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- From: David.Beasley@cs.cf.ac.uk (David Beasley)
- Newsgroups: comp.ai.genetic,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: FAQ: comp.ai.genetic part 4/6 (A Guide to Frequently Asked Questions)
- Supersedes: <part4_969480833@cs.cf.ac.uk>
- Followup-To: comp.ai.genetic
- Date: 11 Apr 2001 20:23:45 GMT
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- Summary: This is part 4 of a <trilogy> entitled "The Hitch-Hiker's Guide
- to Evolutionary Computation". A periodically published list of Frequently
- Asked Questions (and their answers) about Evolutionary Algorithms,
- Life and Everything. It should be read by anyone who whishes to post
- to the comp.ai.genetic newsgroup, preferably *before* posting.
- Originator: scmdb@thrall.cs.cf.ac.uk
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu comp.ai.genetic:21406 comp.answers:44995 news.answers:205231
-
- Archive-name: ai-faq/genetic/part4
- Last-Modified: 4/12/01
- Issue: 9.1
-
- Important note: Do NOT send email to the cs.cf.ac.uk address above: it will
- be ignored. Corrections and other correspondence should be sent to
- david.beasley@iee.org
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS OF PART 4
- Q10: What introductory material on EAs is there?
- Q10.1: Suitable background reading for beginners?
- Q10.2: Textbooks on EC?
- Q10.3: The Classics?
- Q10.4: Introductory Journal Articles?
- Q10.5: Introductory Technical Reports?
- Q10.6: Not-quite-so-introductory Literature?
- Q10.7: Biological Background Readings?
- Q10.8: On-line bibliography collections?
- Q10.9: Videos?
- Q10.10: CD-ROMs?
- Q10.11: How do I get a copy of a dissertation?
-
- Q11: What EC related journals and magazines are there?
-
- Q12: What are the important conferences/proceedings on EC?
-
- Q13: What Evolutionary Computation Associations exist?
-
- Q14: What Technical Reports are available?
-
- Q15: What information is available over the net?
- Q15.1: What digests are there?
- Q15.2: What mailing lists are there?
- Q15.3: What online information repositories are there?
- Q15.4: What relevant newsgroups and FAQs are there?
- Q15.5: What about all these Internet Services?
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q10: What introductory material on EAs is there?
-
- There are many sources of introductory material on evolutionary
- algorithms: background books (see Q10.1), textbooks (see Q10.2),
- classical works (see Q10.3), journal articles (see Q10.4), technical
- reports (see Q10.5), more advanced literature (see Q10.6), biological
- background reading (see Q10.7), bibliography collections (see Q10.8),
- videos (see Q10.9) and CD-ROMs (Q10.10). Information on how to get
- dissertations is also given below (see Q10.11).
-
- Conference proceedings (see Q12) are also a good source of up-to-date
- (and sometimes introductory) material.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q10.1: Suitable background reading for beginners?
-
- These books give a "flavor" of what the subject is about.
-
- Dawkins, R. (1976, 1989 2nd ed) "The Selfish Gene", Oxford: Oxford
- University Press. [The 2nd edition includes two new chapters]
-
- Dawkins, R. (1982) "The Extended Phenotype: The Gene as a Unit of
- Selection", Oxford: Oxford University Press.
-
- Dawkins, R. (1986) "The Blind Watchmaker", New York: W.W. Norton.
-
- Fogel, D. (1998) "Evolutionary Computation: The Fossil Record," IEEE
- Press. Chronicles the history of simulated evolution from the early
- 1950s. http://www.natural-selection.com/people/dbf.html
-
- Gonick, L. (1983) "The Cartoon Guide to Computer Science", New York:
- Barnes & Noble. [eds note: features an interesting chapter on Charles
- Babbage in conjunction with "horse racing forecasting", if you want
- to use EAs to fullfill this task, better read this section first]
- Gonick, L. (1983) "The Cartoon Guide to Genetics", New York: Barnes &
- Noble.
-
- Regis, E. (1987) "Who got Einstein's Office? Eccentricity and Genius
- at the Institute for Advanced Study", Reading, MA: Addison Wesley
- [eds note: chapters 5, 10 and 12]
-
- Levy, S. (1992) "Artificial Life: The Quest for a new Creation", New
- York, NY: Pantheon. [LEVY92]: [eds note: read this and you will have
- the urge to work in this field]
-
- Sigmund, K. (1993) "Games of Life: Explorations in Ecology, Evolution
- and Behaviour", Oxford: Univ. Press. 252 pp. Hard/Softcover avail.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q10.2: Textbooks on EC?
-
- These books go into the "nuts and bolts" of EC.
-
- Goldberg, D.E. (1989) "Genetic Algorithms in Search, Optimization,
- and Machine Learning",Addison-Wesley. [GOLD89]: (Probably the most
- widely referenced book in the field!)
-
- Davis, L. (ed) (1991) "Handbook of Genetic Algorithms", Van Nostrand
- Reinhold, New York, NY. [DAVIS91]:
-
- Michalewicz, Z. (1992) Genetic algorithms + Data Structures =
- Evolution Programs", Springer-Verlag, New York, NY. [MICHALE92]:
- Also second, extended edition (1994) with index. [MICHALE94]:
-
- Koza, J.R. (1992), Genetic Programming: On the Programming of
- Computers by means of Natural Selection", Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
- [KOZA92]:
-
- Langdon, W.B. (1998), Genetic Programming and Data Structures
- Hingham, MA: Kluwer. [LANG98]:
- http://www.wkap.nl/book.htm/0-7923-8135-1
-
- Fogel, Lawrence (1999), Intelligence through Simulated Evolution:
- Forty Years of Evolutionary Programming
- , Wiley.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q10.3: The Classics?
-
- Mostly older works which have helped to shape the field.
-
- Charles Darwin (1859), "The Origin of Species", London: John Murray.
- (Penguin Classics, London, 1985; New American Library, Mentor
- Paperback)
-
- Box, G.E.P. (1957) "Evolutionary operation: a method of increasing
- industrial productivity", Applied Statistics, 6, 81-101.
-
- Fraser, A.S. (1957) "Simulation of genetic systems by automatic
- digital computers", Australian Journal of Biological Sciences, 10,
- 484-491.
- Friedman, G.J. (1959) "Digital simulation of an evolutionary
- process", General Systems Yearbook, 4:171-184.
-
- Bremermann, H.J. (1962) "Optimization through evolution and
- recombination". In M.C. Yovits, et al, (eds) Self-Organizing Systems.
- Washington, DC: Spartan Books.
-
- Holland, J.H. (1962) "Outline for a logical theory of adaptive
- systems", JACM, 3, 297-314.
-
- Samuel, A.L. (1963) "Some Studies in Machine Learning using the Game
- of Checkers", in Computers and Thought, E.A. Feigenbaum and J.
- Feldman (eds), New York: McGraw-Hill.
-
- Walter, W.G. (1963) "The Living Brain", New York: W.W. Norton.
-
- Fogel, L.J., Owens, A.J. & Walsh, M.J. (1966) "Artificial
- Intelligence through Simulated Evolution", New York: Wiley.
- [Fogel66]:
-
- Rosen, R. (1967) "Optimality Principles in Biology", London:
- Butterworths.
-
- Rechenberg, I. (1973, 1993 2nd edn) "Evolutionsstrategie: Optimierung
- technischer Systeme nach Prinzipien der biologischen Evolution",
- Stuttgart: Fromman-Holzboog. (Evolution Strategy: Optimization of
- technical systems by means of biological evolution)
-
- Holland, J.H. (1975) "Adaptation in natural and artificial systems",
- Ann Arbor, MI: The University of Michigan Press. [HOLLAND75]: 2nd
- edn. (1992) [HOLLAND92]:
-
- De Jong, K.A. (1975) "An analysis of the behavior of a class of
- genetic adaptive systems", Doctoral thesis, Dept. of Computer and
- Communication Sciences, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
-
- Schwefel, H.-P. (1977) "Numerische Optimierung von Computer-Modellen
- mittels der Evolutionsstrategie", Basel: Birkhaeuser.
-
- Schwefel, H.-P. (1981) "Numerical Optimization of Computer Models",
- Chichester: Wiley. [eds note: English translation of the previous
- entry; a reworked edition is currently in preparation for 1994]
-
- Axelrod, R. (1984) "The evolution of cooperation", NY: Basic Books.
-
- Cramer, N.L. (1985) "A Representation for the Adaptive Generation of
- Simple Sequential Programs" [ICGA85], 183-187.
-
- Baeck, T., Hoffmeister, F. & Schwefel, H.-P. (1991) "A Survey of
- Evolution Strategies" [ICGA91], 2-9.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q10.4: Introductory Journal Articles?
-
- Baeck, T. & Schwefel, H.-P. (1993) "An Overview of Evolutionary
- Algorithms for Parameter Optimization", Evolutionary Computation,
- 1(1), 1-23.
-
- Baeck, T., Rudolph, G. & Schwefel, H.-P. (1993) "Evolutionary
- Programming and Evolution Strategies: Similarities and Differences",
- [EP93], 11-22.
-
- Baeck, T., Hammel, U. and Schwefel, H.-P. (1997) "Evolutionary
- computation: Comments on the history and current state," IEEE Trans.
- Evolutionary Computation, Vol. 1:1, pp. 3-17
- Beasley, D., Bull, D.R., & Martin, R.R. (1993) "An Overview of
- Genetic Algortihms: Part 1, Fundamentals", University Computing,
- 15(2) 58-69. Available by ftp from ENCORE (See Q15.3) in file:
- GA/papers/over93.ps.gz or from
- ralph.cs.cf.ac.uk/pub/papers/GAs/ga_overview1.ps
-
- Beasley, D., Bull, D.R., & Martin, R.R. (1993) "An Overview of
- Genetic Algortihms: Part 2, Research Topics", University Computing,
- 15(4) 170-181. Available by ftp from ENCORE (See Q15.3) in file:
- GA/papers/over93-2.ps.gz or from
- ralph.cs.cf.ac.uk/pub/papers/GAs/ga_overview2.ps
-
- Brooks, R.A. (1991) "Intelligence without Reason", MIT AI Memo No.
