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KI 2011 - 34th Annual German Conference on Artificial Intelligence (KI 2011)

Date2011-10-04

Deadline2011-05-01

VenueBerlin, Germany Germany

Keywords

Websitehttps://www.tzi.de/~edelkamp/ki/

Topics/Call fo Papers

KI 2011 -- 34th German Conference on Artificial Intelligence

October 4 - 7, 2011, Technical University, Berlin, Germany

http://ki2011.de



NEWS

- Jörg Hoffmann, Sven Koenig, Michael Thielscher, and Luc Steels
will give invited talks
- We will have a doctoral consortium, including a discussion panel with
Franz Baader, Ulrich Frank, Bernhard Nebel, and Ingo Timm
- Deadline for Workshop proposals has been extended to April 1st
- Springer will publish the proceedings in the LNAI/LNCS series
- We expect to run a competition (German Open) on General Game Playing
- We have received our first submissions!
- Poster and flyer are available for download

CO-LOCATED EVENTS:

INFORMATIK-2011: Anual Meeting Gesellschaft für Informatik e.V. (GI)
MATES-2011: Ninth German Conference on Multi-Agent System Technologies

CALL FOR PAPERS

KI 2011 is the 34th edition of the German Conference on Artificial
Intelligence, which traditionally brings together academic and
industrial researchers from all areas of AI. The technical programme
of KI 2011 will comprise paper and poster presentations and a
variety of workshops and tutorials.

KI 2011 will take place in Berlin, Germany, October 4-7, 2011,
and is a premier forum for exchanging news and research results
on theory and applications of intelligent system technology.

The applications of Artificial Intelligence are abundant and widespread.
In fact, Artificial Intelligence has become such a mainstay in today's
world that it is taken for granted by the majority of people who benefit
from its efficiency. Therefore, the focus of the conference is on advances

"Towards a Smart World - Evolving Technologies in AI"

The conference invites original research papers from all areas of AI,
its fundamentals, its algorithms, its history and its applications.

Areas of interest include, but are not limited to

* Knowledge Acquisition, Representation, Reasoning and Ontologies,
* Combinatorial Search, Configuration, Design and Deduction,
* Natural Language Processing, Statistical NLP, Semantics,
* Planning and Scheduling; Spatial and Temporal Reasoning,
* Reasoning under Uncertainty, Probabilistic Inferences,
* Non-Monotonic Reasoning and Default Logics,
* Constraint Satisfaction, Processing and Programming,
* Embodied AI: Robotics, Vision and Perception,
* Intelligent Information Retrieval, Semantic Search, Semantic Web,
* Evolutionary and Neural Computation,
* Machine Learning, Computational Learning Theory and Data-Mining,
* Distributed Problem Solving and Multi-Agent Systems,
* Game Playing and Interactive Entertainment, AI for Graphics
* Game Theory and General Game Playing, Generalized Intelligence,
* AI for Human-Computer-Interaction and Adaptive Communication,
* Mobile Solutions with Textile, Semantic and Spatial Media,
* Augmented Reality, Smart Cities, Smart Traffic, Smart Hardware,
* Assistance Systems in Living and Working Environments,
* Software-Engineering, Model Checking and Security in AI,
* Distributed Computation and Swarm Intelligence,
* Cognitive Modelling, AI and Psychology,
* History and Philosophical Foundations of AI,
* Applications including Logistics, Production and Health Care.

We especially welcome application papers providing novel insights
on the interplay of AI and the real world, as well as papers that
bring into AI useful computational technologies from other areas
of computer science.



Submission Guidelines

Submitted papers, which have to be in English, must not exceed 12 pages
in Springer LNCS style for full technical contributions and 4 pages for
short contributions.

Full technical papers are expected to report on new research that
makes a substantial technical contribution to the field and is placed
in the context of existing work.

Short papers can report on new research or other issues of interest to
the AI community. Examples of work suitable for short papers
include: novel ideas that are not yet fully developed or whose scope
is not large enough for a full paper; important implementation
techniques; novel interesting benchmark problems; short experimental
studies; interesting applications that are not yet completely solved
or analyzed; position or challenge papers; etc.

Conference submission is electronic, in pdf (preferred) or postscript format,
available on

www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ki11

All papers will be reviewed based on the standard criteria of clarity,
relevance, significance, originality, and soundness.

All accepted papers will be published in the main conference
proceedings, and will be presented at the conference.
At least one author per accepted paper must register for the conference
and present the contribution.

MATES 2011 and KI 2011 will include a joint doctoral mentoring program,
aimed at PhD students at advanced stages of their research. This program
will provide an opportunity for students to interact closely with established
researchers in their fields, to receive feedback on their work and to
get advice
on managing their careers.



Important Dates

Paper Submission Deadline: May 1, 2011
Notification: July 1, 2011
Camera Ready: July 15, 2011
Early Registration: July 31, 2011



Organizers

* General Chair: Stefan Edelkamp (Universität Bremen)
* Local Chair: Joscha Bach (txtr GmbH /' TU Berlin, Berlin)
* Workshop Chair: Bernd Schattenberg (Universität Ulm)
* Tutorial Chair: Sebastian Kupferschmid (Universität Freiburg)
* Doctorial Consortium Chair: René Schumann (NII, Tokio)
* Industry Liaisons: Roman Englert (T-LABs)
* Co-Location: Doris Fähndrich (TU Berlin)



Contact

Details and updates will be available on the conference web site
http://ki2011.de

For questions about the CfP or program, please contact:
edelkamp-AT-tzi.de

Last modified: 2011-04-15 06:51:41