M
Mihai Nadin
Researcher at University of Texas at Dallas
Publications - 93
Citations - 1117
Mihai Nadin is an academic researcher from University of Texas at Dallas. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anticipation (artificial intelligence) & Semiotics. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 91 publications receiving 1040 citations. Previous affiliations of Mihai Nadin include University of Wuppertal & University of California, Berkeley.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Interface design: A semiotic paradigm
TL;DR: Signs have been used for representation, communication, and communication functions in the field of semiotic design as mentioned in this paper, where the goal is to make possible the achievement of human goals: communication, as a form of social interaction, engineering, business, architecture, art, education, etc.
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Anticipation and dynamics: Rosen's anticipation in the perspective of time
TL;DR: While Robert Rosen's work is the main focus of this article, an attempt is made to advance a perspective for the broad field of studies that developed around the notion of anticipation, including the circumstances of epistemological and gnoseological significance, leading to the articulation of the early hypotheses regarding anticipatory processes.
Book
The civilization of illiteracy
TL;DR: In order to set before you, at the very beginning, the matter that is addressed here, allow me to bring to your attention a poem written by Victor Hugo over a century ago (1872).
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Stereo matching via selective multiple windows
TL;DR: A multiple window correlation algorithm for stereo matching is presented which addresses the problems associated with a fixed window size by intro- ducing a reliability test to select the most reliable window among multiple windows of increasing sizes.
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Semiotics, advertising and marketing
Richard Zakia,Mihai Nadin +1 more
TL;DR: The first International Conference on Semiotics and Marketing was held at Northwestern University in the summer of 1986 as mentioned in this paper, which was sponsored jointly by J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management at Northwestern and the Research Center for Language and Semiotic Studies at Indiana University.