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The
Center for Biological & Computational Learning (CBCL) at MIT
was founded with the belief that learning is at the very core of the problem
of intelligence, both biological and artificial, and is the gateway to
understanding how the human brain works and to making intelligent machines.
CBCL studies the problem of learning within a multidisciplinary approach.
Its main goal is to nurture serious research on the mathematics, the engineering
and the neuroscience of learning. Established in 1992 with support from the National
Science Foundation, CBCL is based in the Department
of Brain & Cognitive Sciences at MIT (click here
for map information) and is associated with the McGovern
Institute for Brain Research and with the Computer
Science & Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL). Location: Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Bldg. 46-5155, 43 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA (Map) CBCL research was
previously supported by Government grants from: National Science Foundation
Contract (NSF) Nos. DMS-9872936, IIS-9800032, IIS-0085836, ASC-92-17041,
SBR-960-1828, IIS-0112991 and IIS-0209289, National Science Foundation-NIH (CRCNS) No. EIA-0218693, Office of Naval Research (DARPA/ONR) Contract No. N00014-02-1-0915,
Office of Naval Research (ONR) Contract Nos. N00014-00-1-0907, N00014-96-1-0342,
N00014-92-J-1879, N00014-93-13085 and N00014-95-1-0600, and Air Force Aerospace
Research under Contract No. F49620-97-1-0306. Corporations and foundations which have supported or are supporting this Center are as follows: Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry (CRIEPI), Center for e-Business (MIT), DaimlerChrysler AG, Compaq/Digital Equipment Corporation, Gerry Burnett, Eastman Kodak Company, Honda R&D Co., Ltd., Industrial Technology Research Institute (ITRI), Komatsu Ltd., Eugene McDermott Foundation, Merrill-Lynch, Mitsubishi Corporation, NEC Fund, Oxygen, Siemens Corporate Research, Inc., Sony, Sumitomo Metal Industries, and Toyota Motor Corporation. [The views and conclusions
contained within this website are those of the web authors and should
not be interpreted as the official policies, either expressed or implied,
of the National Science Foundation, the Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency, the Office of Naval Research, the Air Force Aerospace Research,
or the United States Government.] |