<div dir="ltr">In 1994, Josef Skrzypek wrote a book titled "<a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=LrBQAAAAMAAJ&q=%22Neural+Network+Simulation+Environment%22&dq=%22Neural+Network+Simulation+Environment%22&ei=NUKSSNu9IIzQjgGhpf35DA&pgis=1" class="external text" title="http://books.google.com/books?id=LrBQAAAAMAAJ&q=%22Neural+Network+Simulation+Environment%22&dq=%22Neural+Network+Simulation+Environment%22&ei=NUKSSNu9IIzQjgGhpf35DA&pgis=1" rel="nofollow">Neural Network Simulation Environments</a>." Unfortunately, there is no modern equivalent and you cant sort the simulators along multiple dimensions using javascript. To fill this gap I've started a <a href="http://grey.colorado.edu/emergent/index.php/GNU_Free_Document_License" title="GNU Free Document License">GFDL-licensed</a>
project to document a variety of modern neural simulators along a
number of useful dimensions. Given the size of such a task I need your
help! If you have experience with any simulator (especially those not
listed), feel a dimension is missing, would like to elaborate in a
sub-article or simply want to check facts, please feel free to
edit, leave a comment on the discussion page or
e-mail me. Basically, Wikipedia's <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Be_bold" class="external text" title="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Be_bold" rel="nofollow">Be Bold</a> policy applies here. A very cool and useful <a href="http://grey.colorado.edu/emergent/index.php/WYSIWYG_editor" title="WYSIWYG editor">wysiwyg editor</a> is enabled, making it easy for anyone to contribute.<br>
<br>Here is the comparison: <a href="http://grey.colorado.edu/emergent/index.php/Comparison_of_Neural_Network_Simulators">http://grey.colorado.edu/emergent/index.php/Comparison_of_Neural_Network_Simulators</a><br><br>See you there,<br>
--<br>Brian Mingus<br>Professional Research Assistant<br>University of Colorado at Boulder<br>(Not sent from my iPhone:)<br>
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