- 1293. Appeared in "Computer's and Thought", IJCAI-91.
-
- Dawkins, R. (1987) "The Evolution of Evolvability", [ALIFEI],
- 201-220.
-
- Fogel, D.B. (1994) "An introduction to simulated evolutionary
- optimization," IEEE Trans. Neural Networks, Vol. 5:1, pp. 3-14.
-
- Goldberg, D.E. (1986) "The Genetic Algorithm: Who, How, and What
- Next?". In Kumpati S. Narenda, ed., Adaptive and Learning Systems,
- Plenum, New York, NY.
-
- Goldberg, D. (1994), "Genetic and Evolutionary Algorithms Come of
- Age", Communications of the ACM, 37(3), 113--119.
-
- Hillis, W.D. (1987) "The Connection Machine", Scientific American,
- 255(6).
-
- Hillis, W.D. (1992) "Massively Parallel Computing" Daedalus, winter,
- 121(1), 1-29. [HILLIS92]:
-
- Holland, J.H. (1989) "Using Classifier Systems to Study Adaptive
- Nonlinear Networks". In: Lectures in the Science of Complexity, SFI
- Studies in the Science of Complexity, D. Stein, (ed), Addison Wesley.
-
- Holland, J.H. (1992) "Genetic Algorithms", Scientific American,
- 267(1), 66-72.
-
- Holland, J.H. (1992) "Complex Adaptive Systems" Daedalus, winter,
- 121(1), 17-30.
-
- Mitchell, M. & Forrest S. (1993) "Genetic Algorithms and Artificial
- Life", Artificial Life, 1(1). Also avail. as SFI Working Paper
- 31-11-072.
-
- Sims, K. (1991) "Artificial Evolution for Computer Graphics",
- Computer Graphics, 25(4), 319-328
-
- Sipper, M (1996) "A Brief Introduction to Genetic Algorithms",
- unpublished guide, available from
- http://lslwww.epfl.ch/~moshes/ga.html
-
- Spears, W.M., DeJong, K.A., Baeck, T., Fogel, D. & de Garis, H.
- (1993) "An Overview of Evolutionary Computation", [ECML93], 442-459.
-
- Peter Wayner (1991), "Genetic Algorithms: Programming takes a
- valuable tip from nature", BYTE, January, 361--368.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q10.5: Introductory Technical Reports?
-
- See also Q14 for other technical
- Ficek, Rhona (1990) "Genetic Algorithms", Dept. of Computer Science
- and Operations Research, North Dakota State University. An
- introductory report, available from:
- http://www.atm.cs.ndsu.nodak.edu/Dienst/UI/2.0/Describe/ncstrl.ndsu_cs%2fNDSU-
- CS-TR-90-51
-
- Hoffmeister, F. & Baeck, T. (1990, 1992) "Genetic Algorithms and
- Evolution Strategies: Similarities and Differences", University of
- Dortmund, Dept. of CS, SyS-1/92. Available by ftp from
- lumpi.informatik.uni-dortmund.de:
-
- Serrada, Anselmo Perez (1996) "Una introducci'on a la Computaci'on
- Evolutiva". An introduction to EC in Spanish. Available from ENCORE
- (see Q15.3) in file EA/papers/intro-spanish.ps.gz with an overview in
- EA/papers/intro-spanish.leeme .
-
- Whitley, D. (1993) "A Genetic Algorithm Tutorial", Colorado State
- University, Dept. of CS, TR CS-93-103. Available by ftp from
- ftp.cs.colostate.edu/pub/public_html/TechReports/1993/tr-103.ps.Z or
- from http://www.cs.colostate.edu
- - follow the link to Technical Reports.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q10.6: Not-quite-so-introductory Literature?
-
- Bock, P. (1993) "The Emergence of Artificial Cognition: An
- Introduction to Collective Learning", Singapore: World Scientific.
-
- Davis, L. (ed) (1987) "Genetic Algorithms and Simulated Annealing",
- available from Morgan Kaufmann Publishers Inc., 340 Pine St, San
- Francisco, CA 94104, (415-392-2665).
-
- Davidor, Y. (1991) "Genetic Algorithms and Robotics", Singapore:
- World Scientific. ISBN 9-810202172.
-
- Forrest, S. (ed) (1990) "Emergent Computation. Self-Organizing,
- Collective, and Cooperative Phenomena in Natural and Artificial
- Computing Networks", [FORREST90]:, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. (Special
- issue of Physica D.)
-
- Hillis, W.D. (1990) "Co-Evolving Parasites Improve Simulated
- Evolution as an Optimization procedure", [ALIFEII], 313-324.
-
- Holland, J.H., Holyoak, K.J., Nisbett, R.E. & Thagard, P.R. (1986)
- "Induction: Processes of Inference, Learning, and Discovery",
- Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
-
- Holland, J.H. (1992) "Adaptation in Natural and Artificial Systems:
- An Introductory Analysis with Applications to Biology, Control, and
- Artificial Intelligence, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press/Bradford Books,
- (2nd edn). Hard: ISBN 0-262-08213-6. Soft: ISBN 0-262-58111-6.
-
- Serra, R. & Zanarini, G. (1990) "Complex Systems and Cognitive
- Processes", New York, NY: Springer-Verlag.
-
- Stender, J. (ed.). (1993) "Parallel Genetic Algorithms", IOS
- Publishing. [Cites just about everything in the parallel GA field.
- -- John Koza]
-
- Rujan, P. (1988) "Searching for optimal configurations by simulated
- tunneling", Zeitschrift der Physik B", Vol.73, 391-416.
-
- Rudolph, G. (1994) "Convergence Analysis of Canonical Genetic
- Algorithms", IEEE Trans. on Neural Networks, Special issue on EP.
- Available by ftp from ENCORE (See Q15.3) in file:
- GA/papers/canon94.ps.gz
-
- Fogel, D. (1995), "Evolutionary Computation: Toward a New Philosophy
- of Machine Intelligence", Piscataway, NJ: IEEE Press. ISBN
- 0-7803-1048-0.
-
- Schwefel, H-P. (1995) "Evolution and Optimum Seeking", New York:
- Wiley. ISBN 0-471-57148-2
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q10.7: Biological Background Readings?
-
- Adams, D. with Carwardine M. (1990) "Last Chance to see...", London:
- Heinemann. [David Corne: I strongly suggest you read this. Its a
- report on visits to various parts of the world to see endangered
- species. It is remarkably and wonderfully funny and illuminating. It
- would actually be a good reference to have in any bit of the FAQ to
- do with genetic diversity and/or the lack of it, or the remarkable
- kinds of adaptations that can occur for the strangest reasons.]
-
- Cairns-Smith, A.G. (1985) "Seven Clues to the Origin of Life",
- Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press.
-
- Fisher, R.A. (1958) "The Genetic Theory of Natural Selection", New
- York: Dover.
-
- Futuyma, D.J. (1986) "Evolutionary Biology", Sunderland, MA: Sinauer
- Assoc. [eds note: the bibliography of this book is truly a treasure
- chest]
-
- Lewin, B. (1993) "Genes IV".
-
- Lewontin, R.C. (1974) "The Genetic Basis of Evolutionary Change", New
- York: Columbia Univ. Press.
-
- Maynard Smith, J. (1972) "On Evolution", Edinburgh: Edinburgh Univ.
- Press.
-
- Maynard Smith, J. (1978) "Optimization Theory in Evolution", Annual
- Review of Ecology and Systematics 9:31-56.
-
- Maynard Smith, J. (1982) "Evolution and the Theory of Games",
- Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press.
-
- Maynard Smith, J. (1989) "The Problems of Biology", Oxford: Oxford
- Univ. Press.
-
- Maynard Smith, J. (1989) "Evolutionary Genetics", Oxford: Oxford
- Univ. Press.
-
- Mayr, E. (1963) "Animal Species and Evolution", Cambridge, MA:
- Harvard Univ. Press.
-
- Mayr, E. (1982) "The Groth of Biological Thought", Cambridge, MA: The
- Belknap Press of Harvard Univ. Press.
-
- Ridley, M. (1985) "The Problems of Evolution", Oxford: Oxford Univ.
- Press.
-
- Tort, P. Ed. (1996) "Dictionary of Darwinism and of Evolution",
- Paris, France: Presses Universitaires de France. Produced by a team
- of 150 international experts over a period of 10 years. Contains a
- vast amount of information about what Darwinism is and (perhaps more
- importantly) is not. Further information from
- http://www.planete.net/~ptort/darwin/evolengl.html (in various
- languages).
-
- Watson, J.D. (1966) "Molecular Biology of the Gene", Menlo Park:
- Benjamin.
-
- Watson, J.D., Hopkins, N.H., Roberts, J.W., Steitz, J.A. & Weiner,
- A.M. (1987) "Molecular Biology of the Gene (4th edn)", Menlo Park:
- Benjamin.
-
- Williams, G.C. (1966) "Adaptation and Natural Selection", Princeton,
- NJ: Princeton Univ. Press.
-
- Wright, S. (1932) "The roles of mutation, inbreeding, crossbreeding
- and selection in evolution", in: Proc. of the 6th Int'l Congress on
- Genetics I, 356.
-
- There is a *lot* of interesting material on biology and evolution in
- the talk.origins newsgroup repository, available by FTP. The index of
- files, available from ics.uci.edu/pub/origins/Index , lists what's
- there, and includes files on Darwinism, definition of evolution,
- introduction to evolutionary biology, a list of important FAQ files,
- speciation, and genetic drift.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q10.8: On-line bibliography collections?
