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Society for Math Psych conference program -- Chapel Hill, NC
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Society for Math Psych conference program -- Chapel Hill, NC
Posted:
Jun 13, 1996 9:42 PM
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29th Annual Meeting of the Society for MATHEMATICAL PSYCHOLOGY
1-4 August 1996, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC
Dear Colleague,
It is our pleasure to invite you to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for the 29th ANNUAL MEETING OF THE SOCIETY FOR MATHEMATICAL PSYCHOLOGY. The meeting will begin on the morning of August 2 and continue until mid-day on August 4, 1996. We have arranged an informal meeting place during the evening of August 1 for participants who arrive on that day.
On behalf of Ido Erev, David Budescu, and Rami Zwick, we also invite you to a WORKSHOP ON GAMES AND BEHAVIOR in honor of Amnon Rapoport that will immediately follow the Mathematical Psychology Meeting. The workshop will begin on the afternoon of Sunday, August 4 and will conclude on the afternoon of Monday, August 5.
The submitted abstracts suggest excellent meetings, and we hope you will be able to attend. An innovation to the Mathematical Psychology Meeting this year is the addition of a poster session each afternoon in conjunction with a long break in the paper sessions. Consequently, there will be many more presentations than usual, but without disrupting the relaxed flow of activities.
Please register by the July 22 deadline in order to help us plan properly. If you wish to arrange hotel or dorm accommodations, please do so before July 15.
Attached to this letter you will find preliminary programs for both meetings, registration information and forms, as well as information regarding dormitory and hotel accommodations, how to reach Chapel Hill, and the general Chapel Hill area. Information about the conference will also be available at http://www.cs.unc.edu/~marshall/math.html on the World Wide Web.
We are looking forward to seeing you!
Sincerely yours,
Thomas S. Wallsten and Jonathan A. Marshall Conference Co-Chairs
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Preliminary Program
29th Annual Meeting of the Society for MATHEMATICAL PSYCHOLOGY
1-4 August 1996, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC
Sponsors: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Department of Computer Science); Society for Mathematical Psychology; Triangle Area Neural Network Society.
Organizing Committee: Christina A. Burbeck, Elliot Hirshman, Jonathan A. Marshall (Co-Chair), Nestor Schmajuk, Thomas S. Wallsten (Co-Chair), Yiu-Fai Yung.
Keynote Speakers: Stephen Grossberg (Boston U), In Jae Myung (Ohio State U), Amnon Rapoport (U of Arizona).
Special Symposia: - Games and Behavior - Models of Binding Mechanisms in Vision
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THURSDAY 01 AUGUST 1996
6:00-9:00 p.m. INFORMAL EVENING MEETING PLACE. Crossroads Bar, Carolina Inn.
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FRIDAY 02 AUGUST 1996, Sitterson Hall, rooms 011 and 014
8:00 REGISTRATION. Sitterson Hall, lower lobby.
SENSATION & PERCEPTION LEARNING & MEMORY
8:30 RG Swensson, PF Judy, Harvard U. B Murdock, U of Toronto. Recall, Observer detection efficiency for judgments of frequency, and visual targets at specified or judgments of recency in TODAM2. unknown locations in noise backgrounds.
8:55 ED Reichle, A Pollatsek, DJK Mewhort, DG Smith, R Kohly, DL Fisher, K Rayner, U of Mass, Queen's U. Interference in memory Amherst. A model of eye produces numerical distance movements in reading. effects.
9:20 D Levin, U of Chicago. A MJ Kahana, Brandeis U. Temporal relativistic description of coding in human memory. perception.
9:45 K Loubier, Z Pizlo, Purdue U. M Howard, MJ Kahana, Brandeis U. Shape constancy in the case of a Mathematical model of free recall single perspective view of a memory. solid object.
10:10 BREAK BREAK
Friday 02 August (continued)
SENSATION & PERCEPTION LEARNING & MEMORY
10:30 TM Cowan, Kansas State U. DM Riefer, M LaMay, Cal State U, Replotting corda tympani data and San Bernardino. Memory for its implications for theories of common and bizarre imagery: A taste. storage-retrieval analysis.
