Browsing Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab (CSAIL) by Issue Date

Now showing items 81-100 of 2625

  • SCPLOT BIN 

    Unknown author (1966-10-01)
    This program will take a list of display instructions and cause it to be plotted. For further or more detailed information consult with Michael Speciner.

  • CHAR PLOT 

    Unknown author (1966-10-01)
    CHAR PLOT is a routine which enables one to use the Calcomp plotter as an output typewriter. This program is stored as CHPLOT BIN [English CHAR PLOT]. In use a code, representing a character of command as defined in Appendix ...

  • Hardware Memo - Input Multiplexer Status 

    Unknown author (1966-10-01)
    Note: Computer control of Input Multiplexer and Output Sample and Hold is available when clock and test switches on the I/O box are in "Computer Input" and "Computer Output" positions, respectively. Manual operation of the ...

  • A Description of the CNTOUR Program 

    Unknown author (1966-11-01)
    The CNTOUR program plots an intensity relief map of an image which is read from the vidisector camera (TV-B). It may be used as a general purpose aiming, monitoring and focusing program, especially for high-contrast images, ...

  • Program Memo about EYE 

    Unknown author (1966-12-01)
    EYE is a program (on the Vision System tape with the name EYE BALL) which displays on the 340 field of view of the vidisector. The program is controlled by the light pen, which selects various modes and options; and by the ...

  • PDP-6 Software Update 

    Unknown author (1967-01-01)
    Conventions of this memo- Most numbers written in Arabic numerals are octal while all those written out in English are decimal. Underlying a character and immediately preceding it with a vertical bar indicates the character ...

  • A Primitive Recognizer of Figures in a Scene 

    Unknown author (1967-01-01)
    Given a scene, as seen for instance from a T.V. camera or a picture, it is desired to analyze it to organize, differentiate and identify desired objects or classes of objects (i.e., patterns) in it. The present report ...

  • Linearly Unrecognizable Patterns 

    Unknown author (1967-01-01)
    The central theme of this study is the classification of certain geometrical properties according to the type of computation necessary to determine whether a given figure has them.

  • Symbolic Mathematical Laboratory 

    Unknown author (1967-01-01)
    A large computer program has been developed to aid applied mathematicians in the solution of problems in non-numerical analysis which involve tedious manipulations of mathematical expressions. The mathematician uses ...

  • Some Aspects of Pattern Recognition by Computer 

    Unknown author (1967-02-01)
    A computer may gather a lot of information from its environment in an optical or graphical manner. A scene, as seen for instance from a TV camera or a picture, can be transformed into a symbolic description of points ...

  • Estimating Stereo Disparities 

    Unknown author (1967-02-01)
    An interesting practical and theoretical problem is putting bounds on how much computation one needs to find the stereo-disparity between two narrow-angle stereo scenes. By narrow angle I mean situations wherein the angle ...

  • Vision Memo 

    Unknown author (1967-02-01)
    This Memo proposes a set of systems programs for vision work. Please comment immediately as we should start on it at once. Values stored outside an array range should have no effect, but set an overflow flag: values read ...

  • A Quick Fail-Safe Procedure for Determining Whether the GCD of 2 Polynomials is 1 

    Unknown author (1967-03-01)
    One of the most widely used routines in an algebraic manipulation system is a polynomial manipulation package (1,2,3). The crucial operation in such routines is the extraction of the Greatest Common Divisor (GCD) of ...

  • Incorporating MIDAS Routines into PDP-6 LISP 

    Unknown author (1967-03-01)
    Some PDP6 LISP users have felt a need for a way to incorporate MIDAS subroutines into LISP. LISP has been changed to let you do this, using files found on the LISP SYSTEM microtape. You write a routine for LISP in much the ...

  • Remarks on Correlation Tracking 

    Unknown author (1967-03-01)
    The problem is to track the motion of part of a field of view. Let us assume that the scene is a two-dimensional picture in a plane perpendicular to the roll axis. (these simplifying assumptions, of course, are a main ...

  • CHAR PLOT 

    Unknown author (1967-03-01)
    CHAR PLOT is a routine which enables one to use the CalComp plotter as a versatile output device. It is presently available as CHPLOT BIN (English CHAR PLOT) on tape MS 3. The program CHAR PLOT is normally called by a PUSHJ ...

  • Hardware and Program Memo About SERVO 

    Unknown author (1967-03-01)
    SERVO is intended as an engineering and programming analyzing and debugging aid for use with devices connected through the input and output multiplexers to the PDP-6. Cannel numbers and values to output, as well as ...

  • Computer Tracking of Eye Motions 

    Unknown author (1967-03-01)
    This memo is to explain why the Artificial Intelligence group of Project MAC is developing methods for on-line tracking of human eye movements. It also gives a brief resume of results to date and the next steps.

  • A Miscellaney of Convert Programming 

    Unknown author (1967-04-01)
    CONVERT shares with other programming languages the circumstance that it is was easier to evaluate the language and to learn its uses if it is possible to scrutinize a representative sample of programs which effect typical ...

  • POLYSEG 

    Unknown author (1967-04-01)
    POLYSEG takes as input a list of dotted pairs of numbers. These pairs are assumed to be the co-ordinates of adjacent points along a single closed line. It is further assumed that the x and y co-ordinates of successive ...