper Sophie Pinchinat Guido Sciavicco L I P I c s – Vo l . 147 – TIME 2019 w w w . d a g s t u h l . d e / l i p i c s Editors Johann Gamper Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, Italy [email protected] Sophie Pinchinat University of Rennes 1, France [email protected] Guido Sciavicco University of Ferrara, Italy [email protected] ACM Classification 2012 Theory of computation → Logic; Information systems → Temporal data; Computing methodologies → Knowledge representation and reasoning ISBN 978-3-95977-127-6 Published online and open access by Schloss Dagstuhl – Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik GmbH, Dagstuhl Publishing, Saarbrücken/Wadern, Germany. Online available at https://www.dagstuhl.de/dagpub/978-3-95977-127-6. Publication date October, 2019 Bibliographic information published by the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliografie; detailed bibliographic data are available in the Internet at https://portal.dnb.de. License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license (CC-BY 3.0): https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode. In brief, this license authorizes each and everybody to share (to copy, distribute and transmit) the work under the following conditions, without impairing or restricting the authors’ moral rights: Attribution: The work must be attributed to its authors. The copyright is retained by the corresponding authors. Digital Object Identifier: 10.4230/LIPIcs.TIME.2019.0 ISBN 978-3-95977-127-6 ISSN 1868-8969 https://www.dagstuhl.de/lipics 0:iii LIPIcs – Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics LIPIcs is a series of high-quality conference proceedings across all fields in informatics. -
1929-1930 Catalog College of the Holy Cross
College of the Holy Cross CrossWorks Course Catalogs College Archives 7-1-1930 1929-1930 Catalog College of the Holy Cross Follow this and additional works at: http://crossworks.holycross.edu/course_catalog Part of the Higher Education Commons Recommended Citation College of the Holy Cross, "1929-1930 Catalog" (1930). Course Catalogs. 49. http://crossworks.holycross.edu/course_catalog/49 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the College Archives at CrossWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Course Catalogs by an authorized administrator of CrossWorks. Extract from Speech of Cardinal Gibbons at the Corn- mencement Exercises, June 18, 1907. "Christian schools, like Holy Cross College, are. indispensable far the moral and mental development of the rising generation." "The defences of our Commonwealth are not material, but spiritual. Her fortifications, her castles, are her insti- tutions of learning. Those who are admitted to the college campus tread the ramparts of the State. The classic halls are the armories from which are furnished forth the knights in armor to defend and support our liberty.. For such high purposes has Holy Cross been called int' eing. A firm foundation of the Commonwealth. A '•nder of right- eousness. A teacher of holy men. Let I ,....;;-rets continue to rise, shuwing forth the way, the truth, and the light. "In thougnts sublime that pierce the night like stars, An t € their mild persistence urge man's arch To ea, tsues.'l "(Extract from the ad r of His Excellency, the Hon. Calvin Coolidge, delivered at the Comm-..u....ment exercises, Holy Cross College, June 25, 1919.) • BULLETIN HOLY CROSS COLLEGE 'EIGHTY-SEVENTH YEAR Catalogue Number WORCESTER, MASS. -
The Twenty-Ninth International Florida Artificial Intelligence Research Society Conference Program of Events
The Twenty-Ninth International Florida Artificial Intelligence Research Society Conference Program of Events Proceedings available online at: http://www.aaai.org/Press/Proceedings/flairs16.php and http://aaai.org/Library/FLAIRS/flairs16contents.php May 16-18, 2016 Hilton Key Largo Resort Key Largo, Florida, USA 1 The 29th International Florida Artificial Intelligence Research Society Conference Welcome from the Conference Chairs Welcome to the 29th International FLAIRS conference and to wonderful Key Largo, Florida! FLAIRS-29 continues the tradition of previous FLAIRS conferences with a high quality program. The call for papers attracted 195 paper submissions (44 to the general conference and 151 to the special tracks), and 36 poster abstracts. Special tracks are a vital part of the FLAIRS conferences, with 16 being held at FLAIRS-29. All papers were reviewed by at least three reviewers, and were coordinated by the program committees of the general conference and the special tracks. The accepted submissions include 102 full papers (25 from the general conference and 77 from the special tracks), 20 short papers presented as posters (5 from the general conference and 15 from the special tracks), and 24 poster abstracts. In addition to the diverse assortment of papers, one of the highlights of the program are the invited speakers. Our General Conference Invited Keynote Speakers are Sumi Helal (University of Florida, USA), Matthew Johnson (Florida Institute for Human & Machine Cognition, USA), and Kristin Tolle (Microsoft Research Outreach, USA). In addition, our Special Track Invited Speakers are Diana Inkpen (University of Ottawa, Canada), Christophe Gonzales (University Paris 6, France), and Xingquan Zhu (Florida Atlantic University, USA). -
