12th European Conference on Logics in Artificial Intelligence
Helsinki, Finland, September 13-15, 2010
http://jelia2010.tkk.fi/
Logics provide a formal basis and key descriptive notation for the study
(AI). With the depth and maturity of formalisms, methodologies, and
systems today, such logics are increasingly important. The European
Conference on Logics in Artificial Intelligence (or Journes Europennes
sur la Logique en Intelligence Artificielle --- JELIA) began back in 1988,
as a workshop, in response to the need for a European forum for the
discussion of emerging work in this field. Since then, JELIA has been
organised biennially, with English as the official language, and with
proceedings published in Springer-Verlag's Lecture Notes in Artificial
Intelligence series. In 2010 the conference is organized for the first
time in Scandinavia, following previous meetings mainly taking place in
Central and Southern Europe (see the general website http://www.jelia.eu/
for details). The increasing interest in this forum, its international
level with growing participation from researchers outside Europe, and the
overall technical quality, has turned JELIA into a major biennial forum
for the discussion of logic-based approaches to AI.
Aims and Scope
The aim of JELIA 2010 is to bring together active researchers interested
in all aspects concerning the use of logics in Artificial Intelligence to
discuss current research, results, problems, and applications of both
theoretical and practical nature. JELIA strives to foster links and
facilitate cross-fertilisation of ideas among researchers from various
disciplines, among researchers from academia and industry, and between
theoreticians and practitioners.
Authors are invited to submit papers presenting original and unpublished
research in all areas related to the use of logics in Artificial
Intelligence including:
-- Abductive and inductive reasoning
-- Answer set programming
-- Applications and foundations of logic-based AI systems
-- Argumentation systems
-- Automated reasoning including satisfiability checking and its extensions
-- Computational complexity and expressiveness
-- Description logics and other logical approaches to
semantic web and ontologies
-- Hybrid reasoning systems
-- Knowledge representation, reasoning, and compilation
-- Logic programming and constraint programming
-- Logics for uncertain and probabilistic reasoning
-- Logics in machine learning
-- Logics in multi-agent systems, games, and social choice
-- Non-classical such as modal, temporal, spatial,
paraconsistent, and hybrid logics
-- Nonmonotonic reasoning, belief revision, and updates
-- Planning and diagnosis based on logic
-- Preferences
-- Reasoning about actions and causality
Important Dates
* Deadline for abstract submission: May 3, 2010
* Deadline for paper submission: May 7, 2010
* Notification of acceptance: June 11, 2010
* Camera Ready Copy: June 30, 2010
Paper Submission
Proceedings will be published by Springer-Verlag in the Lecture Notes on
Artificial Intelligence series. Papers should be written in English, and
should be formatted according to the standard Springer LNCS style. All
submissions must be received by 23:59 GMT on May 3, 2010 (abstract) and
May 7, 2010 (full paper), and should be electronically submitted via the
link available on the JELIA 2010 web page.
There are two categories for submissions:
A. Regular papers
Submissions should not exceed 13 pages including figures, references,
etc., and should contain original research, and sufficient detail to
assess the merits and relevance of the contribution. Submissions must
not have been previously published or be simultaneously submitted for
publication elsewhere.
B. System descriptions
Submissions should not exceed 4 pages, and should describe an
implemented system and its application area(s). A demonstration is
expected to accompany a system presentation. Papers describing systems
that have already been presented in JELIA before will be accepted only
if significant and clear enhancements to the system are reported and
implemented.
Venue
The conference will be held in the main building of University of
Helsinki, located in the center of Helsinki. Founded in 1550, Helsinki has
been the Finnish capital since 1812, when it was rebuilt in the Empire
style by the orders of the Czar of Russia, hence sharing architectural
similarities with St. Petersburg even today. Located on the Baltic
peninsula centrally between the east and the west, Helsinki "the Daughter
of the Baltic" is a city full of contrasts: light and white in summer
while dark but full of warmth in winter, with a combination of high-tech,
contemporary design, and ever-present nature. Finnish design has made
Helsinki world famous, and recently Helsinki was appointed World Design
Capital 2012.
Programme Co-Chairs
Tomi Janhunen, Aalto University School of Science and Technology, Finland
http://www.tcs.hut.fi/~ttj/
Ilkka Niemelä, Aalto University School of Science and Technology, Finland
http://www.tcs.hut.fi/~ini/
Further Information
Conference web page: http://jelia2010.tkk.fi/
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