10:55 EA Roy, M Hollins, U of North TD Wickens, U of Cal, Carolina, Chapel Hill. A model Los Angeles. Forgetting as a of vibrotactile loudness. failure process.
11:20 J Doner, Charlottesville, VA. X Hu, W Marks, A Isenberg, State and spatial complementarity U of Memphis. Retrieval inhibi- in the dipole information of tion in directed forgetting: A discrete 2D patterns. source monitoring approach.
11:45 T Indow, U of Cal, Irvine. J Metcalfe, R Dodhia, Columbia U. Mathematical implication of Source monitoring in a composite Munsell color system. memory model.
12:10 LUNCH. Nearby restaurants. LUNCH. Nearby restaurants.
INFORMATION PROCESSING & MEASUREMENT & STATISTICS PERFORMANCE
1:25 JD Balakrishnan, R Venugopalan, MJ Wenger, JT Townsend, Purdue U. Fixed and variable Indiana U. Facial gestalts and sample, distribution-free configurality as aspects of form measures of response bias. and capacity.
1:50 Y Yung, U of North Carolina, JT Townsend, MJ Wenger, Chapel Hill. Applications of the Indiana U. Evidence monitoring bootstrap to structural equation theory: A dynamic extension of modeling: Techniques and issues. general recognition theory and cognitive stochastic processing theory.
2:15 C Chiang, James Madison U. R Ratcliff, G McKoon, Invariant parameters of Northwestern U. A counter model measurement scales. for implicit priming in perceptual identification.
Friday 02 August (continued)
2:40 BREAK AND POSTERS
RD Thomas, DP Gallogly, Miami U. Some consequences of the RT-distance hypothesis on factorial additivity.
SA Marinov, Applied Linguistics Centre, Winnipeg. Pseudo-physical dimensions in analysis of psychological data.
MA Woodbury, KG Manton, Duke U. Grade of membership analysis: Insights for measurement theory.
AB Cobo-Lewis, U of Miami. An adaptive method for estimating multiple parameters of a psychometric function.
J Miles, M Shevlin, Derby U, Nottingham Trent U. How to Excel at SEM.
K Tateneni, MW Browne, Ohio State U. A noniterative algorithm for joint correspondence analysis.
K Hayashi, PK Sen, U of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Covariance matrix for covariance estimators of MLEs of factor loadings with raw-varimax rotation in factor analysis.
SM Zoldi, AD Krystal, HS Greenside, Duke U. Statistical analysis of redundancy and stationarity in multi-channel EEG.
GJ Kalarickal, JA Marshall, U of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Synaptic plasticity: Comparison of EXIN and BCM learning rules.
C Kim, IJ Myung, WB Levy, Ohio State U, U of Virginia. Encoding of context information with self-organizing neural assemblies.
RA Heath, U of Newcastle. Controlling a chaotic neural network: Implications for decision making, memory, and motor control.
AR Sarkisyan, HH Mkrtchian, AA Melkonian, Nat Acad of Sciences of Armenia. A method for cable model parameters identification using output frequency characteristics.
S Graham, Z Pizlo, A Joshi, Purdue U. An exponential pyramid model of solving the traveling salesman problem.
MA Garcia-Perez, U Complutense, Madrid. Forced-choice staircases: Some little known facts.
AK Hon, LT Maloney, New York U. Analysis of visual interpolation and segmentation of sampled contours using Frechet derivatives.
GL Zimmerman, MR Canaday, Tulane U. Adaptive model of equiluminant motion perception.
3:40 PLENARY TALK: Stephen Grossberg, Boston U. The attentive brain: Perception, learning, and consciousness.
Friday 02 August (continued) -- Saturday 03 August
NON-LABORATORY APPLICATIONS NEURAL & LEARNING SYSTEMS
4:40 DJ Weiss, CS Rundall, Cal NA Schmajuk, C Buhusi, JA Gray, State U, Los Angeles. Using Duke U, Inst of Psychiatry nested group designs to examine (London). An attentional- subject characteristics in configural model of the cognitive models. classical conditioning.
