I would appreciate recommendations for a preprint server to submit preprints in computational intelligence / computational cognitive science.

I know about the following preprint servers and would appreciate opinions about their relative merits for that topic area, and links to any other relevant preprint servers.

* https://www.techrxiv.org/

* https://www.preprints.org/

* https://arxiv.org/
- The available fine-grained categories in Computer Science *might* not cover my topics (depending on how strictly the categories are interpreted).
- The submission formats *might* be incompatible with my writing workflow.

* https://osf.io/preprints/discover
- OSF Preprints is a network of community-run OSF-hosted preprint servers. The only vaguely relevant community server is PssyArXiv, and it isn't clear that my topics of interest are on-scope for PsyArXiv.

* https://zenodo.org/
- Appears to have no constraints on format or topic (which is probably positive for me).
- Is not indexed by Google Scholar. (I have views about Google. However, not being indexed by Google means that preprints on Zenodo are effectively invisible to many researchers.)

#FediHelp #PrePrint #ScholarlyPublishing #AI #ArtificialIntelligence #CogSci #CognitiveScience #CompCogSci #ComputationalCognitiveScience #ComputationalIntelligence #MathematicalPsychology #MathPsych

TechRxiv preprint server - Browse

Since I'm still relatively new here, I thought I could use that as an opportunity to advertise "A Pamphlet against R", a short (and rather silly) booklet that I wrote a few years ago about #ComputationalIntelligence in #Guile #scheme

https://github.com/panicz/pamphlet

GitHub - panicz/pamphlet: Source Codes for "A Pamphlet against R"

Source Codes for "A Pamphlet against R". Contribute to panicz/pamphlet development by creating an account on GitHub.

GitHub
An Algorithm to Make Pleasing Colour Swatches from an Image

I was looking through my photos and decided I wanted to make an algorithm to automatically create a palette of colours based on a photo. At some point the concept changed to creating a gradient swatch based on the most common colours within the image. This article goes through the steps I took to go

Landreville

Robot Solves a Rubik's Cube In 0.38 Seconds.

Video: https://youtu.be/8ZBP0n6yeQo

... this accomplishment was met with some rejection in the video's comments.

Note: It's the consciousness behind the gun that pulls the trigger. Who, or what, is pointing a gun at you presently?

#Technology #Robotics #ComputationalIntelligence #MachineVision

Robot Solves A Rubik's Cube In 0.38 Seconds

YouTube
Robert Anton Wilson - Preparing For The Future

YouTube