Database description with SDM: a semantic database model
ACM Transactions on Database Systems (TODS)
On database systems development through logic
ACM Transactions on Database Systems (TODS)
The entity-relationship model—toward a unified view of data
ACM Transactions on Database Systems (TODS) - Special issue: papers from the international conference on very large data bases: September 22–24, 1975, Framingham, MA
A Machine-Oriented Logic Based on the Resolution Principle
Journal of the ACM (JACM)
The fifth generation project — a trip report
Communications of the ACM
Communications of the ACM
A relational model of data for large shared data banks
Communications of the ACM
Design considerations for data-flow database machines
SIGMOD '80 Proceedings of the 1980 ACM SIGMOD international conference on Management of data
Natural Language Communication with Computers
The new generation of computer architecture
ISCA '83 Proceedings of the 10th annual international symposium on Computer architecture
Inference machine: From sequential to parallel
ISCA '83 Proceedings of the 10th annual international symposium on Computer architecture
Overview to the Fifth Generation Computer System project
ISCA '83 Proceedings of the 10th annual international symposium on Computer architecture
An architecture for a relational dataflow database
SIGSMALL '81 Proceedings of the 1981 ACM SIGSMALL symposium on Small systems and SIGMOD workshop on Small database systems
Execution of logic programs on a dataflow architecture
ISCA '84 Proceedings of the 11th annual international symposium on Computer architecture
Survey on special purpose computer architectures for AI
ACM SIGART Bulletin
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Five areas of computer science - logic programming, database technology, knowledge representation using semantic nets, natural language processing, and dataflow architectures - are related to the goals of the Fifth Generation Computer Project. In this paper we present a number of recent research projects found in the intersection of two or more of the above areas. It is argued that, while much of the research began before the initiation of the Japanese national project, the explicit call for a new generation of computer systems will have a beneficial impact on current research throughout the world and will bring together traditionally very distinct areas of computer science.