5:05 RL Stout, Brown U. Analyzing out- J Zhang, M Chang, U of Michigan. come over time in Project MATCH. A model of operant reinforcement learning.
5:30 J Shanteau, Kansas State U. The RM Golden, U of Texas, Dallas. psychometrics of expertise Mathematical methods for revisited. connectionist model analysis and design.
5:55 SESSION END
BANQUET DINNER -- Carolina Club.
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SATURDAY 03 AUGUST 1996, Sitterson Hall, rooms 011 and 014
JUDGMENT & DECISION MAKING LEARNING & MEMORY
8:30 A Diederich, U Oldenburg. Get T Van Zandt, Johns Hopkins U. MADD: Decision making in conflict Confidence judgments in situations. recognition memory: A two-choice decision is not the same as a six-choice decision.
8:55 RH Bender, U of North Carolina, RA Chechile, Tufts U. Unifica- Chapel Hill. Extending and test- tion of signal-detection and ing the stochastic judgment model process-tree approaches for in a four-category rating task. memory storage measurement.
9:20 M Regenwetter, AAJ Marley, D Nikolic, SD Gronlund, U of McGill U. Random relations, Oklahoma. A tandem random walk random utilities, and random model for the speed-accuracy functions. tradeoff paradigm.
9:45 AAJ Marley, R Regenwetter, H Joe, JR Busemeyer, E Byun, E Delosh, McGill U, U of British Columbia. M McDaniel, Purdue U. Random utility threshold models Artificial neural network models of subset choice. of function learning.
10:10 BREAK BREAK
10:30 PLENARY TALK: In Jae Myung, Ohio State U. Maximum entropy charac- terization of categorization models. (SMP New Investigator Award.)
Saturday 03 August (continued)
REACTION TIME CATEGORIZATION
11:30 R Schweickert, Purdue U. Response RM Nosofsky, TJ Palmeri, time distribution: Some simple Indiana U, Vanderbilt U. effects of factors selectively Comparing exemplar-retrieval and influencing mental processes. decision-bound models of speeded classification.
11:55 EN Dzhafarov, U of Illinois, WT Maddox, WK Estes, Arizona Urbana-Champaign. A canonical State U, Harvard U. A dual- representation for selectively process architecture for models influenced processes and of category learning. component times.
12:20 LUNCH. Nearby restaurants. LUNCH. Nearby restaurants.
JUDGMENT & DECISION MAKING CATEGORIZATION
1:35 Y Li, DH Krantz, Columbia U. CJ Bohil, WT Maddox, Arizona Overconfidence and the goals of State U. Base-rate and payoff interval estimation. effects in multidimensional perceptual categorization.
2:00 DV Budescu, A Rapoport, U of FG Ashby, W Schwarz, U of Cal, Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Santa Barbara. A stochastic U of Arizona. Randomization in version of general recognition individual choice behavior. theory.
2:25 Y Cho, RD Luce, G Fisher, PM Berretty, FG Ashby, S Queller, R Sneddon, U of Cal, Irvine. U of Cal, Santa Barbara. On the Certainty equivalents and joint dominance of verbal rules in receipt: Troubles and a possible unsupervised categorization. resolution.
2:50 P Wakker, H Zank, U of Tilburg, B Edelman, D Valentin, H Abdi, U of Limburg. Additive conjoint U of Texas, Dallas. Sex measurement for infinite product classification of face areas: sets: State-dependent expected Performance of human subjects and utility for decision under a linear neural network. uncertainty.
Saturday 03 August (continued)
3:15 BREAK AND POSTERS
CM Mayenga, U of Toronto. Dual scaling of sorting data: Determining dominant mathematical classificatory criterion.
TJ Palmeri, Vanderbilt U. Exemplar similarity and the development of automaticity.
C Sheu, D Kuhn, G Grams, DePaul U. On dividing the loot and claiming the debts.
