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A Field to Dynamical Recurrent (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R5,628
Discovery Miles 56 280
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A Field to Dynamical Recurrent (Hardcover)
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"FIELD GUIDE TO DYNAMICAL RECURRENT NETWORKS Acquire the tools for
understanding new architectures and algorithms of dynamical
recurrent networks (DRNs) from this valuable field guide, which
documents recent forays into artificial intelligence, control
theory, and connectionism. This unbiased introduction to DRNs and
their application to time-series problems (such as classification
and prediction) provides a comprehensive overview of the recent
explosion of leading research in this prolific field. A Field Guide
to Dynamical Recurrent Networks emphasizes the issues driving the
development of this class of network structures. It provides a
solid foundation in DRN systems theory and practice using
consistent notation and terminology. Theoretical presentations are
supplemented with applications ranging from cognitive modeling to
financial forecasting. A Field Guide to Dynamical Recurrent
Networks will enable engineers, research scientists, academics, and
graduate students to apply DRNs to various real-world problems and
learn about different areas of active research. It provides both
state-of-the-art information and a road map to the future of
cutting-edge dynamical recurrent networks. About the Editors John
F. Kolen has explored the computational capabilities of dynamical
recurrent networks on a wide range of projects: computer tomography
of ballistic tests, autonomous science on extraterrestrial sensor
platforms, and laser marksmanship modeling. His research interests
include neural networks, distributed processing, philosophy of
computation, and computer gaming. Dr. Kolen is a member of the
Institute for Human and Machine Cognition at the University of West
Florida. Stefan C. Kremer's research interests include
connectionist networks (the subject of his 1996 thesis A Theory of
Grammatical Induction in the Connectionist Paradigm), genetic
algorithms, signal processing, grammar induction, and image
processing. He is an assistant professor of computing and
information science at the University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada,
and is a founding member of the Guelph Natural Computation Research
Group."
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