-
- The Big One
- Jarmo Alander has compiled probably the biggest EC bibliography
- around. It has 2500 entries, and is available in postscript form by
- ftp from: garbo.uwasa.fi/pc/research/2500GArefs.ps.gz and also from
- ENCORE (see Q15.3) in file refs/2500GArefs.ps.gz Please send any
- additions or corrections to <ja@cs.hut.fi>
-
- The same directory on ENCORE also contains some other bibliography
- collections.
-
- Combinations of GAs and NNs
- Dave Schaffer <ds1@philabs.Philips.Com> has compiled a bibliograpy on
- combinations of GAs and neural networks. About 150 entries, available
- in Bib format from ENCORE (See Q15.3) in file refs/cogann.bib.gz
-
- Jochen Ruhland <jochenr@neuro.informatik.uni-kassel.de> has also
- compiled a bibliography on this topic. Some papers deal only with
- neural networks, some only with genetic algorithms. About 300
- references altogether. Some include an abstract. Available from:
- ftp.neuro.informatik.uni-kassel.de/pub/NeuralNets/ in
- We_and_our_work/papers/diplom.1.bib.gz There are plans to expand this
- bibliography from time to time; the sequels will have names
- diplom.2.bib.gz, etc.
-
- Bibliography at IlliGAL
- A bibliography on Genetic Algorithms compiled by David E. Goldberg,
- Kelsey Milman, and Christina Tidd is available as IlliGAL Report No
- 92008 (see Q14), via ftp from:
- gal4.ge.uiuc.edu/pub/papers/IlliGALs/92008part1.ps.Z and
- 92008part2.ps.Z
-
- GAPHD Bibliography Collection
- Martyn Amos <Martyn.Amos@dcs.warwick.ac.uk> has assembled a
- collection of bibliographies from various sources, tidied up the
- entries and removed duplicates. The collections are as follows:
-
- Alife.bib.gz - General Artificial Life
- ICGA-93.bib.gz - Proc. International Conference on GAs (1993)
- chaos.bib.gz - Chaos theory
- ga+nn.bib.gz - GAs and neural networks
- ga.bib.gz - General GA references
- ga2.bib.gz - General GA references
- parallelGA.bib.gz - Parallel GAs
- theory.bib.gz - Theoretical computer science (bias towards graph
- theory, stochasic modelling and pobability theory)
- misc.bib.gz - Miscellaneous topics (eg. Internet)
- There are about 6200 references in total, although the biggest file
- by far is theory.bib, which is not directly related to EC. The
- references are in BibTeX format. The files are available by FTP from
- ftp.dcs.warwick.ac.uk/pub/gaphd/Bibliographies/ or by WWW from
- http://www.dcs.warwick.ac.uk/~martyn/ga.html
-
- Genetic Programming Bibliography
- A collection of Genetic Programming references (and other tools) is
- maintained by Bill Langdon <W.Langdon@cs.ucl.ac.uk> and is available
- via anonymous ftp from cs.ucl.ac.uk/genetic/biblio/
-
- Evolutionary Models in the Social Sciences
- Edmund Chattoe <E.Chattoe@surrey.ac.uk> has set up a bibliography on
- Evolutionary Models In Economics and the Social Sciences. The latest
- copy of the EMSS bibliography and some accompanying notes can be
- found at http://www.soc.surrey.ac.uk/~scs1ec/emssbib.html
-
- GAs and Economics
- Bernard Manderick <manderic@cs.few.eur.nl> has compiled a
- bibliography on the use of GAs in economics, and this was published
- in GA-Digest, v7n4 (with some followup comments in v7n5 & v7n7).
- This can be retrieved by FTP from
- ftp.aic.nrl.navy.mil/pub/galist/digests/v7n4 (see Q15.1).
-
- GAs in Control
- Carlos Fonseca <fonseca@acse.sheffield.ac.uk> has compiled a
- bibliography of about 50 references on GAs in Control, and it was
- published in GA-Digest, v7n18. This can be retrieved by FTP from
- ftp.aic.nrl.navy.mil/pub/galist/digests/v7n18 (see Q15.1).
-
- Learning Classifier Systems
- The Learning Classifier Systems Bibliography is the largest LCS
- bibliography there is. Currently about 600 entries.
- http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/~tyk/lcs/
-
- Parallel GAs
- A parallel GA bibliography is available via ftp from:
- unix.hensa.ac.uk/pub/parallel/faqs/parallel-genetic-algorithms
-
- Andreas Uhl <uhl@wst.wst.edvz.sbg.ac.at> has also compiled a parallel
- GA bibliography with about 80 entries. It is available by WWW in:
- http://www.mat.sbg.ac.at/~uhl/GA.html
-
- Genetic Programming
- John Koza <koza@CS.Stanford.EDU> has compiled an annotated
- bibliography on GP, and about 60 references were published in GA-
- Digest, v7n30. This can be retrieved by FTP from
- ftp.aic.nrl.navy.mil/pub/galist/digests/v7n30 or from ENCORE (See
- Q15.3) in file refs/gp-ref.gz
-
- GAs and protein folding
- Melanie Mitchell <mm@santafe.edu > has compiled a bibliography of
- about 40 references on this topic, and it was published in GA-Digest,
- v7n33. This can be retrieved by FTP from
- ftp.aic.nrl.navy.mil/pub/galist/digests/v7n33 (see Q15.1).
-
- GAs in Image Processing and Computer Vision
- Kyeongmo Park <kpark@cs.gmu.edu> has compiled a bibliography of about
- 20 references on this topic, and it was published in GA-Digest,
- v8n10. This can be retrieved by FTP from
- ftp.aic.nrl.navy.mil/pub/galist/digests/v8n10 (see Q15.1).
-
- GAs in telecommunications and data networks
- Bhaskar Krishnamachari <bhaskar@ee.cornell.edu> has compiled the
- following bibliographies:
-
- The application of genetic algorithms to telecommunication systems: a
- bibliography http://www.ee.cornell.edu/~bhaskar/gacomm-bib.html
-
- The application of genetic algorithms to the design and optimization
- of data networks: a bibliography
- http://www.ee.cornell.edu/~bhaskar/ganet-bib.html
-
- Masters and PhD theses
- Richard K. Belew has collected information on approximately 2600
- Masters and Ph.D. theses, nominally in the area of AI. The entire
- list (about 170KB) is available for anonymous FTP at:
- ftp.cs.ucsd.edu/pub/rik/aigen.rpt Questions, suggestions, additions
- etc. to <rik@cs.ucsd.edu>.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q10.9: Videos?
-
- Fogel, D.B. (1997) "An Introduction to Evolutionary Computation," for
- ordering contact <customer.service@ieee.org>
-
- Sims, K. (1990) "Panspermia", ACM SIGGRAPH Video Review. Ordering
- information from http://www.siggraph.org/publications/video-
- review/SVR.html
-
- Langton, C.G. (ed) (1992) "Artificial Life II Video Proceedings" The
- Advanced Book Program of the Santa Fe Institute: Studies in the
- Sciences of Complexity, Addison Wesley, ISBN 0-201-55492-5. [ALIFEII-
- V]:
-
- Koza, J.R. & Rice, J.P. (1992) "Genetic Programming: The Movie",
- Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. See GP-faq for an order form. (see Q15)
-
- The Santa Fe Institute has produced a thirteen minute promotional
- video, which includes a five minute segment discussing the Tierra
- research project, illustrated with a very high quality animation
- produced by the Anti Gravity Workshop in Santa Monica, CA. To obtain
- the video, contact the Santa Fe Institute at: 1660 Old Pecos Trail,
- Suite A, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501 (Tel: 505-984-8800, Fax:
- 505-982-0565, Net: <email@santafe.edu>) or contact Linda Feferman:
- <fef@santafe.edu> or <0005851689@mcimail.com>
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q10.10: CD-ROMs?
-
- PTF for AI by CMU
- Carnegie Mellon University is establishing an Artificial Intelligence
- Repository to contain public domain and freely distributable
- software, publications, and other materials of interest to AI
- researchers, educators, and students. The AI Repository will be
- accessible by anonymous FTP and Andrew File System (AFS) without
- charge (See Q15.3). The contents of the repository will also be
- published by Prime Time Freeware as an inexpensive mixed-media
- (Book/CD-ROM) publication.
-
- For your information, here is a precis of the CD-ROM:
-
- PTF for AI is a periodic collection of AI-related source code and
- documentation. PTF for AI in no way modifies the legal restrictions
- on any package it includes. The first issue (1-1; Summer, 1993)
- consisted of an ISO-9660 CD-ROM bound into a ~100 page book. It
- contained ~600 MB of gzipped archives (2+ GB uncompressed and
- unpacked). Cost: $60 US.
-
- For more information contact: Mark Kantrowitz, Archivist, CMU AI
- Repository, Editor, PTF for AI. Net: <mkant+repository@cs.cmu.edu>,
- Tel: +1 412-268-2582, Fax: +1 412-681-5739.
-
- AI CD-ROM by NCC
- Network Cybernetics Corporation has released a new CD-ROM title, the
- AI CD-ROM Revision 3 (ISBN 1-886376-01-8). This is the newest
- version of an annually updated collection of artificial intelligence
- programming and research tools. This ISO-9660 format CD-ROM contains
- thousands of programs, source code collections, tutorials, research
- papers, Internet journals, and other resources. Previous versions of
- the AI CD-ROM are currently in use as teaching aids for AI-related
- University courses, as research aids to computer scientists, and as a
- source of advanced computer programming tools for application program
- developers around the world.
