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New Generation Computing, Volume 3, 1985
Volume 3, Number 1, 1985
- Gordon Bell:
On Declaring and Reaching the Fifth Generation by 1990. 1-2 - Takayasu Ito:
A Step Towards Complementary Programming. 3-13 - Noriyoshi Ito, Hajime Shimizu, Masasuke Kishi, Eiji Kuno, Kazuaki Rokusawa:
Data-flow Based Execution Mechanisms of Parallel and Concurrent Prolog. 15-41 - John S. Conery, Dennis F. Kibler:
AND Parallelism and Nondeterminism in Logic Programs. 43-70 - Paul J. Voda:
A View of Programming Languages as Symbiosis of Meaning and Computations. 71-100 - W. F. Clocksin:
Design and Simulation of a Sequential Prolog Machine. 101-120 - Akira Kikuchi:
Opening of the International Conference on Fifth Generation Computer Systems 1984. 121-124
Volume 3, Number 2, 1985
- Hajime Enomoto:
Knowledge and Service. 129-130 - Kohei Noshita, Teruo Hikita:
The BC-chain Method for Representing Combinators in Linear Space. 131-144 - Akikazu Takeuchi, Koichi Furukawa:
Bounded Buffer Communication in Concurrent Prolog. 145-155 - J. Ross Quinlan:
Internal Consistency in Plausible Reasoning Systems. 157-180 - David F. Bailsford, R. James Duckworth:
The MUSE Machine - an Architecture for Structured Data Flow Computation. 181-195 - Rikio Onai, Moritoshi Aso, Hajime Shimizu, Kanae Masuda, Akira Matsumoto:
Architecture of a Reduction-Based Parallel Inference Machine: PIM-R. 197-228
Volume 3, Number 3, 1985
- Bernard A. Galler:
A View of Artificial Intelligence. 235-236 - Esen A. Ozkarahan:
Evolution and Implementation of the RAP Database Machine. 237-271 - Gerald Gazdar, Geoffrey K. Pullum:
Computationally Relavant Properties of Natural Languages and Thier Grammar. 271-306 - Yuzuru Tanaka:
A VLSI Algorithm for Sorting Variable-Length Character Strings. 307-328
Volume 3, Number 4, 1985
- Toshiyuki Sakai:
Intelligent Sensor. 339-340 - Fumio Mizoguchi, Koichi Furukawa:
Guest Editors' Preface. 341-344 - Stanley J. Rosenschein:
Formal Theories of Knowledge in AI and Robotics. 345-357 - Kenneth A. Bowen:
Meta-Level Programming and Knowledge Representation. 359-383 - Randy Goebel:
The Design and Implementation of DLOG, a Prolog-based Knowledge Representation System. 385-401 - Setsuo Ohsuga, Hiroyuki Yamauchi:
Multi-Layer Logic - A Predicate Logic Including Data Structure as Knowledge Representation Language. 403-439 - Kuniaki Mukai, Hideki Yasukawa:
Complex Indeterminates in Prolog and its Application of Discorse Models. 441-466 - Yoav Shoham:
Ten Requirements for a Theory of Change. 467-477 - Mitsuru Ishizuka, Naoki Kanai:
Prolog-ELP Incorporating Fuzzy Logic. 479-486
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