Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory, Inc.

MARK I Perceptron Press Conference Records, 1960

CBI 48

 

0.1 cubic feet in 1 box

Creator: Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory, Inc.

By: Kevin D. Corbitt, March 1991

ACCESS: The collection is unrestricted.

COPYRIGHT: CBI holds the copyright to all materials in the collection, except for items covered by a prior copyright (such as published materials). Researchers may quote from the collection under the fair use provisions of the copyright law (Title 17, U.S. Code).

Please cite the collection as follows: Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory, Inc., MARK I Perceptron Press Conference Records (CBI 48), Charles Babbage Institute, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.

History

The MARK I perceptron was an experimental machine which could automatically identify optical patterns. It was developed at Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory under the sponsorship of the Information Systems Branch of the Office of Naval Research and the Rome Air Development Center. Frank Rosenblatt headed the development team at Cornell. The MARK I was an electromechanical device built to demonstrate the feasibility of the basic perceptron concept. Perceptrons had a significant role in artificial intelligence research during the 1960s, although claims about the MARK I and later perceptrons were later demonstrated to have been exaggerated. The MARK I was first publicly demonstrated on 23 June 1960.

Scope and Content

The collection consists of one folder of records related to the demonstration of the MARK I. Included are prepared statements, a list of attendees, a press conference agenda, newsclippings, short reports about the MARK I by Albert E. Murray, Frank Rosenblatt, and Marshall C. Yovitz, and a reprint of a journal article on the MARK I.

Several photographs have been removed to the CBI photograph collection.


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