-
- The AI CD-ROM contains thousands of up to date files covering a wide
- range of topics including: Fuzzy Logic, Genetic Algorithms, Neural
- Networks, Expert Systems, Robotics, Machine Vision, Natural Language,
- Prolog, Lisp, Embedded AI, Virtual Reality, Cellular Automata, Chaos,
- Fractals, and more. The disc is divided into topical subdirectories
- and each directory contains an index file with descriptive listings
- of the contents. The AI CD-ROM has received good reviews in many
- magazines including Byte (Jerry Pournelle, March '93) and IEEE
- Computer (J. Zalewski, July '93), CD-ROM Professional and others.
- The CD-ROM has a list price of $89.00.
-
- For people wanting to see a complete listing of the CD's contents,
- FTP to ftp.ncc.com:/ and get the file AICD3.ZIP. The file is also
- available from the Compuserve AIEXPERT forum, and the NCC dial-up BBS
- at 214-258-1832. Also check out the WWW site at:
- http://www.ncc.com/cdroms/ai/index.html
-
- Enquiries to: Network Cybernetics Corporation, 4201 Wingren Road,
- Suite 202, Irving, TX 75062-2763, USA <ai-info@ncc.com>
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q10.11: How do I get a copy of a dissertation?
-
- All US American dissertations are available from: UMI Dissertation
- Information Service, University Microfilms International, A Bell &
- Howell Information Company, 300 N. Zeeb Road, Ann Arbor, Michigan
- 48106, USA. Tel.: 800-521-0600, or +1 (313) 761-4700
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q11: What EC related journals and magazines are there?
-
- 1. Dedicated EC Journals:
- Evolutionary Computation
- Published quarterly by: MIT Press Journals, 55 Hayward Street,
- Cambridge, MA 02142-1399, USA. Tel: (617) 253-2889, Fax: (617)
- 258-6779, <journals-orders@mit.edu>
-
- Along with the explosive growth of the computing industry has come
- the need to design systems capable of functioning in complex,
- changing ENVIRONMENTs. Considerable effort is underway to explore
- alternative approaches to designing more robust computer systems
- capable of learning from and adapting to the environment in which
- they operate.
-
- One broad class of such techniques takes its inspiration from natural
- systems with particular emphasis on evolutionary models of
- computation such as GAs, ESs. CFS, and EP. Until now, information
- on these techniques has been widely spread over numerous disciplines,
- conferences, and journals. [eds note: The editorial board reads like
- a who-is-who in EC.] For paper e-mail submission, use one of the
- following addresses:
-
- o America: John Grefenstette <gref@aic.nrl.navy.mil>
-
- o Europe: Heinz Muehlenbein <heinz.muehlenbein@gmd.de>
-
- o Asia: Hiroaki Kitano <kitano@csl.sony.co.jp>
-
- o Ed-in-chief: Ken De Jong <kdejong@aic.gmu.edu>
-
- Please note, that submissions should be sent to one of the sub-
- editors. Grefenstette and Kitano accept LaTeX or PostScript
- submissions.
-
- BioSystems
- Journal of Biological and Information Processing Sciences, Elsevier
- Science Publishers, P.O. Box 1527, 1000 BM Amsterdam, The
- Netherlands.
-
- BioSystems encourages experimental, computational, and theoretical
- articles that link biology, evolutionary thinking, and the
- information processing sciences. The link areas form a circle that
- encompasses the fundamental nature of biological information
- processing, computational modeling of complex biological systems,
- evolutionary models of computation, the application of biological
- principles to the design of novel computing systems, and the use of
- biomolecular materials to synthesize artificial systems that capture
- essential principles of natural biological information processing.
-
- Topics: Molecular EVOLUTION: Self-organizing and self-replicating
- systems, Origin and evolution of the genetic mechanism; Biological
- Information Processing: Molecular recognition, Cellular control,
- Neuromuscular computing, Biological adaptability, Molecular computing
- technologies; EVOLUTIONARY SYSTEMS: Stochastic EVOLUTIONARY
- ALGORITHMs, Evolutionary OPTIMIZATION, SIMULATION of genetic and
- ecological systems, Applications (neural nets, machine learning,
- robotics))
-
- IEEE Transactions on Evolutionary Computation
- The IEEE Transactions on Evolutionary Computation will publish
- archival journal quality original papers in EVOLUTIONARY COMPUTATION
- and related areas, with particular emphasis on the practical
- application of the techniques to solving real problems in industry,
- medicine, and other disciplines. Specific techniques include but are
- not limited to EVOLUTION STRATEGIEs, EVOLUTIONARY PROGRAMMING,
- GENETIC ALGORITHMs, and associated methods of GENETIC PROGRAMMING and
- CLASSIFIER SYSTEMs. Papers emphasizing mathematical results should
- ideally seek to put these results in the context of algorithm design,
- however purely theoretical papers will be considered. Other papers
- in the areas of cultural algorithms, ARTIFICIAL LIFE, molecular
- computing, evolvable hardware, and the use of simulated evolution to
- gain a better understanding of naturally evolved systems are also
- encouraged.
-
- Papers must conform to IEEE standard submission guidelines which are
- available in IEEE transactions (for example, see the IEEE
- Transactions on Neural Networks or the IEEE Transactions on Fuzzy
- Systems). Those wanting to receive an author's information booklet
- from the IEEE can request this at <trans@ieee.org>.
-
- Six (6) hard copies of the manuscript should be sent to: David B.
- Fogel, Editor-in-Chief, IEEE Transactions on Evolutionary
- Computation, c/o Natural Selection, Inc., 3333 N. Torrey Pines Ct.,
- Suite 200, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA.
-
- The editor-in-chief will be pleased to comment on the suitability of
- other submissions at the request of the authors. Further questions
- can be directed to <d.fogel@ieee.org>. The transactions will appear
- quarterly.
-
- 2. Related Journals:
- Complex Systems
- Published by: Complex Systems Publications, Inc., P.O. Box 6149,
- Champaign, IL 61821-8149, USA.
-
- Complex Systems devotes to the rapid publication of research on the
- science, mathematics, and engineering of systems with simple
- components but complex overall behavior. Try finger(1) on
- <jcs@wri.com> for additional info.
-
- Machine Learning
- Published by: Kluwer Academic Publishers, P.O. Box 358, Accord
- Station, Hingham, MA 02018-0358 USA.
-
- Machine Learning is an international forum for research on
- computational approaches to learning. The journal publishes articles
- reporting substantive research results on a wide range of learning
- methods applied to a variety of task domains. The ideal paper will
- make a theoretical contribution supported by a computer
- implementation.
-
- The journal has published many key papers in learning theory,
- reinforcement learning, and decision tree methods. The journal
- regularly publishes special issues devoted to GAs and CFS as well.
-
- Adaptive Behavior
- Published quarterly by: MIT Press Journals, details above.
-
- Broadly, behavior is adaptive if it deals successfully with changes
- circumstances. For example, when surprised, a hungry --but
- environmentally informed-- mouse may dart for cover rather than
- another piece of cheese. Similarly, a tripped-up ROBOT [eds note: not
- necessarily built by Sirius Cybernetics Corp.] could get back on its
- feet and accomplish a moonrock-finding mission if it had learned to
- cope with unanticipated lunar potholes.
-
- Adaptive Behavior thus takes an approach complementary to traditional
- AI. Now basic abilities that allow animals to survive, or robots to
- perform their mission in unpredictable ENVIRONMENTs, will be studied
- in preference to more elaborate and human-specific abilities.
-
- The journal also aims to investigate which new insights into
- intelligence and cognition can be achieved by explicitly taking into
- account the environment feedback --mediated by behavior-- that an
- animal or a robot receives, instead of studying components of
- intelligence in isolation.
-
- Topics: INDIVIDUAL and Collective Behavior. Neural Correlates of
- Behavior. Perception and Motor Control. Motivation and Emotion.
- Action SELECTION and Behavioral Sequences. Internal World Models.
- Ontogeny, Learning, and EVOLUTION. Characterization of environments.
-
- Artificial Life
- Published quarterly by: MIT Press Journals, details above.
- Artificial Life is intended to be the primary forum for the
- dissemination of scientific and engineering research in the field of
- ARTIFICIAL LIFE. It will report on synthetic biological work being
- carried out in any and all media, from the familiar "wetware" of
- organic chemistry, through the inorganic "hardware" of mobile robots,
- all the way to the virtual "software" residing inside computers.
-
- Research topics ranging from the fabrication of self-replicating
- molecules to the study of evolving POPULATIONs of computer programs
- will be included.
-
- There will also be occasional issues devoted to special topics, such
- as L-Systems, GENETIC ALGORITHMs, in-vitro evolution of molecules,
- artificial cells, computer viruses, and many social and philosophical
- issues arising from the attempt to synthesize life artificially.
-
- [eds note: The editorial board reads like a who-is-who in ALIFE]
-
- Evolutionary Economics
- Published quarterly by: Springer-Verlag New York, Inc., Service
- Center Secaucus, 44 Hartz Way, Secaucus, NJ 07094, USA. Tel: (201)
- 348-4033, Fax: (201) 348-4505.
-
- Evolutionary Economics aims to provide an international forum for a
- new approach to economics. Following the tradition of Joseph A.
- Schlumpeter, it is designed to focus on original research with an
- evolutionary conception of the economy. The journal will publish
- articles with strong emphasis on dynamics, changing structures
- (including technologies, institutions, beliefs, imitation, etc.). It
- favors interdisciplinary analysis and is devoted to theoretical,
- methodological and applied work.
-
- Research areas include: industrial dynamics; multi-sectoral and
- cross-country studies of productivity; innovations and new
- technologies; dynamic competition and structural change in a national
- and international context; causes and effects of technological,
- political and social changes; cyclic processes in economic evolution;
- the role of governments in a dynamic world; modeling complex dynamic
- economic systems; application of concepts, such as self-organization,
- bifurcation, and chaos theory to economics; evolutionary games.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q12: What are the important conferences/proceedings on EC?