AW MacRae, U of Birmingham. The computer as opponent in experimental games.
M Zlotnick, Washington, DC. A model for rational decision making and role-playing games.
T Slembeck, U of St Gallen. Learning as a basic process in economic behavior: On the foundations of an economic theory of learning.
TS Wallsten, H Gu, U of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Effects of criterion variance on judgment: Model and data.
M Chang, J Zhang, U of Michigan. An information-based model of choice reaction time.
JF McGrew, Pacific Bell. Decision making in real-world situations: A model of the use of decision techniques by managers.
SL Coleman, V Brown, DS Levine, U of Texas, Arlington. Foraging decisions made under risk: A cognitive-emotional neural network model.
E Hirshman, U of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. A single-process model of the remember-know paradigm.
E Fulcher, Worcester Coll of Higher Ed. Testing neural network models of conditioning within the human evaluative conditioning paradigm.
ME Hasselmo, BP Wyble, Harvard U. A network model of the hippocampus that addresses human memory performance on delayed free recall and recognition under scopolamine.
NG Kim, U of Connecticut, Storrs. Look in the direction of heading.
K Niall, Armstrong Lab. Acuity of vision and the projective invariants of conics.
Saturday 03 August (continued)
REACTION TIME SENSATION & PERCEPTION
4:15 H Colonius, W Ellermeier, M Chen, KC Chen, SUNY Brockport, U Oldenburg, U Regensburg. Rochester Inst of Tech. A group Distribution inequalities for model of plane affine parallel models of reaction time transformations and perception. with generalized stopping rules.
4:40 PL Smith, U of Melbourne. Z Pizlo, E Weg, Purdue U. The Dynamic signal detection models concept of group, the likelihood driven by white noise integrals. principle, and the theory of shape constancy.
5:05 JN Rouder, Northwestern U. LT Maloney, P Mamassian, Assessing the roles of change New York U. The mother of all discrimination and accumulation: constancies: Effect of changes Evidence for a hybrid model of of illumination and material perceptual decision making. surface on perceived geometry of real objects.
5:30 SMP BUSINESS MEETING SMP BUSINESS MEETING
6:00 SESSION END. Dinner at nearby restaurants.
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SUNDAY 04 AUGUST 1996, Sitterson Hall, rooms 011 and 014
8:30 PLENARY TALK: Amnon Rapoport, U of Arizona. Equilibrium play in large group noncooperative market entry games.
SYMPOSIUM: MODELS OF BINDING IN VISION SYMPOSIUM: GAMES AND BEHAVIOR
9:30 M Kubovy, D Cohen, J Hollier, R Zwick, A Rapoport, E Weg, Hong U of Virginia, U of North Kong U of Sci & Tech, Carolina at Wilmington. The in- U of Arizona, Purdue U. A break- teraction of modules demonstrated down of invariance: The case of using the Gestalt detection two vs. three-person sequential technique: The pre-attentive bargaining. binding of color and form.
9:55 S Niyogi, MIT. Perceptual A Chaudhuri, Rutgers U. The structural descriptions, ratchet principle in a principal selection, and mental actions. agent game with unknown costs: An experimental analysis.
10:20 BREAK BREAK
10:40 J Feldman, Rutgers U. The logic Y Bereby-Meyer, Technion. A of perceptual grouping. reference-point model for the payoff effect in probability learning experiments.
11:05 JA Marshall, CP Schmitt, J Meyer, D Gopher, Ben Gurion U, GJ Kalarickal, RK Alley, Technion. Applying cognitive U of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. game theoretical analyses to Neural model of transfer-of- two-person signal detection. binding in visual relative motion perception.
11:30 J Zhang, U of Michigan. A S Gilat, J Meyer, D Gopher, Tech- geometric framework for nion, Ben Gurion U. Beyond perceptual binding. Bayes' theorem: The effect of base rate information in consensus games.
