CALL FOR PAPERS
CAIA-93
The Ninth IEEE Conference on
Artificial Intelligence for Applications
Disneyworld Hilton -- Orlando, Florida
March 1-5, 1993
The conference is devoted to advancing the application of artificial
intelligence techniques to real world problems. Two kinds of papers are
appropriate: case studies of AI applications that solve significant
problems and stimulate the development of useful techniques, and papers on
novel AI techniques and principles that enable more ambitious real-world
applications. This conference provides a forum for such synergy between
applications and AI techniques. Emphasis at this year's conference will
be on new AI paradigms that can or have had an impact on applications.
Papers describing significant unpublished results are solicited in two
areas:
* Applications Papers. Contributions stemming from the general areas of
industry, science and engineering, business, government, law, etc.
Application papers must: (1) Justify the use of the AI technique, based on
the problem definition and an analysis of the application's requirements;
(2) Explain how AI technology was used to solve a significant problem; (3)
Describe the status of the implementation; (4) Evaluate the effectiveness
of the application and the technique used.
Short papers describing systems in use (up to 1000 words, extended
abstract) will also be accepted for presentation in these application
tracks.
* Enabling Technology Papers. Contributions focusing on techniques and
principles that facilitate the development of practical AI applications
that can be scaled to handle increasing problem complexity. Topics
include, but are not limited to: knowledge representation, reasoning,
search, knowledge acquisition, learning, constraint programming, planning,
(including artificial neural nets, genetic algorithms, nearest neighbors,
etc.), validation and verification, project management, natural language
processing, speech, robotics, data discovery and database mining,
multimedia and virtual reality applications, intelligent interfaces,
integration, problem-solving architectures, programming environments,
exploitation of parallelism, and general tools.
Papers should be limited to 5000 words. Papers significantly longer that
this will not be reviewed. The first page of the paper must contain the
following information (where applicable) in the order shown:
* Title.
* Author's name and affiliation (specify student status).
* Contact information (name, postal address, phone and email address).
* Abstract: A 200 word abstract that includes a clear statement
describing the paper's original contributions and what new lesson is
imparted.
* AI topic: One or more terms describing the relevant AI areas, e.g.
knowledge acquisition, explanation, diagnosis, etc.
* Domain area: One or more terms describing the problem domain area, e.g.
mechanical design, factory scheduling, education, medicine, etc.
* Language/Tool: Underlying programming languages, systems and tools used.
* Status: Development and deployment status, as appropriate.
* Effort: Person-years of effort put into developing the particular aspect
of the project being described.
* Impact: A 20 word description of estimated or measured (specify) benefit
of the application developed.
Papers will be accepted in two forms: long papers and short papers. Papers
accepted for publication will be allotted seven pages (long papers) or
four papers (short papers) in the conference proceedings. The best papers
accepted will be considered for a special issue of IEEE EXPERT to appear
late in 1993. Awards will be presented to best paper and best student
paper at the conference.
In addition to papers, we will be accepting the following types of
submissions:
* Proposals for Panel Discussions. Provide a brief description of the
topic (1000 words or less). Indicate the membership of the panel and
interest in organizing/moderating the discussion.
* Proposals for Tutorial Presentations. Proposals for the three hour
tutorials of both an introductory and advanced nature are requested.
Topics should relate to the management and technical development of useful
artificial intelligence applications. Tutorials which analyze classes of
applications in depth or examine techniques appropriate for a particular
class of applications are of particular interest.
Each tutorial should include the following:
* Detailed topic outline and extended abstract (about 3 pages).
* Intended audience and assumed background knowledge.
* Half-page synopsis of focus, topics, and benefits to audience.
* Full professional vita (including lecture/tutorial experience and a
one-paragraph summary.
* Proposals for Workshops. Proposals are sought for one day workshops to
be held in conjunction with the conference. These workshops can focus on a
specific application domain (e.g. aerospace applications) or on a
technical subarea (e.g. intelligent real time problem solving). Workshop
organization and attendance will be governed by the organizers. Submit
proposals to the Workshop Chair.
Important Dates
* August 31, 1992: Four copies of papers, and three copies of all the
proposals are due. Submissions not received by that date will be returned
unopened. Electronically transmitted materials will not be accepted.
* October 30, 1992: Author notifications mailed.
* December 14, 1992: Accepted papers due to IEEE. Accepted tutorial
notes due to Tutorial Chair.
* March 1-2, 1993: Conference tutorial program.
* March 3-5, 1993: Conference technical program.
Submit Papers and Panels to:
David Waltz
Thinking Machines Corporation
245 First Street
Cambridge, MA 02142-1214
Phone: 617-234-2050
Fax: 617-234-4444
Email: ·····@think.com
Submit Tutorial or Workshop Proposals to:
Peter Selfridge
AT&T Bell Labs
2B-425
600 Mountain Avenue
P.O. Box 636
Murray Hill, NJ 07974
Phone: 908-582-6801
Email: ···@research.att.com
For registration and additional conference information, contact:
CAIA-93
IEEE Computer Society
1730 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20036-1903
Phone: 202-371-1013
General Chair:
Jan Aikins, Aion Corporation
Program Chair:
David Waltz,
Thinking Machines Corporation, and Brandeis University
Tutorial/Workshop Co-Chairs:
Donald McKay, Paramax Systems Corporation
Peter Selfridge, AT&T Bell Laboratories
Publicity Chair:
Curt Hall, Intelligent Software Strategies
Local Arrangements Chair:
Doug Dankel, University of Florida
Program Committee:
Chid Apte, IBM
Ralph Barletta, Cognitive Systems
Madeleine Bates, Bolt, Beranek & Newman
Vasant Dhar, NYU
Bob Engelmore, Stanford University
Tim Finin, University of Maryland Baltimore County
Brad Goodman, Mitre Corporation
Mark Goodman, Cognitive Systems, Inc. and Brandeis University
Paul Haley, The Haley Enterprise
Larry Harris, AI Corporation
Phil Hayes, Carnegie Group, Inc.
Se June Hong, IBM
Anthony Maddox, Northeastern University
Patti Maes, MIT Media Lab
Rob Milne, Intelligent Applications (Scotland)
Bernadette Kowalski Minton, Aion Corporation
Steve Minton, NASA Ames Research Center
Fumio Mizoguchi, Tokyo Science University
Peter Norvig, Sun Microsystems Laboratories
Dan O'Leary, University of Southern California
James Pustejovsky, Brandeis University
Elaine Rich, MCC
Edwina Rissland, University of Massachusetts
Oliver Selfridge, GTE Laboratories
Howard E. Schrobe, Symbolics, Inc.
Candy Sidner, DEC Cambridge Research Laboratory
Craig Stanfill, Thinking Machines Corporation
Oliver Vadas, Pulp and Paper Research Insititute of Canada
Partial list of invited speakers:
Patrick Winston, MIT and Ascent Technology
"Learning and Database Mining"
Wendy Lehnert, University of Massachusetts
"What We've Learned from the DARPA Natural Language Initiative"
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