-
- 1. Dedicated EC Conferences:
- GECCO: Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference
- Major international conference held anually in North America since
- 1999. It is organised by ISGEC (International Society for Genetic
- and Evolutionary Computation) (see http://www.isgec.org ). GECCO
- combines the previously separate ICGA and Genetic Programming
- conferences. Covers all aspects of EVOLUTIONARY COMPUTATION.
-
- The 2000 conference was held on July 8-12 in Las Vegas, USA. Details
- from http://www.genetic-algorithm.org
-
- The 1999 conference was held on July 14--17 in Orlando, Florida.
- Details from http://www-illigal.ge.uiuc.edu/gecco/
-
- ICGA: International Conference on Genetic Algorithms
- Major international conference held in North America in odd-numbered
- years between 1985 and 1999. Covers all aspects of EVOLUTIONARY
- COMPUTATION. Since 1999, this conference has been combined with the
- annual Genetic Programming conference, and titled GECCO (see above).
-
- The 1999 conference was held on July 14--17 in Orlando, Florida.
- Details from http://www-illigal.ge.uiuc.edu/gecco/
-
- The 1997 conference was at Michigan State University, East Lansing,
- USA. Details from http://GARAGe.cps.msu.edu/icga97/index.html
-
- Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Genetic Algorithms
- (1985) J.J. Grefenstette (ed) [ICGA85]: and Proc. of the 2nd Int'l
- Conf. on Genetic Algorithms (1987) J.J. Grefenstette (ed) [ICGA87]:
- available from Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc., 365 Broadway,
- Hillsdale, New Jersey, 07642, (800) 926-6579.
-
- Proc. of the 3rd Int'l Conf. on Genetic Algorithms (1989) J.D.
- Schaffer (ed) [ICGA89]: and Proc. of the 4th Int'l Conf. on Genetic
- Algorithms (1991) R.K. Belew and L.B. Booker (eds) [ICGA91]: and
- Proc. of the 5th Int'l Conf. on Genetic Algorithms (1993) S. Forrest
- (ed) [ICGA93]: and Proc. of the 6th Int'l Conf. on Genetic Algorithms
- (1995) [ICGA95]: available from Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, Inc., San
- Francisco (415-392-2665). <morgan@unix.sri.com>
-
- FOGA: Foundations of Genetic Algorithms
- Major international workshop focusing on theoretical aspects of EC,
- that's usually limited to some 50 participants and is usually held
- somewhere in North America. FOGA 5, however, was held in Leiden, The
- Netherlands on 24-26 September 1998. Details from:
- http://www.wi.leidenuniv.nl/CS/ALP/foga98.html
-
- Foundations of Genetic Algorithms (1991) G.J.E. Rawlins (ed)
- [FOGA91]: and Foundations of Genetic Algorithms 2 (1993) L.D. Whitley
- [FOGA93]: available from Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, Inc., San
- Francisco (415-392-2665). <morgan@unix.sri.com>
-
- FOGA 3 took place in 1994. Enquires to: Darrell Whitley,
- <whitley@cs.colostate.edu>. FOGA 4 took place from August 3-5 1996
- in San Diego, California. Details from
- http://www.aic.nrl.navy.mil/galist/foga/
-
- PPSN: Parallel Problem Solving from Nature
- Major international conference held in Europe in even-numbered years.
- Covers all aspects of problem solving inspired by natural processes.
- The 1998 conference was held in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, September
- 27 - October 1. Information from:
- http://www.wi.leidenuniv.nl/CS/ALP/ppsn98.html Further information on
- all PPSN conferences is available from:
- http://LS11-www.informatik.uni-dortmund.de/PPSN/
-
- Parallel Problem Solving from Nature, (1990) H.-P. Schwefel and R.
- Maenner (eds) [PPSN90]: published by Springer-Verlag, 175 5th Avenue,
- New York, NY, 10010, (212) 460-1500. Parallel Problem Solving from
- Nature 2, (1992) R. Maenner and B. Manderick (eds) [PPSN92]:
- published by North-Holland, Elsevier Science Publishers, Sara
- Burgerhartstraat 25, P.O. Box 211, 1000 AE Amsterdam, The
- Netherlands. Parallel Problem Solving from Nature 3, (1994) Y.
- Davidor (ed.), [PPSN94]: PPSN96 was held in Berlin, September 1996.
-
- EP: Annual Conference on Evolutionary Programming
- Major international annual conference held in USA. Covers all
- aspects of EC with emphasis on EP related research. The 1999
- conference was held in conjunction with the ICEC (See below).
-
- The 1997 conference was held on April 13-16 in Indianapolis. Details
- from Pete Angeline <pja@lfs.loral.com>. The 1996 conference was held
- on Feb 29-March 3. The 1995 conference was held on March 1-4.
- Details from David Fogel <fogel@sunshine.ucsd.edu>.
-
- Proceedings of the 1st Annual Conference on Evolutionary Programming,
- (1992) D.B. Fogel and W. Atmar (eds), [EP92]:, and Proc. of the 2nd
- Annual Conf. on Evolutionary Programming, (1993) D.B. Fogel and W.
- Atmar (eds), [EP93]: published by the Evolutionary Programming
- Society, 9363 Towne Centre Dr., San Diego, CA 92121, Attn: Bill
- Porto, Treasurer (cf Q13). Proceedings of the Third Annual
- Conference on Evolutionary Programming, (1994) A.V. Sebald and L.J.
- Fogel (eds), [EP94]:, World Scientific Publishers, River Edge, NJ.
-
- CEC: Congress on Evolutionary Computation
- Major international conference covering all aspects of EC. Prior to
- 1999 it was called the IEEE Conference on Evolutionary Computation
- (ICEC). Since 1999 it has been titled the Congress on Evolutionary
- Computation, (CEC) and is held in conjunction with the Evolutionary
- Programming Conference (EP) and Genetic Algorithms in Engineering
- Systems: Innovations and Applications (GALESIA). It is jointly
- sponsored by the IEEE Neural Networks Council, the Evolutionary
- Programming Society (EPS), and the Institution of Electrical
- Engineers (IEE).
-
- The eigth conference will be held in Seoul, Korea, from 27-30 May
- 2001. Details from http://cec2001.kaist.ac.kr/
-
- The seventh conference was held in San Diego, USA, from 16-19 July
- 2000. Details from http://pcgipseca.cee.hw.ac.uk/cec2000/main.html
-
- The sixth conference was held in Washington DC, from 6-9 July 1999.
- Details from http://garage.cps.msu.edu/cec99/ . The fifth conference
- was held in Anchorage, Alaska, USA, from May 4-9 1998. Details from
- http://www.arc.unm.edu/wcci-98/icec.html . The fourth was on April
- 14-17 1997 in Indianapolis (in conjunction with EP97). The third was
- on May 20-22 1996 in Nagoya, Japan, details from
- http://www.bioele.nuee.nagoya-u.ac.jp/ICEC96/ . The second was on 29
- Nov--1 Dec 1995 in Perth, Australia. Details from
- <ec95@ee.uwa.edu.au> . The first took place in June 1994 at the
- World Congress on Computational Intelligence, Florida.
-
- Proceedings of the 1st IEEE Conference on Evolutionary Computation,
- (1994) D.B. Fogel (ed.) (2 Volumes). Published by IEEE, 445 Hoes
- Lane, PO Box 1331, Piscataway, NJ 08855-1331. Also, talks from
- invited speakers are published in "Computational Intelligence
- Imitating Life" (1994) J.M. Zurada, R.J. Marks, C.J. Robinson (eds),
- IEEE.
-
- Genetic Programming
- Since 1999, the annual Genetic Programming conference has been
- combined with the ICGA, to make GECCO (see above).
-
- The 1998 conference dedicated to GP was held on July 22-25 at the
- University of Winconsin. Details of the GP conferences can be
- obtained from: http://www.genetic-programming.org or from
- <gp@aaai.org>.
-
- The first conference was held on July 28--31 1996 at Stanford
- University, California. Details from:
- http://www.cs.brandeis.edu/~zippy/gp-96.html
-
- The third European Conference on Genetic Programming was held in
- Edingurgh, UK, on 15-16 April 2000. Details from
- http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/~rmp/eebic/eurogp2000/
-
- 2. Related Conferences:
- Alife: International Conference on Artificial Life
- Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on ARTIFICIAL LIFE,
- (1989) C.G. Langton (ed), Santa Fe Institute Studies in the Sciences
- of Complexity, Proc. Vol. VI, [ALIFEI]: and Proc. of the 2nd Int'l
- Conf. on Artificial Life II, (1992) C.G. Langton, C. Taylor, J. Doyne
- Farmer and S. Rasmussen (eds), Santa Fe Institute Studies in the
- Sciences of Complexity, Proc. Vol. X, [ALIFEII]: and Proc. of the 3rd
- Int'l Conf. on Artificial Life III, (1993) C.G. Langton (ed),
- [ALIFEIII]: published by Addison Wesley, Redwood City, CA, USA.
-
- Artificial life IV, was organized by Rodney Brooks, MIT AI Lab,
- <alife@ai.mit.edu> and held on July 6-8, 1994. Proceedings edited by
- R. Brooks and P. Maes. [ALIFEIV]:
-
- ECAL: European Conference on Artificial Life
- Proceedings of the 1st European Conference on Artificial life, (1991)
- F.J. Varela and P. Bourgine (eds), [ECAL91]: and Proc. of the 2nd
- European Conf. on ALIFE: Self-organization and life, from simple
- rules to global complexity, (1993), (? eds) (? pub) [ECAL93]:
- published by MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, USA.
-
- ECML: European Conference on Machine Learning
- Machine Learning: ECML-93, Proc. European Conf. on Machine Learning,
- (1993) P.B. Brazil (ed), [ECML93]: published by Springer, New York,
- NY, USA.