11:55 S Shams, Hughes Research Labs. A R Barkan, D Zohar, Technion. self-organizing model for solving Accidents and decision making the binding problem using under risk: A comparison of four nonlinear integrate-fire neurons. alternative models.
12:20 DISCUSSION SYMPOSIUM END
12:45 SYMPOSIUM END
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Tentative Program: WORKSHOP ON GAMES AND BEHAVIOR in Honor of Amnon Rapoport's 60th birthday
4-5 August 1996, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC
SUNDAY 04 AUGUST 1996, Sitterson Hall, room 011
LEARNING: 2:00-3:45
Colin Camerer, Teck-Hua Ho. Reinforcement learning with implicit beliefs and sophistication.
Reinhard Selten. Learning direction theory.
Al Roth, Ido Erev. A cognitive game theoretical analysis of learning in matrix games.
SOCIAL DILEMMAS AND COOPERATION: 4:15-6:35
Gary Bornstein. Team games.
Ramzi Suleiman, David Budescu. Common pool resource dilemmas with incomplete information.
David M. Messick, Wim B. G. Liebrand. Levels of analysis and the explanation of the costs and benefits of cooperation.
Robyn Dawes. A discussion of social dilemma research.
BANQUET DINNER
MONDAY 05 AUGUST 1996, Sitterson Hall, room 011.
BIDDING, GUESSING AND BARGAINING: 8:30-10:15
John Kagel. Bidding in common value auctions: Why don't very experienced bidders earn even more?
Rosemarie Nagel, John Duffy. On the robustness of behavior in experimental guessing games.
Eythan Weg, Rami Zwick. Infinite horizon bargaining with complete and common knowledge: Facts and fictions.
COORDINATION: 10:45-12:30
Daryl Seale, Jim Sundali. Strategic signaling in an N person simultaneous market entry game.
John Van Huyck. Learning mutually consistent behavior.
Jack Ochs, Jouh Duffy. Experimental study of the evolution of money.
FAIRNESS AND TRUST: 2:00-3:45
Gary Bolton, Klaus Abbink, Abdolkarim Sadrieh, Fang-Fang Tang. Adaptive learning versus punishment in ultimatum bargaining.
Chris Snijders, Gideon Keren. Determinants of trust.
Warner Guth. On the effects of the pricing rule in auction and fair division games: An experimental study.
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29th Annual Meeting of the Society for Mathematical Psychology 1-4 August 1996
and
Workshop on Games and Behavior in honor of Amnon Rapoport 4-5 August 1996
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Sponsors: The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Department of Computer Science); Society for Mathematical Psychology; Triangle Area Neural Network Society.
GENERAL INFORMATION
The Society for Mathematical Psychology Annual Meeting will run from 8:30 a.m. on Friday, 2 August, through 12:45 p.m. on Sunday, 4 August. In addition to oral and poster presentations, there will be a banquet on Friday, 2 August, and the annual business meeting of the Society on Saturday, 3 August. Please see the detailed preliminary program included with these materials.
The conference will be followed by a special Workshop on Games and Behavior being held to honor the contributions of Amnon Rapoport. The workshop begins on 4 August 1996, after the conclusion of the Society Meeting. Participants in the SMP Annual Meeting are invited to attend. Please see the preliminary program included with these registration materials.
Arrangements for the 1996 SMP Annual Meeting and the Workshop are being handled by the Conferences and Institutes Office in the Division of Continuing Education at UNC-Chapel Hill. Correspondence should be addressed to SMP Annual Meeting, Division of Continuing Education, CB 1020, The Friday Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-1020, USA. Phone 919-962-2643 or 800-845-8640, fax 919-962-2061, e-mail smp96@cs.unc.edu.
LOCATION
Conference sessions will be held in Sitterson Hall on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. A pre-conference meeting place has been arranged for Thursday evening, 1 August, in the Crossroads Bar of the Carolina Inn, adjacent to campus. The banquet will be held at the Carolina Club, located on campus immediately across from Carmichael Hall, on Friday evening, 2 August. The Workshop on Games and Behavior will be held in Sitterson Hall. The Workshop dinner on Sunday evening, 4 August, will be held at Pyewacket's, a restaurant within walking distance of campus.
