Some reflections on early history
A history of personal workstations
Experiments in processing pictorial information with a digital computer
IRE-ACM-AIEE '57 (Eastern) Papers and discussions presented at the December 9-13, 1957, eastern joint computer conference: Computers with deadlines to meet
Pattern and character recognition systems: picture processing by nets of neuron-like elements
IRE-AIEE-ACM '59 (Western) Papers presented at the the March 3-5, 1959, western joint computer conference
Alpha-numeric character recognition using local operations
IRE-AIEE-ACM '59 (Eastern) Papers presented at the December 1-3, 1959, eastern joint IRE-AIEE-ACM computer conference
Abstract shape recognition by machine
AFIPS '61 (Eastern) Proceedings of the December 12-14, 1961, eastern joint computer conference: computers - key to total systems control
Some applications for content-addressable memories
AFIPS '63 (Fall) Proceedings of the November 12-14, 1963, fall joint computer conference
Experiments in the recognition of hand-printed text, part I: character recognition
AFIPS '68 (Fall, part II) Proceedings of the December 9-11, 1968, fall joint computer conference, part II
Region growing based segmentation algorithm for typewritten and handwritten text recognition
Applied Soft Computing
K3M: A universal algorithm for image skeletonization and a review of thinning techniques
International Journal of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science
Segmentation of connected handwritten digits using Self-Organizing Maps
Expert Systems with Applications: An International Journal
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Everyone likes to speculate, and recently there has been a lot of talk about reading machines and hearing machines. We know it is possible to simulate speech. This raises lots of interesting questions such as: If the machines can speak, will they squawk when you ask them to divide by zero? And can two machines carry on an intelligent conversation, say in Gaelic? And, of course, there is the expression "electronic brain" and the question, Do machines think? These questions are more philosophical than technical and I am going to duck them.