Skip to main content
guest
Join
|
Help
|
Sign In
chessprogramming
Home
guest
|
Join
|
Help
|
Sign In
Wiki Home
Recent Changes
Pages and Files
Members
Home
Basics
Getting Started
Board Representation
Search
Evaluation
Principle Topics
Chess
Programming
Artificial Intelligence
Knowledge
Learning
Testing
Tuning
User Interface
Protocols
Dictionary
Lists
Arts
Cartoons
CC Forums
Conferences
Dedicated CC
Engines
Games
Hardware
History
Organizations
Papers
People
Periodical
Samples
Software
Timeline
Tournaments and Matches
Videos
Misc
Acknowledgments
On New Pages
Recommended Reading
Wikispaces Help
Alan H. Bond
Edit
1
15
…
4
Tags
mathematician
people
researcher
robots
Notify
RSS
Backlinks
Source
Print
Export (PDF)
Home
*
People
* Alan H. Bond
Alan Hale Bond
(October 18, 1940),
a British American physicist, electrical engineer, computer scientist, AI researcher, and
neuroscientist
at
Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior
,
University of California, Los Angeles
, California, and as president of
Expert Software, Inc.
[1]
working on theory, design, development, and implementation of
Artificial Intelligence
,
Logic programming
, and Brain models for every occasion
[2]
.
Alan Bond received the B.A. in
Physics
in 1961 and the M.A. degree in 1966 from
Magdalen College, Oxford
and the Ph.D. in
Theoretical Physics
from
Imperial College London
[3]
. Since then he had various research and lecturer positions in the UK and US, beside others at
Carnegie Mellon University
and
Queen Mary, University of London
[4]
. He was tutor and advisor of
John J. Scott
, an early British computer chess programmer, and was along with
Alex Bell
supporter and promoter of early
Computer Chess Conferences
, the forerunner of
Advances in Computer Chess
[5]
.
Alan H. Bond
[6]
Table of Contents
Photos
Selected Publications
1968
1970 ...
1980 ...
1990 ...
2000 ...
External Links
Books
Other Alan Bonds
References
What links here?
Photos
Alan Bond at
Pittsburgh Zoo
: 1966
[7]
Selected Publications
[8]
[9]
1968
Alan H. Bond
(
1968
).
Interactive Programming at Carnegie Tech
. Artificial Intelligence 3,
Literature: Reports
hosted by
Atlas Computer Laboratory
Alan H. Bond
,
Jerry Rightnour
,
L. Steven Coles
(
1969
).
An Interactive Graphical Display Monitor in a Batch-processing Environment with Remote Entry
.
Communications of the ACM
, Vol. 12, No. 11,
pdf
1970 ...
Alan H. Bond
(
1973
).
A Descriptor Indexed Bibliography of Computer Chess
. in
Alex Bell
(ed.) (
1973
).
Computer Chess
. Proceedings
May 1973 Meeting on chess playing by computer
. Science Research Council,
Atlas Computer Laboratory
Alan H. Bond
(
1973
).
Psychology and Computer Chess
. in
Alex Bell
(ed.) (
1973
).
Computer Chess
. Proceedings
May 1973 Meeting on chess playing by computer
. Science Research Council,
Atlas Computer Laboratory
Alan H. Bond
(
1979
).
An Approach to Artificial Intelligence
.
pdf
1980 ...
Alan H. Bond
,
David H. Mott
(
1981
).
Learning of Sensory-Motor Schemas in a Mobile Robot
.
IJCAI 1981
,
pdf
Alan H. Bond
,
David H. Mott
(
1985
).
An investigation of a learning system with a mobile robot
.
Queen Mary, University of London
,
pdf
Alan H. Bond
(
1987
).
Broadcasting Arrays - A Highly Parallel Computer Architecture Suitable For Easy Fabrication
.
pdf
1990 ...
Alan H. Bond
(
1990
).
What I have in Mind
.
draft as pdf
Alan H. Bond
(
1996
).
A Computational Architecture for Social Agents
.
pdf
Alan H. Bond
(
1999
).
A system model of the primate neocortex
.
Neurocomputing
, vol 26-27, pp. 617-623,
pdf
[10]
2000 ...
Alan H. Bond
(
2004
).
A Computational Model for the Primate Brain based on its Functional Architecture
.
Journal of Theoretical Biology
, vol 227, pp. 81-102,
pdf
Alan H. Bond
(
2005
).
Representing episodic memory in a system-level model of the brain
.
Neurocomputing
, vol 65-66, pp. 261-273,
pdf
Alan H. Bond
(
2007
).
BAD, a Declarative Logic-Based Language for Brain Modeling
. PADL 2007: 200-214
External Links
Expert Software home page
Alan Bond's home page
The Mathematics Genealogy Project - Alan Bond
Books
allbookstores: Alan H. Bond: Books
Amazon.com: Alan H. Bond: Books
Other Alan Bonds
from
Wikipedia
:
Alan Bond (businessman)
Alan Bond (rocket developer)
References
^
Expert Software Inc - Santa Monica, California (CA) | Company Profile
^
Expert Software home page
^
NSF bio
^
Alan Bond. Curriculum Vitae
^
Alex Bell
(
1978
).
MASTER at IFIPS
. Excerpt from: The Machine Plays Chess? from
Atlas Computer Laboratory
, hosted by
Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (RAL)
^
Alan Bond's home page
^
Alan H. Bond (
1968
).
Interactive Programming at Carnegie Tech
. Artificial Intelligence 3,
Literature: Reports
hosted by
Atlas Computer Laboratory
^
Alan Bond's publications page
^
DBLP: Alan H. Bond
^
Neocortex from Wikipedia
What links here?
Page
Date Edited
Advances in Computer Chess 1
Oct 22, 2015
Alan H. Bond
Oct 7, 2014
Artificial Intelligence
Apr 9, 2018
Carnegie Mellon University
Feb 12, 2018
CMU Chess Program
Oct 6, 2014
Cognition
Dec 8, 2017
John J. Scott
Aug 30, 2016
Joseph S. Rubenfeld
Oct 6, 2014
L. Stephen Coles
Jan 5, 2017
Mathematician
Apr 9, 2018
Memory
Dec 8, 2017
People
Feb 28, 2018
Queen Mary, University of London
Jul 12, 2017
Robots
Feb 20, 2018
Sequential Logic
May 10, 2017
Up one level
Javascript Required
You need to enable Javascript in your browser to edit pages.
help on how to format text
Turn off "Getting Started"
Home
...
Loading...
a British American physicist, electrical engineer, computer scientist, AI researcher, and neuroscientist at Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, University of California, Los Angeles, California, and as president of Expert Software, Inc. [1] working on theory, design, development, and implementation of Artificial Intelligence, Logic programming, and Brain models for every occasion [2].
Alan Bond received the B.A. in Physics in 1961 and the M.A. degree in 1966 from Magdalen College, Oxford and the Ph.D. in Theoretical Physics from Imperial College London [3] . Since then he had various research and lecturer positions in the UK and US, beside others at Carnegie Mellon University and Queen Mary, University of London [4] . He was tutor and advisor of John J. Scott, an early British computer chess programmer, and was along with Alex Bell supporter and promoter of early Computer Chess Conferences, the forerunner of Advances in Computer Chess [5] .
Table of Contents
Photos
Selected Publications
[8] [9]1968
1970 ...
1980 ...
1990 ...
2000 ...
External Links
Books
Other Alan Bonds
from Wikipedia:References
What links here?
Up one level