Chapel Hill, home to the University, is a busy, modern town that maintains a village atmosphere. The Triangle area, which includes Raleigh, Durham, and Chapel Hill, offers museums, performing arts centers, historical and architectural landmarks, restaurants, shops of all descriptions, and sporting events. In addition to The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the Triangle is home to Duke University, North Carolina State University, North Carolina Central University, and several private colleges.
In August, the weather in Chapel Hill is typically hot and humid.
REGISTRATION INFORMATION
To register for the 29th Annual Meeting of the Society for Mathematical Psychology or for the Workshop on Games and Behavior, complete the form included with these materials. Mail the form, along with payment, to the address indicated. Registrations received after 22 July 1996, will be charged a $15 late fee. Hotel/dorm reservations must be made by July 15.
The registration fees for the SMP Annual Meeting on 2-4 August are: SMP member, includes banquet (by 22 July 1996) $90 Non-member registration, includes banquet (by 22 July 1996) $95 Student registration, includes banquet (by 22 July 1996) $45
The registration fee includes all educational sessions, refreshment breaks, and the Friday banquet. Guests who wish to attend the banquet may purchase a ticket for $35; payment must accompany the participant registration.
The registration fees for the Rapoport Workshop on Games and Behavior on 4-5 August are: Regular registration (by 22 July 1996) $35 Registration and proceedings, when available (by 22 July 1996) $142
In addition, individuals attending the Rapoport Workshop may register for the Saturday SMP sessions for $26 and for the Sunday SMP sessions for $13.
Fees may be paid by check or money order (made payable to the Division of Continuing Education), purchase order, Visa, or MasterCard. Credit card and purchase order registrations may also be sent by phone, fax, or e-mail. For security reasons, we do not recommend sending credit card numbers by e-mail; those choosing to register by e-mail may telephone to provide the appropriate credit card information.
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill maintains a policy of equal educational opportunity.
CANCELLATIONS AND REFUNDS
Requests for refunds will be honored if received in writing by 29 July 1996. No refunds are available after that date. Substitutions may be made at any time.
SPECIAL NEEDS
Individuals with special requirements to accommodate a motor or sensory impairment should indicate their needs in the space provided on the registration form. Information must be received by 22 July 1996.
ACCOMMODATIONS
A block of rooms has been reserved at the Best Western University Inn and at the Carolina Inn. The University Inn, located on Raleigh Road (Highway 54) approximately three miles east of campus, offers a complimentary continental breakfast with a full-service nearby restaurant serving lunch and dinner. Room rates at the University Inn are $65, plus tax, single or double. Rooms will be available at these rates until 15 July 1996. Please make your reservation by calling the motel directly at 919-932-3000, and identifying yourself as participant in the Society for Mathematical Psychology conference.
The Carolina Inn, a recently renovated historic hotel, is located adjacent to Sitterson Hall. Room rates at the Carolina Inn are $79-$89, plus tax, single or double. Rooms will be available at this rate until 15 July 1996. Please make a reservation by calling the Inn directly at 919-933-2721 or 800-962-8519, and identifying yourself as a participant in the Society for Mathematical Psychology conference.
Accommodations are also available in Carmichael Hall, an air-conditioned, smoke-free residence hall on campus. Linens (two sheets, one pillowcase, two towels, one washcloth, one pillow, one blanket) are included. Participants should bring an alarm clock as one will not be provided. Housekeeping service is not included. The cost for residence hall accommodations is $37 per night, single, or $44 per night, double, which includes a continental breakfast. All dormitory rooms must be vacated by Monday, 5 August. All reservations for Carmichael Hall must be pre-paid; reservation and payment must be received by 15 July 1996. Please mark the appropriate spot on the enclosed registration form. Parking permits will be available for purchase at check-in.
TRAVELING TO CHAPEL HILL
By automobile: Chapel Hill is easily accessible by car from Interstate 40 and from Interstate 85. Maps with directions and parking information will be mailed with the confirmation packet.
