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date Tue, 03 Jun 2014 13:09:25 -0400
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1 #+title: Prof. Sussman's Reading List
2 #+author: Gerald Sussman (compiled by Robert McIntyre)
3 #+email: rlm@mit.edu
4 #+description: Professor Sussman's reading recommendations
5 #+keywords: sussman physics computer science reading list MIT
6 #+SETUPFILE: ../../aurellem/org/setup.org
7 #+INCLUDE: ../../aurellem/org/level-0.org
8 #+babel: :mkdirp yes :noweb yes :exports both
10 If you want to cite any of these papers, [[./sussman-recs.bib][here]] is a bibtex format file
11 that contains all of these papers in the order they appear on the
12 page. ([[./sussman-recs.bib]]).
14 * Recommendations
15 - Computers and Thought, by Edward A. Feigenbaum (Editor), Julian
16 Feldman (Editor).
17 - [[http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/computers-and-thought][MIT Press]]
18 - ISBN: 0262560925
19 This book includes some of the very interesting early papers in
20 AI, and is overall a great book. Of course, some of the included
21 papers are not very interesting.
23 - The Configuration Space Method for Kinematic Design of Mechanisms,
24 by Elisha Sacks and Leo Joskowicz
26 [[http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/configuration-space-method-kinematic-design-mechanisms][MIT Press]], ISBN: 9780262013895
28 - I learned a lot reading this. (RLM should read this!)
30 * TODO Should Add DSPACE links
31 * TODO Also add thesis summaries / abstracts
33 * Things Micah should read
35 - Wolpert Principles of development
36 - A geneti switch Mark Ptashne
37 - Lawrence the making of a fly
38 - Frankel "Pattern Formation" (my type of book!)
40 * Things rlm should read
41 - The harmonic mind vol 1+2 smolenck + legendre
43 * For fun
44 - Time's Arrow ad Archemdedes's ???? (price)
45 - a reasonable philisopher
46 - was einstein right? (clifford will)
48 * Everybody should know:
49 - fundamental physics
50 - classical mechanics
51 - E & M
52 - relativity
53 - QM
54 - mathemeatics
57 - Bernard F Schultz "A first course in general relativity"
58 - readable
59 - not too heavy
60 - you can just go through it...
61 - minimal dependencies
64 - Scott Aaronson "Quantum Computing since Democratus"
65 - everything you might want to know about QM, w/ phiospphical
66 outlook
69 - Bible + friends
70 - whether or not you believe it
71 - read between the lines
72 - discover what people were actually thinking
73 - very interesting document
75 - Stranger in a strange land
78 - radio amateur's handbook ARRL
79 - /practical/ electronics book
80 - done for 100 years
82 - Radiotron Designer's handbook RCA, 4th edition
83 - "I'm very interested in hi-fi."
85 - Hackers, by Steven Levy
86 - Accuracy is not to good - people's names are spelled wrong, for
87 example.
88 - But the /feelings/ are exactly right!
90 * From house interview
92 - Network Theory, Bose + Stevens
93 - beautiful, best book.
94 - obsolete, only linear
95 - get the real story about RLC circuits
97 - Linear and nonlinear circuits, Chua Sesoler kuh
98 - more up-to-date than /Network Theory/
99 - 10/10 would teach
100 - mathematically very clear
102 - "Art of electronics practice" horowitz & hill
103 - practical
105 - Grey + meyer (2nd or 3rd) edition "analysis and design of analogue
106 and integrated circuits"
108 - A survey of modern algebra Birkhoff + macland
109 - all the wau to gaoias theory
110 - clear
112 - Visual Complex Analusis, Needham
113 - Easy reading, well written
115 - Solid shape, Jan Koenderink
116 - just good
118 - Probability: the Logic of Science, Jaynes
120 - Calculus on Manifolds, Spivak
121 - great notation, inspiration for SICM
122 - great flame
124 - Variational Princ. Mech. Lanczos
125 - very phisolic
126 - deep
127 - read 100 times, learn something new each time
129 - Mermin, Space and time in special relativity
130 - can be read by H.S. student
131 - will change your life
132 - you will understand special relativity!
134 - faynman lectures
135 - learn something
136 - understandable
139 * Marvin Minsky
140 Minsky really made me as a person. He was my advisor when I was a
141 student at MIT, and he got me my first job. He had the "magnetisim"
142 to attract the most talented people to MIT to work on AI, and the
143 right amount of negligence and delagaion to create an environment
144 where people could thrive. He is certainly the reason that I was
145 seduced into working on AI. Minsky has vast and deep Scientific
146 knowledge -- he could walk into almost any class: Chemistry,
147 Physics, Math, Computer Science, and teach the class without
148 preparation!