ENG Informatico Light
Scientific committe : Università degli Studi di Bergamo Emanuela Casti (Cartographic Laboratory Diathesis – Comune di Bergamo University of Bergamo), Greg Elmes (West Virginia State GIS Technical Center – West Virginia University, Morgantown), Horst Kremers (CODATA-Germany, Berlin), Jacques Lévy (Chôros Laboratory – EPFL, Lausanne), Stéphane Roche (CRG – Laval University, Québec) Conference secretariat: Federica Burini ([email protected]) Alessandra Ghisalberti ([email protected]) Annarita Lamberti ([email protected]) Information: Tel. +39 035 2052415 Web sites: www.unibg.it/geografia www.comune.bergamo.it Sponsoring institutions: International conference International Cartographic Association CARTOGRAPHICCARTOGRAPHIC Associazioni Scientifiche per le Informazioni Territoriali e Ambientali CHALLENGESCHALLENGES Società Geografia Italiana movement, participation, risk Associazione Geografi Italiani Supporting institutions: Università degli Studi di Bergamo rd th Bergamo April 23 -24 2009 Participation as auditors is admitted, upon free registration Thursday, April 23 PROGRAMME Friday, April 24 First session Third session CARTOGRAPHIC CHALLENGES PARALLEL WORKSHOPS 9.00 a.m. Conference opening and welcome speech 9.00 a.m. – 1.00 p.m Promoter JACQUES LÉVY ROBERTO BRUNI, Mayor of Bergamo 11.00 – 11.15 a.m. Break BRUNO CARTOSIO, Dean of the Facolty of Foreign Languages, University of Bergamo 1. MOVEMENT CARTOGRAPHY coordinator: ALESSANDRA GHISALBERTI GEORG GARTNER, Vice-President of the International Cartographic Association Interventions: ALBERTA BIANCHIN, University IUAV of Venice GIANCARLO MACCHI, University of Siena FRANCO SALVATORI, President of the Italian Geographical Society LUISA CARBONE, Italian Geographical Society EDOARDO BORIA, University of Rome “La Sapienza” ALBERTO DI BLASI, President of the Association of Italian Geographers ALESSANDRA GHISALBERTI, University of Bergamo ANDREA MASTURZO, Military Geographical Institute, Florence 9.30 – 11.30 a.m. -
Non Participation in an « Initiatives D’Excellence » Project
APPEL A PROJETS LABEX/ Acronyme du projet / CALL FOR PROPOSALS Acronym 2010 DOCUMENT SCIENTIFIQUE B / SCIENTIFIC SUBMISSION FORM B Acronyme du projet/ Acronym of the SYMMECOM project Titre du projet en Systèmes moléculaires et matériaux sous français environnements complexes Molecular systems and materials under complex Project title in English environments Nom / Name : LEROUX Hugues Coordinateur du Etablissement / Institution : PRES ULNF projet/Coordinator of Laboratoire / Laboratory : Unité matériaux et transformations the project Numéro d’unité/Unit number : UMR 8207 11.47 M€ Aide demandée/ Requested funding X Santé, bien-être, alimentation et biotechnologies / Health, well- being, nutrition and biotechnologies X Urgence environnementale et écotechnologies / Environnemental Champs disciplinaires urgency, ecotechnologies (SNRI) / Disciplinary □ Information, communication et nanotechnologies / Information, field communication and nantechnologies □ Sciences humaines et sociales / Social sciences X Autre champ disciplinaire / Other disciplinary scope Energie, environnement, santé, géoscience, matériaux sous pression, matériaux architecturés, systèmes Domaines scientifiques/ moléculaires, polymères, sécurité-feu, transition de scientific areas phase, combustible nucléaire, électrolyse à haute température, réactivité-sélectivité Participation à un ou plusieurs projet(s) « Initiatives d’excellence » (IDEX) / X oui □ non Participation in an « Initiatives d’excellence » project 1/106 APPEL A PROJETS LABEX/ Acronyme du projet / CALL FOR PROPOSALS -
The Agentlink III Technical Forums: Introduction to the Special Issue
