Publications

David Keil. Can quantum computing provide exponential speedup? CSI Communications, February 2015.

David Keil. Boundaries of Algorithmic Computing. CSI Communications, December 2014.

David Keil, Dina Goldin. Indirect Interaction in Environments for Multiagent Systems. In Environments for Multiagent Systems II, eds. Danny Weyns, Van Parunak, Fabien Michel. LNCS 3830, Springer, 2006.

David Keil, Dina Goldin. Adaptation and Evolution in Dynamic Persistent Environments. Presented at FInCo2005, Edinburgh, April 2005. To be published in Electronic Notes in Theoretical Computer Science.

Dina Goldin, David Keil. Interactive Models for Design of Software-Intensive Systems.  FInCo2005.

David Keil and Dina Goldin. Indirect Interaction and Decentralized Coordination. Extended draft.

David Keil and Dina Goldin. Modeling Indirect Interaction in Open Computational Systems. 1st Int'l workshop on Theory and Practice of Open Computational systems (TAPOCS), Linz, Austria, June 2003.

Dina Goldin and David Keil. Evolution, interaction, and intelligence. Proceedings, Congress on Evolutionary Computation (CEC-2001), Seoul, Korea, May 2001.

Dina Goldin, David Keil, and Peter Wegner. An interactive viewpoint on UML. In K. Siau and T. Halpin, Eds., Unified Modeling Language: Systems Analysis, Design, and Development Issues, Idea Group Publishing, 2000.

Dina Goldin and David Keil. Minimal sequential interaction machines. Technical Report, Dept. of Mathematics and Computer Science, University of Massachusetts. Boston, June 2000 (requires Ghostview or a similar viewer).

David Keil. Sorting by dispersion. Computer Language, April, 1985.

Invited talks

Grading; engagement; assessment, CELTSS Day in May, Framingham State University, May 13, 2015.

Wanted: Assessment-based grading methods that support student engagement. Poster presentation, 2014 Assessment Institute, Indianapolis, Indiana, Oct. 20, 2014.

Wanted: Grading methods to support student engagement, CELTSS January day faculty development program, Framingham State University, January 9, 2014.

Some background for a discussion on less-centralized classrooms, CELTSS January day faculty development program, Framingham State University, January 10, 2013.

Using assessment-based methods for grading and for engaging students. Paper presented at the Mass Bay Community College 2012 Assessment Retreat, January 10, 2012. Slides

Decentralization and stigmergy. Framingham State College Faculty Science Colloquium, February 29, 2008.

Scalable models of multi-stream interaction. Framingham State College Mathematics / Computer Science Colloquium, September 28, 2006.

Modeling indirect interaction for evolving adaptive multi-agent systems in dynamic persistent environments. Doctoral thesis proposal, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Connecticut, April 11, 2006.

Modeling indirect interaction in multi-agent systems. Framingham State College Mathematics / Computer Science Colloquium, February 22, 2005.

Debate on artificial intelligence, Framingham State College, November, 2005.

Evolutionary computation in dynamic persistent environments. Framingham State College Computer Science Club Talk Series, October 4, 2004.

Gödel’s theorem: Limits of logic and computation. Framingham State College Mathematics / Computer Science Colloquium, March 27, 2003.

Toward a theory of interactive computation. Northeast Section, Mathematics Association of America, Framingham, MA, November 2002.

This page last updated 3/29/15