perm filename AIMWOR.SAT[NET,KMC] blob sn#156993 filedate 1975-04-29 generic text, type T, neo UTF8
			      * Schedule *

			      First Annual
			      AIM WORKSHOP

			    General Session
			Saturday, June 14, 1975

Morning Session:

8:30 - 9:00	Registration.
9:00 - 9:15	Introduction to the Workshop.
		(S. Amarel, Rutgers University)

	I.  KNOWLEDGE-BASED SYSTEMS IN MEDICINE

9:15 - 9:40	MYCIN: Antimicrobial Therapy Consultation System
		(E. Shortliffe, Stanford Univ.).
9:40 - 10:05	DIALOG: Diagnostic Logic System in Internal Medicine
		(H. Pople, Univ. of Pittsburgh).
10:05 - 10:30	Model-based Systems for Consultation:
		CASNET (Causal-Associational Network Systems)
		and other approaches (C. Kulikowski, Rutgers Univ.).
10:30 - 10:50	Break.
10:50 - 11:15	Analyzing and Simulating the Present Illness
		(G. A. Gorry, M.I.T.).
11:15 - 11:55	Panel Discussion:
		Medical Perspectives of AIM Systems.
		(A. Safir, Mt. Sinai School of Medicine - Moderator).

Lunch:

12:00 - 1:40

Afternoon Session:

	II. KNOWLEDGE-BASED SYSTEMS IN PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY

1:45 - 2:10	PARRY: Improving a Simulation of Paranoid Thought
		Processes. (K. Colby, U.C.L.A.).
2:10 - 2:35	BELIEVER: Belief Systems Interpretation
		(C. Schmidt, Rutgers Univ.).

	III. KNOWLEDGE-BASED SYSTEMS IN BIOCHEMISTRY & CHEMISTRY

2:35 - 3:00	CONGEN: Constrained Generation of Chemical Structures.
		(B. Buchanan, Stanford Univ.).
3:00 - 3:25	SECS: Organic Synthesis System (T. Wipke, Princeton Univ.).
3:25 - 3:50	Protein Crystallography System
		(R. Engelmore, Stanford Univ.).
3:50 - 4:05	Break.

	IV. OVERVIEW OF SYSTEMS AND METHODOLOGY

4:00 - 4:45	Panel Discussion on Artificial Intelligence
		Methodology in Medicine, Psychology, and
		Biochemistry.  Comparative review of systems
		and future problems and perspectives.
		(E. Feigenbaum, Stanford Univ. - Moderator.)
4:45 - 5:25	Panel Discussion on Shared Resources 
		and Computer Networking.
		(W. Baker, BRB, National Institutes of Health -
		 Moderator)
Dinner:

5:30 - 7:00

Evening Session:

7:00 - 9:00	Informal demonstration of systems to interested
		participants.