The AgentLink III Technical Forums: Introduction to the Special Issue PAOLO PETTA1, ANDREA OMICINI2, TERRY PAYNE3 and PETER McBURNEY4 1 Austrian Research Institute for Artificial Intelligence, Vienna, Austria, EU, and Medical University of Vienna, Austria, EU 2 DEIS, Alma Mater Studiorum—Universita` di Bologna, Cesena, Italy, EU 3 School of Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK, EU 4 Department of Computer Science, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK, EU This paper introduces the Special Issue of ACM Transactions on Autonomous and Adaptive Systems devoted to research papers arising from the three Technical Forum Group meetings held in 2004 and 2005 that were organised and sponsored by the European FP6 Coordination Action AgentLink III. Categories and Subject Descriptors: Computing Methodologies [Artificial Intelligence]: Distributed Artificial Intelligence General Terms: Design, Documentation, Economics, Experimentation, Languages, Standardiza- tion, Theory, Veri¯cation Additional Key Words and Phrases: AgentLink III, Autonomous Agents, Multi-Agent Systems, Agent-oriented Software Engineering, Technical Forums, European Research 1. INTRODUCTION This special issue of ACM Transactions on Autonomous and Adaptive Systems is devoted to research papers arising from the AgentLink III Agent Technical Forums. AgentLink III (2004-2005) was a European Union (EU)-sponsored project to support research and development in agent-based technologies and to strengthen Europe’s efforts in this do- main. It was funded under the Information Society Technologies (IST) Activity Area of the Sixth Framework Programme (FP6), through the Semantic-based Knowledge Systems area (Project number: IST-FP6-002006CA). AgentLink III could build on the success of its predecessors: the original AgentLink (1998-2001) project coordinated by Mike Wooldridge (then at Queen Mary & Westfield College, London), one of the “preparatory, accompanying and support measures” funded Author’s address: P. -
Agent-Directed Simulation Symposium (ADSS'08) Scientific Committee
Agent-directed Simulation Symposium (ADSS’08) Scientific Committee Executive Committee • Dr. Tuncer Ören, General Chair • Dr. Levent Yilmaz, Co-chair • Dr. Maarten Sierhuis, Co-chair • Dr. Gregory R. Madey, Co-chair • Dr. Andreas Tolk, Publicity Chair International Program Committee • Agostino Bruzzone, University of Genoa, Italy • Alessandro Acquisti, Carnegie Mellon University, USA • Alessondro Ricci, University of Bologna, Italy • Andras Jávor, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary • Bernard Espinasse, Université d'Aix-Marseille, France • C. Anthony Hunt, UCSF, USA • Charles Santoni, LSIS, France • Christine Lisetti, Institut Eurecom, France • Claudia Frydman, LSIS, France • Desmond Saunders-Newton, USC and DARPA-IAO, USA • Ernest Page, The MITRE Corporation, USA • Fernando Barros, University of Coimbra, Portugal • Gabriel Wainer, Carleton University, Canada • Glen Ropella, UCSF, USA • Henry Hexmoor, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, USA • Hessam Sarjoughian, Arizona State University, USA • Jeffrey Schamburg, U.S. Army TRAC - Monterey, USA • Jeffrey Smith, Auburn University, USA • John Hiles, MOVES Institute, USA • Julie Dugdale, Laboratoire d'Informatique de Grenoble, France • Kathleen Carley, Carnegie Mellon University, USA • Marco Janssen, Arizona State University, USA • Mehdi Dastani, University of Utrecht, Netherlands • Michael Weiss, Carleton University, Canada • Norbert Giambiasi, LSIS, France • Paolo Petta, Centre for Brain Research, Medical University of Vienna, Austria • Paul Davis, RAND and RAND Graduate School, USA • Paul Fishwick, University of Florida, USA • Rafael Bordini. Durham University, UK • Rosario Conte, National Research Council, Italy • Sule Yildirim, Hedmark University College, Norway • Sunwoo Park, UCSF, USA • Virginia Dignum, University of Utrecht, Netherlands • Xiaolin Hu, Georgia State University, USA . -
ICNS 2016 Committee Page
ICNS 2016 Committee ICNS Advisory Committee Pedro Andrés Aranda Gutiérrez, Telefónica I+D - Madrid, Spain Carlos Becker Westphall, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil Eugen Borcoci, University 'Politehnica' Bucharest, Romania Jaime Lloret Mauri, Polytechnic University of Valencia, Spain Sathiamoorthy Manoharan, University of Auckland, New Zealand Simone Silvestri, Missouri University of Science and Technology, USA Yoshiaki Taniguchi, Kindai University, Japan Go Hasegawa, Osaka University, Japan Abdulrahman Yarali, Murray State University, USA Emmanuel Bertin, Orange Labs, France Steffen Fries, Siemens, Germany Rui L.A. Aguiar, University of Aveiro, Portugal Iain Murray, Curtin University of Technology, Australia Khondkar Islam, George Mason University - Fairfax, USA ICNS Industry/Research Relation Chairs Eunsoo Shim, Samsung Electronics, Korea Tao Zheng, Orange Labs Beijing, China Bruno Chatras, Orange Labs, France Jun Kyun Choi, KAIST, Korea Michael Galetzka, Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated Circuits - Dresden, Germany Juraj Giertl, T-Systems, Slovakia Sinan Hanay, NICT, Japan ICNS 2016 Technical Program Committee Johan Åkerberg, ABB AB - Corporate Research - Västerås, Sweden Ryma Abassi, Higher School of Communication of Tunis /Sup'Com, Tunisia Nalin Abeysekera, University of Colombo, Sri Lanka Ferran Adelantado i Freixer, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Spain Hossam Afifi, Télécom SudParis | Institut Mines Télécom, France Prathima Agrawal, Auburn University, USA Javier M. Aguiar Pérez, Universidad de Valladolid, Spain