By air: The University is approximately 15 miles from Raleigh-Durham International Airport (RDU). Ground transportation is available by cab, rental car, or airport shuttle service. LTD Transportation (800-432-8008 from the USA or 919-840-1836) and R&G Transportation (800-840-2738 from the USA or 919-840-0262) provide shuttle service to Chapel Hill. Both have information booths at the baggage claim areas of the terminals. Participants are encouraged to call in advance to schedule service. When calling, be prepared to provide a flight number and arrival time.
PROGRAM INFORMATION:
Prof. Thomas S. Wallsten Prof. Jonathan A. Marshall 919-962-2538, fax 919-962-2537 919-962-1887, fax 919-962-1799 E-mail: tom.wallsten@unc.edu E-mail: marshall@cs.unc.edu
INFORMATION about registration, accommodations, and logistics:
SMP Annual Meeting, Division of Continuing Education CB #1020, The Friday Center, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, NC 27599-1020, USA. Phone: 919-962-2643 or 800-845-8640. Fax: 919-962-2061. E-mail: smp96@cs.unc.edu
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29th Annual Meeting of the Society for Mathematical Psychology 1-4 August 1996
and
Workshop on Games and Behavior in honor of Amnon Rapoport 4-5 August 1996
REGISTRATION FORM
Please type or print. One registration per form; duplicate as necessary.
Name: Dr./Mr./Ms. ___________________________________________________________ last first m.i.
Name as it should appear on name badge: ______________________________________
Social Security Number: ______________________________________________________ (optional; used for record keeping only)
Affiliation: _________________________________________________________________
Address: _____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
City: ___________________________________
State: _______ Zip/Postal Code: __________________ Country: __________________
Phone: (_______) _____________________ Fax: (_______) _______________________
E-mail address: ______________________________________________________________
Special Needs (Individuals with special needs to accommodate a motor or sensory impairment should indicate their needs in the space below. Special dietary requirements should also be noted.):
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
(continued)
REGISTRATION FEES
( ) SMP Conference (includes Friday banquet) SMP Member ( ) By 22 July: $90 ( ) After 22 July: $105 Non-member ( ) By 22 July: $95 ( ) After 22 July: $110 Student ( ) By 22 July: $45 ( ) After 22 July: $ 60
( ) Games and Behavior Workshop (registration does not include Sunday dinner) Regular Registration ( ) By 22 July: $35 ( ) After 22 July: $ 50 Registration with Proceedings ( ) By 22 July: $142 ( ) After 22 July: $157 Special fee for workshop participants ( ) SMP Saturday sessions: $26 ( ) SMP Sunday sessions: $13 Sunday Dinner ( ) Workshop participant: $25
( ) Guest Meals ____ Friday banquet: $35 ____ Sunday dinner: $25
RESIDENCE HALL ACCOMMODATIONS (reservation and payment MUST be received by 15 July)
( ) Single: $37 / night ( ) Double: $22 per person / night (Roommate: __________________________)
Arrival day, date, and time: ______________________________________________
Departure day, date, and time: ____________________________________________
PAYMENT
Total Amount Due: $ ________________
( ) Check or money order, made payable to Division of Continuing Education (Federal ID #56-6001393)
( ) Charge to credit card number: ____________________________________________
( ) VISA ( ) MasterCard Expiration date: _____________________
Cardholder name: __________________ Signature: ________________________
( ) Purchase order (P.O. number _____________________________________________)
MAIL completed form and payment (US funds only) to:
SMP Annual Meeting, Division of Continuing Education CB# 1020, The Friday Center, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, NC 27599-1020, USA
With credit card or purchase order information, registrations may be sent by Fax, 919-962-2061, or e-mail, smp96@cs.unc.edu. For security reasons, we do not recommend sending credit card numbers by e-mail; those choosing to register by e-mail may telephone to provide the credit card information. Registrations received after 22 July will be subject to a late fee of $15.
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