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Several formerly independent trends including the in creasing rate
of technological change, the demand for greater efficiency and
productivity in R&D and innovation, and the need for applying
technology to the solution of pressing social and economic problems
have recently begun to reinforce each other resulting in renewed
interest in technology trans fer activities and research. The
proliferation of research efforts in the U. S. and Western Europe,
increased corporate and governmental efforts to develop mechanisms
and incentives for transfer and the growing closeness between
transfer and innovation studies led to the decision to convene a
meeting with representatives from both research and practice in
trans fer and innovation in order to establish a "state-of-the-art"
baseline and to promote discussion between the researchers and
practioners from all sectors in the hope that new research will
better reflect the realities of current practice and new mechanisms
created by practioners might be improved through the use of
knowledge generated from research. How close we came~to the second
goal is a question which must be left to the fut~re. The
proceedings which follow re flect the first goal. If the papers and
conclusions occasional ly appear to be contradictory or repetitive,
or naive, or over ly pessimistic or simply based upon too narrow a
base or re search or experience, they are an accurate reflection of
both the state-of-the-art and the lack of communications among in
dividuals and organizations involved in similar activities.
Dr. Lester A. Gerhardt Professor and Chairman Electrical, Computer,
and Systems Engineering Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Troy, New
York 12180 This book is a collection of papers on the subject of
Robotics and Artificial Intelligence. Most of the papers contained
herein were presented as part of the program of the NATO Advanced
Study Institute held in June 1983 at Castel vecchio Pascoli, Italy
on the same subject. Attendance at this two week Institute was by
invitation only, drawing people internationally representing
industry, government and the academic community worldwide. Many of
the people in attendance, as well as those presenting papers, are
recognized leaders in the field. In addition to the formal paper
presentations, there were several informal work shops. These
included a workshop on sensing, a workshop on educational
methodology in the subject area, as examples. This book is an
outgrowth and direct result of that Institute and includes the
papers presented as well as a few others which were stimulated by
that meeting. A special note is the paper entitled
"State-of-the-Art and Predictions for Artificial Intelligence and
Robotics" by Dr. R. Nagel which appears in the Introduction and
Overview chapter of this book. This paper was originally developed
as part of a study for the United States Army performed by the
National Research Council of the National Academy of Science and
published as part of a report entitled "Applications of Robotics
and Artificial Intelligence to Reduce Risk and Improve
Effectiveness" by National Academy Press in 1983."
An Advanced Study Institute on Ultrasonics in Medical Diagnosis was
held in Milan, Italy, from 10 to 15 June 1974. This ASI was of a
short five-day duration and limited to cardiac diagnosis by ultra
sound only. Since that time, the field of diagnostic imaging in
medicine has literally exploded with new and improved means of
medical diagnosis such as computed tomography, microwaves, nuclear
magnetic resonance and other sophisticated techniques. These
developments have enabled medical practitioners to make diagnoses
with a minimum of danger to the patient, and a maximum of accuracy
never before possible, and represent a multi-quantum advance over
the early state-of-the-art presented at the 1974 ASI. Since then,
several meetings have taken place on these individual topics to
bring together experts who presented their latest research results,
but none have discussed the entire field of diagnostic imaging in
medicine in one meeting nor have they had the teaching character of
an Advanced Study Institute. The art and science of medicine have
been altered repeatedly during the eight year interval since the
last ASI. Today's clinician must be part technologist and must be
enough of an investigator to understand and appreciate the
scientific method. The current complex advances in instrumentation
and pharmacology have had a marked effect on how medicine is
practiced. There was, therefore, an urgent need to bring the entire
field of imaging in medicine to one teaching podium where the many
advances of the last six or seven years could be reviewed.
Technology transfer has a long history, but only recently has it
become the subject of study and action. The rapid rate of
scientific and technical advance in both Europe and the United
States and the existence of large technology gaps among nations has
brought the importance of the process into sharper focus, and has c
used technology transfer to have implications for countless aspects
of both national and international develop ment. Technology
transfer has been variously defined as: the process of information
transfer between science, technology and actual utilization of
scientific data and ideas, to wit: production of goods and
services; the process by which science and technology are diffused
throughout human activity; the transfer of research results into
operations; the process by which technical information originating
in one setting is adapted for use in another setting. Collectively,
these and other definitions share a common theme which
characterizes the process as one of bringing technology i'ilto
widespread use in solving mankind's problems in the shortest
practical time. The first NATO Advanced Study Institute (ASI) on
Technology Transfer in July, 1973, brought together many of the
individuals dealing with quantitative data, based on empirical
research. This conference had both the advantages and disadvantages
of a somewhat detached point of view. The ASI also had lectures
contributed by representatives from government agencies and
corporations (and a few university-based scholars) who had been
active as practitioners or consultants in policy-making and
organizational design for technology transfer."
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