150 - homepage :: http://web.media.mit.edu/~minsky/ Much of Minsky's
151 work is here, including his book, /The Emotion
152 Machine/, and several essays and papers. Check it out!
154 - Society of Mind, by Marvin Minsky
155 http://aurellem.org/society-of-mind/
156 Read it online! Each chapter of this book is a short,
157 self-contained essay about the various
159 - Music, Mind, and Meaning, by Marvin Minsky
160 https://web.media.mit.edu/~minsky/papers/MusicMindMeaning.html
161 Minsky is one of a few living people who can /improvise/
162 complicated Baroque era fugues. You can hear one of these
163 improvisations here: http://aurellem.org/mmm/
165 - [[http://web.media.mit.edu/~minsky/papers/steps.html][Steps towards Artificial Intelligence]] Here, Minsky outlines how we
166 might begin to build an AI. This is considered to be one of the
167 founding papers of the field, along with Turing's "Computing
168 Machinery and Intelligence" [[http://www.loebner.net/Prizef/TuringArticle.html][paper]].
170 - Perceptrons, by Marvin Minsky
171 - [[http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/perceptrons][MIT Press]], ISBN: 9780262631112
172 - Really good for "Math types."
173 - Uses geometry for proving things.
174 - People unwisely consisdered it to kill off Neural Nets; In fact,
175 it only shows the limitations of certain simple kinds of Neural
176 Nets.
178 * Representative Student Theses
180 These are students where I played a large role in their
181 education. Many of them represent compelling research directions
182 that desperatly need to be extented by the next generation of
183 researchers! As Minsky says, if you want to do something really new,
184 go back to points in the past where there was a neat idea that never
185 really caught on, and follow the path of that idea to see where it
186 leads. A comprehensive list of all my student's works can be found
187 at my [[http://groups.csail.mit.edu/mac/users/gjs/gjs.html][homepage]]. If you want to cite any of these papers, you can
188 find bibtex citations here: [[./sussman-recs.bib]].
190 In particular, here's two great ideas that seem extremely promising
191 and have NOT been properly explored! You could be the first person
192 to get them working!
194 - Using Chaotic Systems to get unlimited measurement precision!
195 - Two papers:
196 - [[http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/5953][A Global Approach to Parameter Estimation of Chaotic Dynamical
197 Systems]], by [[http://eas.caltech.edu/people/3209/profile][Athanassios G. Siapas]], 1992.
198 - [[http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/7060][Paramater Estimation in Chaotic Systems]], by Elmer Hung, 1995.
199 - No one put enough effort into seeing if it really worked.
200 - Seems to allow for almost unlimited percision in measurement.
201 - Initial results look very promising, with a =13 order of
202 magnitude= improvement in measurement precision in a simple
203 experiment.
204 - You will win the Nobel Prize if you can get it to work, because
205 you will revolutionize the way we do measurements.
207 - [[http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/12007][Towards Intelligent Structures: Active Control of Buckling]]
208 - By [[http://www.berlinplace.com/][Andrew A. Berlin]], 1994
209 - Achieves a 10 fold increase in strength by actively eliminating
210 vibrational modes.
211 - Such a good idea; It's cool, short -- great!
212 - No one's followed up on it!
214 In historical order:
216 - [[http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/6888][A System for Representing and Using Real-World Knowledge]]
217 - By [[http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~sef/][Scott Elliot Fahlman]], 1977
218 - Basically the reason that the Connection Machine was later
219 invented.
221 - The Connection Machine
222 - By Danny Hillis, 1981
223 - Beautiful thesis, but it doesn't tell you anything you can
224 really /do/ today.
226 - A Circuit Grammar For Operational Amplifier Design
227 - By Andrew Ressler, 1984
228 - If you're an Electrical Engineering person.
230 - ONTIC: A Knowledge Representation System for Mathematics
231 - By David A. McAllester, 1987
232 - Very hard, very deep.
233 - You will need to know a lot of Math.
235 - KAM: Automatic Planning and Interpretation of Numerical
236 Experiments Using Geometrical Methods
237 - By Kenneth Man-Kam Yip, 1989
238 - Coolest PhD thesis ever!
239 - Solve problems using graphs.
240 - So cool!
242 - Botanical Computing: A Developmental Approach to Generating
243 Interconnect Topologies on an Amorphous Computer
244 - By Daniel Coore, 1999
245 - Interesting to programmers especially.
247 - Programmable Self-Assembly: Constructing Global Shape using
248 Biologically-inspired Local Interactions and Origami Mathematics
249 By Radhika Nagpal, 2001
250 - Also Interesting to programmers.
252 - Cellular Computation and Communications using Engineered Genetic
253 Regulatory Networks
254 - By Ron Weiss, 2001
255 - Third in a line of bio-papers which should be highly interesting
256 to programmers.
258 - [[http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/6082][An Algorithm for Bootstrapping Communications]]
259 - By Jake Beal, 2001
260 - Seems like it could be "the right thing" for how modules in the
261 brain learn to talk to each other.
262 - Someone should expand on this work!
263 - Also a PhD thesis from Beal on this: [[http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/38483][Learning by Learning to
264 Communicate]], 2007
266 - Games, Puzzles, and Computation
267 - By Robert Aubrey Hearn, 2006.
269 - Propagation Networks: A Flexible and Expressive Substrate for
270 Computation.
271 - By Alexey Andreyevich Radul, 2009