-
- ICANNGA: International Conference on Artificial Neural Networks and
- Genetic Algorithms
- Held every 2 years since 1993. The 1997 conference was on April 1-4
- in Norwich, England. Details from
- http://www.sys.uea.ac.uk/Research/ResGroups/MAG/ICANNGA97/
-
- SAB: International Conference on Simulation of Adaptive Behavior
- From Animals to Animats. Proceedings of the 1st International
- Conference on SIMULATION of Adaptive Behavior, (1991) [SAB90]: J.-A.
- Meyer and S.W. Wilson, ISBN 0-262-63138-5, and Proc. of the 2nd Int'l
- Conf. on Simulation of Adaptive Behavior, (1993) [SAB92]:, J.-A.
- Meyer, H. Roitblat and S.W. Wilson (eds) and Proc. of the 3rd Int'l
- Conf. on Simulation of Adaptive Behavior, [SAB94]:, P. Husbands,
- J.-A. Meyer and S.W. Wilson (eds) published by MIT Press, Cambridge,
- MA, USA.
-
- SAB96 took place on September 9-13, 1996 in Cape Cod, MA USA.
- Details from http://www.cs.brandeis.edu/conferences/sab96
-
- 3. Pointers to upcoming Conferences:
- The Genetic Algorithm Digest
- Aka "GA-Digest" always starts with a "Calendar of GA-related Events,"
- i.e. a list of upcoming conferences, covering the complete field of
- EAs (see Q15.1), available from http://www.aic.nrl.navy.mil/galist/
-
- The Artificial Life Digest
- Aka "Alife digest" always starts with a "Calendar of Alife-related
- Events," that lists conferences, workshops, etc. (cf Q15)
-
- The Evolutionary Programming Digest
- Aka "EP-digest" doesn't list conferences explicitly, like the
- previously mentioned ones, but carries most CFP's; that can be looked
- at in the backissues folder: amazon.eng.fau.edu/pub/ep-list/digest/
- (cf Q15)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q13: What Evolutionary Computation Associations exist?
-
- ISGEC: International Society for Genetic and Evolutionary Computation
-
- Formed in late 1999 from the merger of the International Society for
- GENETIC ALGORITHMs (ISGA) and the GENETIC PROGRAMMING Conference
- organization. This society brings together the oldest society in the
- field of EVOLUTIONARY COMPUTATION (ISGA) as well as the two largest
- conferences in the field. The ISGEC should help bring a greater
- sense of unity, order, and inclusiveness to the growing field of
- genetic and evolutionary computation.
-
- The ISGEC embraces all facets of its growing field, including genetic
- algorithms, genetic programming, EVOLUTION STRATEGIEs, EVOLUTIONARY
- PROGRAMMING, CLASSIFIER SYSTEMs, evolvable hardware, and emerging
- areas including (but not limited to) immune system learning, DNA and
- molecular computing, ant OPTIMIZATION, evolutionary robotics, ECHO,
- Tierra, and genetic scheduling. The society and its annual GECCO
- conference are dynamically structured so as to continuously and
- automatically embrace new directions of research and new participants
- in the field.
-
- ISGEC is a formal membership society. Special arrangements have been
- negotiated to provide the two journals Evolutionary Computation and
- Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines to all members as part of
- their membership. Society members will also get a significant
- discount at society conferences and workshops, such as GECCO and
- FOGA.
-
- Information about ISGEC is available from http://www.isgec.org
-
- EvoNet
- EvoNet is a Europe wide network of evolutionary computing experts
- that supports research and facilitates the transfer of knowledge from
- academia to industry. EvoNet is funded by the European Union.
-
- Contact details: Website: http://www.dcs.napier.ac.uk/evonet/
- Email: <evonet@dcs.napier.ac.uk> Post: EvoNet, School of Computing,
- Napier University, 219 Colinton Rd, Edinburgh, EH6 8RR, UK. Tel: +44
- (0)131 455 4218, Fax: +44 (0)131 455 4440
-
- EPS: Evolutionary Programming Society
- Membership is $40/year ($10/year for students with id) and also gives
- you a discounted registration at the annual conference. You can also
- order EP proceedings ($30/members, $45/other) from EPS.
-
- Address: Evolutionary Programming Society, 9363 Towne Centre Dr., San
- Diego, CA 92121, Attn: Bill Porto, Treasurer.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q14: What Technical Reports are available?
-
- Technical reports are informally published, unrefereed papers giving
- up-to-date information on what is going on at research institutes.
- Many later go on to be formally published in journals or at
- conferences.
-
- TCGA Reports
- The Clearing House for Genetic Algorithms (TCGA) at the Univ. of
- Alabama (Tuscaloosa) distributes TCGA technical reports. A number of
- these are now available in compressed Postscript form via FTP from:
- aramis.cs.ua.edu/pub/tech-reports/ Read the file README first.
-
- Contact: Robert Elliott Smith, Department of Engineering of
- Mechanics, Room 210 Hardaway Hall, The University of Alabama, P.O.
- Box 870278, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487, USA. Tel: (205) 348-1618,
- <rob@comec4.mh.ua.edu>, or Dr. Ron Sun <rsun@athos.cs.ua.edu>
-
- IlliGAL Reports
- The Illinois Genetic Algorithms Laboratory distributes IlliGAL
- technical reports, as well as reprints of other publications; they
- are available in hardcopy and can be ordered from: IlliGAL Librarian,
- Department of General Engineering, 117 Transportation Building, 104
- South Mathews Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801-2996, USA.
- <library@gal1.ge.uiuc.edu>
-
- NOTE: When ordering, please include your surface mail address!
-
- IlliGAL also have an anonymous-FTP server, holding most of the
- existing IlliGAL reports, at: gal4.ge.uiuc.edu/pub/papers/IlliGALs/
- There is also a WWW home page with a complete list, order form, and
- other information at: ftp://gal4.ge.uiuc.edu/illigal.home.html
-
- SyS Reports
- The Systems Analysis Research Group (SyS) at the University of
- Dortmund, maintains an experimental anonymous FTP server:
- lumpi.informatik.uni-dortmund.de/pub/ On lumpi you can find SyS-
- Reports from 1992 on. (Get "/pub/ls-Ral.Z" and look for "papers"
- folders, the server is sorted by EA paradigms, i.e. "/pub/GA/papers"
- contains papers related to GAs, etc.). A strongly recommended, and
- quarterly updated, report is a list of current applications of GAs,
- EP and ESs; get "/pub/EA/papers/ea-app.ps.gz" (SyS-2/92).
-
- Bionics Reports
- The Bionics and EVOLUTION Techniques Laboratory at the Technical
- University of Berlin maintains an anonymous FTP server: ftp-
- bionik.fb10.tu-berlin.de/pub/ On ftp-bionik you find reports and
- software, related to EVOLUTIONARY ALGORITHMs and Artificial Neural
- Networks.
-
- University College London Reports
- A number of GENETIC ALGORITHM reports produced by UCL are available
- via anonymous FTP at cs.ucl.ac.uk/genetic/papers/ Abstracts of others
- can be obtained via WWW at http://www.cs.ucl.ac.uk/rns/
-
- Other Sources of Reports
- Reports are also available from some of the sources listed in Q15.1,
- Q15.2 and Q15.3.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q15: What information is available over the net?
-
- A whole lot of information is available "electronically" via the
- internet, accessible using e-mail or (more easily) FTP. There are
- electronic digests (see Q15.1), electronic mailing lists (see Q15.2),
- online FTP repositories (see Q15.3), and various USENET news groups
- (see Q15.4).
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q15.1: What digests are there?
-
- Digests are regulated, moderated, information sources in which many
- contributions are combined together before being posted out to
- subscribers, usually on a regular basis (eg. weekly). Mailing lists
- are listed in Q15.2.
-
- Genetic Algorithm Digest
- The GA research community exchanges news, CFP's, etc. through this
- (approximately weekly) digest, currently moderated by Mitchell Potter
- and Annie Wu (formerly by Bill Spears). The digest is also posted to
- the comp.ai.genetic newsgroup.
-
- o Send administrative requests to <ga-list-REQUEST@aic.nrl.navy.mil>
-
- o The FTP archive: ftp.aic.nrl.navy.mil/pub/galist/ is maintained by
- Alan C. Schultz, and contains back issues, GA-code, conference
- announcements (in "/pub/galist/information/conferences") and many
- other things. Info in "/pub/galist/FTP".
-
- o The archive may also be accessed at
- http://www.aic.nrl.navy.mil/galist Also, links are given to many
- interesting sites around the World with material related to
- EVOLUTIONARY COMPUTATION.
- Artificial Life Digest
- This digest no longer appears to exist. In the past, the ALIFE
- research community exchanged news, CFP's, etc. through this digest,
- edited by Liane Gabora and Rob Collins of the ARTIFICIAL LIFE
- Research Group at UCLA. Administrative requests used to go to
- <alife-REQUEST@cognet.ucla.edu>, and there was an anonymous FTP
- archive at: ftp.cognet.ucla.edu/pub/alife/
-
- If anyone knows what happened to this digest, please let us know.
-
- Evolutionary Programming Digest
- This digest no longer appears to exist. In the past, the digest was
- intended to promote discussions on a wide range of technical issues
- in evolutionary OPTIMIZATION, as well as provide information on
- upcoming conferences, events, journals, special issues, and other
- items of interest to the EP community. Discussions on all areas of
- EVOLUTIONARY COMPUTATION were welcomed, including ARTIFICIAL LIFE,
- EVOLUTION STRATEGIEs, and GENETIC ALGORITHMs. The digest was meant
- to encourage interdisciplinary communications.
-
- The subscription address was <ep-list-REQUEST@magenta.me.fau.edu> The
- digest was moderated by N. Saravan of Florida Atlantic University.
-
- If anyone knows what happened to this digest, please let us know.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q15.2: What mailing lists are there?
-
- Mailing lists are unregulated, unmoderated, information sources in
- which messages sent in by subscribers are posted out immediately and
- individually to all other subscribers. Digests are listed in Q15.1.
-
- Classifier Systems
- John Holmes has a classifier systems mailing list, which can be used
- to ask questions, announce papers, introduce yourself, etc. Mail
- John Holmes <jholmes@cceb.med.upenn.edu> to subscribe. The list's
- address is: classifier systems mailing list
- <cslist@cceb.med.upenn.edu>
-
- Genetic Programming Mailing List
- The GP community uses this list as a discussion forum, news exchange
- and FAQ distribution channel, originally set up by John Koza and
- James Rice at Stanford.
-
- o Admin requests: <genetic-programming-REQUEST@cs.stanford.edu>
-
- o The archive includes a lengthy, but "mostly interesting" FAQ by
- James Rice on GP related subjects. The archive is at
- http://www.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs/project/ai-
- repository/ai/areas/genetic/gp/faq/gp.faq (plain text) and also at
- http://www.cs.ucl.ac.uk/research/genprog/gp2faq/gp2faq.html
- (converted to HTML).
-
- Tierra Mailing List
- Thomas Ray's Tierra is discussed elsewhere (see Q4.1); here's how to
- obtain Tierra electronically and get in contact with other users.
-
- o Admin requests: <tierra-REQUEST@life.slhs.udel.edu>
- o Anonymous FTP archive: tierra.slhs.udel.edu/pub/ (tierra, almond,
- beagle, etc.)
-
- UK's Evolutionary-Computation mailing list
- o Admin details: <evolutionary-computing-request@mailbase.ac.uk>
-
- GANN: Genetic Algorithms and Neural Networks
- This list will focus on the use of EVOLUTIONARY ALGORITHMs (GENETIC
- ALGORITHMs, GENETIC PROGRAMMING and their variants) in the
- EXPLORATION of the design space of (artificial) neural network
- architectures and algorithms. The list will be semi-moderated to
- keep the signal to noise ratio as high as possible. (This list was
- formerly known as the neuro-evolution e-mail list.)
-
- o Admin requests/enquiries: gann-request@cs.iastate.edu
-
- o Subscription requests to the admin address with Subject:
- subscribe
-
- gattbl: Timetabling mailing list
- This group is for people using GAs and other techniques for exam or
- course scheduling for academic institutions. To subscribe, send email
- to <ttp-request@cs.nott.ac.uk>.
-
- Evolutionary Models in the Social Sciences
- See Q10.8 for details.
-
- Genetic Algorithms in Production Scheduling
- The GASched list is for discussion of the use of GENETIC ALGORITHMs
- on Production Scheduling Problems (only). Possible subjects for the
- list include: GAs for job-shop scheduling theory, GAs for practical
- problem solving in industry, problem representation within the GA,
- combinatorial optimisation techniques for scheduling problems,
- results & effects of GA-based systems working in industry, techniques
- for improving performance, problem data, or any other burning issues
- which come into GAs for production scheduling.
-
- A full introduction can be obtained by mailing
- <listproc@sheffield.ac.uk> with no subject line and 'info
- gascheduling' in the body of the message.
-
- To subscribe to the list, email <listproc@sheffield.ac.uk> with the
- body of the message containing 'subscribe gascheduling YOUR NAME'.
- Please dont include anything else in the message, and leave the
- subject empty. For help on how to use the automated software, and
- some other commands which may be available in future, mail
- <listproc@sheffield.ac.uk> with 'HELP' in the body of your message,
- and no subject line.
-
- For non-standard administration requests, or if you are having
- problems with the automated address, please email: <gascheduling-
- request@sheffield.ac.uk> These messages will be dealt with manually,
- and so may take a couple of days for a response.
-
- There is also a related Web site at:
- http://www.shef.ac.uk/~gaipp/index.html
-
- Autopoiesis
- There is an Autopoiesis Email List for the discussion of the theory
- of Autopoiesis of H. Maturana and F. Varela. Autopoiesis means self-
- production and concerns self-organizing systems.
-
- To join send a message containing the text: SUB AUTOPOIESIS to
- <listserv@think.net>
-
- To see what other systems and philosophy lists exist at this site
- send the message: HELP instead.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q15.3: What online information repositories are there?
-
- Many research institutes have online repositories of information
- which my be retrieved using FTP or HTTP (World Wide Web).
-
- NOTE: See also Q14 above.
-
- ENCORE
- ENCORE (The EvolutioNary COmputation REpository network) is a
- collection of FTP servers/World Wide Web sites providing a wealth of
- information in the area of EC, from technical reports, copies of
- journal articles, down to source code for various EAs. ENCORE acts
- as a distributor of much material generated at research institutes
- (and other places) which don't necessarily have their own FTP
- servers.
-
- Each node of Encore is referred to as an "EClair". There are numerous
- nodes around the world, all carrying copies of the same information.
- The sites may be accessed using FTP or WWW browsers. Sites offering
- HTTP access are the best to use if using a WWW browser. They include:
-
- o UUnet Deutschland GmbH (Germany): http://surf.de.uu.net/encore/
-
- o The University of Granada (Spain):
- http://krypton.ugr.es/~encore/
-
- o The University of Birmingham (UK)
- http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/Mirrors/ftp.de.uu.net/EC/clife/
-
- o The Santa Fe Institute (USA):
- http://alife.santafe.edu/~joke/encore/
-
- o The Chinese University of Hong Kong:
- http://www.cs.cuhk.hk/pub/EC/Welcome.html
-
- Other sites offer FTP access (slow if using WWW). If using FTP, omit
- the initial "ftp://" and the final "Welcome.html" in the file
- specification in order to access the top-level directory. The FTP
- sites include:
-
- o Technical University of Berlin (Germany): ftp://ftp-
- bionik.fb10.tu-berlin.de/pub/EC/Welcome.html
-
- o Ecole Polytechnique, Palaiseau (France):
- ftp://blanche.polytechnique.fr/pub/eark/EC/Welcome.html
-
- o The University of Oviedo (Spain):
- ftp://zeus.etsimo.uniovi.es/pub/EC/Welcome.html
-
- o The Santa Fe Institute (USA): ftp://alife.santafe.edu/pub/USER-
- AREA/EC/Welcome.html
-
- o The California Institute of Technology (USA):
- ftp://ftp.krl.caltech.edu/pub/EC/Welcome.html
-
- o Wayne State University, Detroit (USA):
- ftp://ftp.cs.wayne.edu/pub/EC/Welcome.html
-
- o The Michigan State University, East Lansing (USA):
- ftp://ftp.egr.msu.edu/pub/EC/Welcome.html
-
- o The Chinese University of Hong Kong:
- ftp://ftp.cs.cuhk.hk/pub/EC/Welcome.html
-
- o University of Cape Town (South Africa):
- ftp://ftp.uct.ac.za/pub/mirrors/EC/Welcome.html
-
- o Center of Technological Education of Parana, Curitiba (Brazil):
- ftp://ftp.cefetpr.br/pub/EC/Welcome.html
-
- Well worth getting is "The Navigator's Guide to ENCORE", a handbook
- to this service, in file:
-
- o handbook/encore.ps.gz (A4 paper) or
-
- o handbook/encore-US.ps.gz (US letter size paper).
-
- Encore is administered by Joerg Heitkoetter <joke@de.uu.net>.
-
- The Santa Fe Institute
- The Santa Fe Institute Studies in the Sciences of Complexity (SFI)
- issues a recommended series: SFI Studies in the Science of
- Complexity, published by Addison Wesley and maintains a well-sorted
- FTP server with EC related material.
-
- o Admin requests: <ftp@santafe.edu>
-
- o Anonymous FTP archive: ftp.santafe.edu/pub/
- Information on SUMMERSCHOOLs held by the SFI can be obtained from:
- Santa Fe Institute, 1399 Hyde Park Road, Santa Fe, NM 87501, USA.
-
- The Australian National University (ANU)
- The Bioinformatics facility at Australian National University has set
- up an anonymous FTP server, that contains EC related material,
- maintained by David G. Green.
-
- o Admin requests: <david.green@anu.edu.au>
-
- o Anonymous FTP archive: life.anu.edu.au/pub/complex_systems/alife/
-
- o World Wide Web: The hypermedia server offers introductory
- tutorials, preprints and papers online. The URL for this service
- is http://complex.csu.edu.au/complex or link via the servers home
- page http://life.anu.edu.au/
-
- LGI laboratory, Grenoble, France
- Research into Parallel GENETIC ALGORITHMs: papers (technical reports,
- conference and journal articles, theses, monographies, etc...)
- written by members of the SYMPA team are available by FTP from
-
- o imag.fr/pub/SYMPA/
-
- Their adress is: SYMPA/LGI - Institut IMAG, BP 53 38041 Grenoble
- Cedex, FRANCE <muntean@imag.fr>
-
- The University of Alabama, Department of Computer Science
- A number of papers and preprints are available in compressed
- Postscript form by FTP from the Univ. of Alabama (Tuscaloosa) from
- aramis.cs.ua.edu/pub/tech-reports/ The naming convention for files
- is: (author's last name).(journal name).ps . Maintained by Dr. Ron
- Sun <rsun@athos.cs.ua.edu>
-
- CMU Artificial Intelligence Repository
- Holds more than a gigabyte of software, publications, and other
- materials of interest to AI researchers, educators, students, and
- practitioners. The AI Programming Languages and the AI Software
- Packages sections of the repository can be accessed in the lang/ and
- areas/ subdirectories. Other directories, which are in varying states
- of completion, are events/ and pubs/ (Publications, including
- technical reports, books, mail/news archives).
-
- The AI Programming Languages section includes directories for Common
- Lisp, Prolog, Scheme, Smalltalk, and other AI-related programming
- languages. The AI Software Packages section includes subdirectories
- for: alife/ (ARTIFICIAL LIFE), anneal/ (Simulated Annealing),
- genetic/ (GENETIC ALGORITHMs etc., including benchmarks and test
- problems) and many more.
-
- The AI Repository is accessible by FTP at: ftp.cs.cmu.edu/user/ai/
- (Be sure to read the files 0.doc and readme.txt in this directory)
- and by WWW at: http://www.cs.cmu.edu/Groups/AI/html/repository.html
- It is also available on CD-ROM (See Q10.10).
-
- The MSU Genetic Algorithms Research and Applications Group (GARAGe)
- GARAGe has a number of interesting projects, both in terms of GA and
- GP fundamental research and in GA/GP applications including:
- parallelization of GAs/GPs; multiple POPULATION topologies and
- interchange methodologies; scheduling applications, including
- sponsored research on job-floor scheduling; design applications,
- including sponsored research on composite material design;
- configuration applications, particularly physics applications of
- optimal molecule configurations for particular systems like C60
- (buckyballs) and others.
-
- Information on GARAGe research projects is available by WWW at the
- URL: http://GARAGe.cps.msu.edu
-
- School of Cognitive and Computing Sciences, University of Sussex
- The Evolutionary and Adaptive Systems Group in COGS does a
- significant amount of research in the area of GAs and Neural Networks
- and modeling the process of biological development. For purposes of
- artificial EVOLUTION, many at COGS see this as the major issue to be
- tackled. For general info about the group, consult the WWW server
- at: http://www.cogs.susx.ac.uk/lab/adapt/index.html
-
- The Navy Center for Applied Research in Artificial Intelligence
- The Navy Center for Applied Research in ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
- (NCARAI) is conducting basic research in the analysis of GAs and
- other EVOLUTIONARY ALGORITHMs. GAs are being applied to the learning
- of strategies and behaviors for autonomous vehicles, and for
- adaptively testing complex systems such as vehicle controllers. You
- will find description of projects, researchers, and downloadable
- papers at URL http://www.aic.nrl.navy.mil/ in addition to other
- information. The GA-digest and the GENETIC ALGORITHMs Archive are
- maintained at NCARAI. See Q15.1, "Genetic Algorithms Digest", for
- more information.
-
- Case Western Reserve University
- A WWW home page is available for the CWRU Autonomous Agents Research
- Group at: http://yuggoth.ces.cwru.edu/
-
- The group, led by Randall Beer, conducts interdisciplinary research
- in the departments of Computer Engineering and Science, Biology,
- Mechanical Engineering, and Systems Engineering. This research
- includes work in EVOLUTIONARY ALGORITHMs, mobile robotics, and
- computational biology. The aim is to study the mechanisms that can
- produce adaptive behavior in animals and ROBOTs.
-
- Currently available are Postscript versions of a number of our
- research papers (in particular, those related to mobile robotics,
- evolving recurrent neural networks, and computational models of
- development), an HTML version of a paper on computational development
- which appeared in ALIFE IV, and images of the robots used in our
- research.
-
- Comments to <yamauchi@alpha.ces.cwru.edu>
-
- Genetic Algorithms Group, George Mason University
- Members of the research group are working on a variety of projects
- including GA theory, coevolutionary algorithms, decentralized GAs,
- representation issues, evolutionary microeconomics, the application
- of GAs to molecular biology, and GA-based machine learning. There is
- an online publications list that contains links to PostScript copies
- of many of their published papers. A WWW home page is available at:
- http://www.cs.gmu.edu/research/gag/
-
- The Complexity and Artificial-Life Research Concept
- Includes a whole load of information on the topics of complexity,
- artificial-life, GAs, NNs, cellular automata, nonlinear science,
- fractals, self-organisation, evolution, and more. Visit:
- http://www.calresco.force9.co.uk
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Q15.4: What relevant newsgroups and FAQs are there?
-
- Besides the obvious comp.ai.genetic there exist some other newsgroups
- that sometimes carry EC related topics:
-
- o comp.ai (FAQ in news.answers , comp.answers )
-
- o comp.ai.digest
-
- o comp.ai.fuzzy (FAQ in news.answers , comp.answers )
-
- o comp.ai.jair.announce (FAQ in news.answers , comp.answers )
-
- o comp.ai.jair.papers (PostScript papers of the Journal of AI
- Research, published by Morgan Kaufmann <morgan@unix.sri.com>) [eds
- note: this is the first journal that's completely published on
- USENET first, and later in paper form; read the jair-faq, that's
- posted to the announcement group to find out how to submit your
- papers, get JAIR papers by FTP, Gopher or e-mail, etc.]
-
- o comp.ai.neural-nets (FAQ in news.answers , comp.answers )
-
- o comp.robotics (FAQ in news.answers , comp.answers )
-
- o comp.theory.cell-automata (FAQ in
- http://alife.santafe.edu/alife/topics/cas/ca-faq/ca-faq.html )
-
- o comp.theory.dynamic-sys (no FAQ)
-
- o comp.theory.self-org-sys (no FAQ)
-
- o sci.bio.evolution (no FAQ as such, but there is an archive of
- interesting material, accessible via WWW at
- http://www.cqs.washington.edu/~evolution )
-
- o sci.math.num-analysis (some FAQs in news.answers , comp.answers )
-
- o sci.op-research (some FAQs in news.answers , comp.answers )
-
- o talk.origins (discusses origins of life, EVOLUTION, etc. FTP
- repository index at ics.uci.edu/pub/origins/Index -- see Q10.7 for
- more details.)
-
- ------------------------------
- Subject: Q15.5: What about all these Internet Services?
-
- The Internet supports a variety of on-line services, and a number of
- tools are available to enable people to make good use of these,
- including: telnet, FTP, gopher, veronica, archie, Wide Area
- Information Servers (WAIS), and the World-Wide Web (WWW).
-
- Information about using Internet is available from a number of
- sources, many accesible on-line, via email or FTP. For example, the
- EFF (Electronic Frontier Foundation) publishes two guides for novices
- on all the Internet has to offer, by Adam Gaffin and Joerg
- Heitkoetter (see below). These are avaiable over the net.
-
- To receive a short guide to using anonymous FTP, send e-mail with the
- text "help" to <info@sunsite.unc.edu>.
-
- If you dont have FTP access, you can retrieve documents using the
- FTP-by-email service. The "ftpmail" service is installed on several
- sites to allow transmission of FTPable files from almost anywhere. To
- get the PostScript version of this FAQ from ENCORE, (See Q15.3) for
- example, send a message to (for example) <ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com>
- containing the lines:
- reply <your-own-e-mail-address-here>
- connect alife.santafe.edu
- get pub/USER-AREA/EC/FAQ/hhgtec.ps.gz
- quit
- where <your-e-mail-address> is e.g. foo@bar.edu
-
- FTPmail sites available are listed below. Use one that is near you
- for best performance.
-
- (USA) <ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com>
- <ftpmail@sunsite.unc.edu>
- <bitftp@pucc.princeton.edu>
-
- (Europe) <bitftp@dearn> or to <bitftp@vm.gmd.de>
- <ftpmail@ftp.uni-stuttgart.de>
- <ftpmail@ftp.inf.tu-dresden.de>
- <ftpmail@grasp.insa-lyon.fr>
- <bitftp@plearn.edu.pl>
- <ftpmail@doc.ic.ak.uk>
-
- Documents from the archive at <rtfm.mit.edu> can be retrieved
- similarly by sending email to <mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu>, containing
- a message such as:
-
- send usenet/news.answers/index
- send usenet/news.answers/ai-faq/genetic/part1
- quit
-
- References
-
- Kehoe, B.P. (1992) "Zen and the Art of the Internet: A Beginner's
- Guide to the Internet", 2nd Edition (July). Prentice Hall, Englewood
- Cliffs, NJ. 112 pages. The 1st Edition, (February) is available in
- PostScript format via anonymous FTP from ftp.cs.widener.edu: and many
- other Internet archives.
-
- Krol, E. (1992) "The Whole Internet: Catalog & User's Guide".
- O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., Sebastopol, CA. 376 pages.
-
- LaQuey, T. and J.C. Ryer (1992) "The Internet Companion: A Beginner's
- Guide to Global Networking". Addison-Wesley Publishing Co., Reading,
- MA. 208 pages.
-
- Smith, Una R. (1993) "A Biologist's Guide to Internet Resources."
- USENET sci.answers FTP and e-mail from many archives, eg.
- rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/sci.answers/biology/guide/part?
-
- Gaffin, A. (1994) "Everybody's Guide to the Internet." Published by
- the EFF and MIT Press. $14.95. ISBN 9-780262-67105-7. This book is
- available in ASCII by sending e-mail to <netguide@eff.org>; you'll
- receive the book split into several pieces; for a more elaborate
- version of the guide see the following entry.
-
- Gaffin, A. with Heitkoetter, J. (1994) "EFF's (Extended) Guide to the
- Internet: A round trip through Global Networks, Life in Cyberspace,
- and Everything...", aka `eegtti.texi'. This is available from
- ftp.eff.org/pub/Net_info/Net_Guide/Other_versions/ (Texinfo, ASCII,
- HTML, DVI and PostScript). A README file gives more information.
- The hypertext (HTML) version can be browsed at:
- http://surf.de.uu.net/bookland/inet/joke/eegtti/eegtti.html Or see
- http://www.eff.org/
-
- The EARN Association (May 1993) "A Guide to Network Resource Tools",
- available via e-mail from <listserv@EARNCC.bitnet>, by sending the
- message "get nettools ps" (PostScript) or "get nettools memo" (plain
- text).
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Copyright (c) 1993-2000 by J. Heitkoetter and D. Beasley, all rights
- reserved.
-
- This FAQ may be posted to any USENET newsgroup, on-line service, or
- BBS as long as it is posted in its entirety and includes this
- copyright statement. This FAQ may not be distributed for financial
- gain. This FAQ may not be included in commercial collections or
- compilations without express permission from the author.
-
- End of ai-faq/genetic/part4
- ***************************
-
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