From crabapple.srv.cs.cmu.edu!cantaloupe.srv.cs.cmu.edu!magnesium.club.cc.cmu.edu!news.mic.ucla.edu!library.ucla.edu!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!noc.near.net!uunet!utcsri!alberta!vanbeek Wed Aug 4 12:14:12 EDT 1993 Article: 18091 of comp.ai Xref: crabapple.srv.cs.cmu.edu comp.ai:18091 Newsgroups: comp.ai,can.ai Path: crabapple.srv.cs.cmu.edu!cantaloupe.srv.cs.cmu.edu!magnesium.club.cc.cmu.edu!news.mic.ucla.edu!library.ucla.edu!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!noc.near.net!uunet!utcsri!alberta!vanbeek From: vanbeek@cs.UAlberta.CA (Peter van Beek) Subject: Call for participation: AI'94, Banff, Alberta Message-ID: <1993Jul28.225325.12420@cs.UAlberta.CA> Sender: news@cs.UAlberta.CA (News Administrator) Nntp-Posting-Host: vilna.cs.ualberta.ca Organization: University of Alberta Date: Wed, 28 Jul 1993 22:53:25 GMT Lines: 127 CALL FOR PARTICIPATION AI'94 Canadian Artificial Intelligence Conference Banff Park Lodge Banff, Alberta, Canada May 16-20, 1994 AI'94 is the tenth biennial conference on Artificial Intelligence sponsored by the Canadian Society for the Computational Study of Intelligence. AI'94 will be held in conjunction with AI/GI/VI'94. AI/GI/VI'94 is a unique event with three Canadian research conferences that present the latest results in artificial intelligence, computer graphics, and computer vision. Each conference offers three concurrent days of invited and submitted papers. For a single registration fee, conference participants can attend presentations in any of the three, promoting the exchange of knowledge among these important disciplines. Two days have been set aside for workshops and other events. A banquet and electronic theatre provide additional opportunities to meet speakers and other attendees for informal discussion in a social setting. The conference will be held at the Banff Park Lodge, Banff, Alberta. Banff is located in the spectacular Canadian Rockies, the beauty of which remains unsurpassed, and is just an hour and a half drive from Calgary. The Calgary International Airport can be reached from many North American cities via many different airlines. In addition, there is direct bus service from the Calgary International Airport to Banff, or alternatively one can arrange a limousine or rental car at the airport. The ski season usually ends around the 24th of May at Sunshine, so ski enthusiasts may enjoy spring skiing at its finest. For non-skiers there are many other activities to occupy their time. Contributions are invited that present original, unpublished results in all areas of Artificial Intelligence. Submitted papers must not exceed 5000 words in length, including abstract and bibliography. Theoretical and position papers will be judged on their originality and contribution to the field of AI, and applied papers on the importance and originality of the application. To help in the review process, authors should list, in decreasing order of relevance, 1 to 3 of the following keywords: applications learning reasoning (indicate subarea) search cognitive modelling knowledge representation planning architectures knowledge acquisition perception robotics language understanding problem solving theorem proving neural nets/connectionism Authors should submit four (4) complete copies of the paper in hardcopy form, for review by members of the program committee. Acceptance depends on the overall merit and significance of the reported research, as well as the quality of the written presentation. Each copy of the paper must include a cover page, separate from the body of the paper, which includes, in order, (1) title of the paper, (2) full names, postal addresses, phone numbers, and email address of all authors, (3) an abstract of no more than 250 words, and (4) keywords to classify the paper for review purposes. As a condition of acceptance, the author or a co-author must present the paper at the conference. If the paper is being submitted to other conferences, either in verbatim or in essence, authors must clearly indicate this on the cover page. Papers should be sent to the program chair, Renee Elio. Papers must be received by 15 November 1993. Notification of acceptance or rejection will be mailed to the first author by 7 February 1994. Camera ready copy of accepted papers is due 24 March 1994. Each paper will be allotted up to eight (8) pages in the conference proceedings, formatted using 12pt LaTeX or equivalent. The journal Artificial Intelligence intends to publish the ``best paper'' of the conference, and provide a prize. Selection of the best paper will be done by the program committee. Important Dates * November 15, 1993: Four copies of papers due to the program chair at the address listed below (no electronic submissions). * February 7, 1994: Author notifications mailed. * March 24, 1994: Accepted camera-ready papers due. * May 16-17, 1994: Workshops. * May 18-20, 1994: Conference technical program. Submit papers to: Renee Elio Computing Science Dept University of Alberta Edmonton, AB T6G 2H1 Canada For additional conference and registration information, contact: AI/GI/VI'94 Box 1098 Summerland, B.C. V0H 1Z0 Canada General Co-Chairs (AI/GI/VI'94): Tony Marsland & Wayne Davis, University of Alberta Program Chair (AI'94): Renee Elio, University of Alberta Local Arrangements (AI/GI/VI'94): Jan Mulder, Alberta Research Council Program Committee (AI'94): Fahiem Bacchus U of Waterloo Veronica Dahl Simon Fraser University Brian Gaines U of Calgary Russell Greiner Siemens Research Lab Lev Goldfarb U of New Brunswick Scott Goodwin U of Regina Rainer von Konigslow Cognex Corporation Bruce MacDonald U of Calgary Gordon McCalla U of Saskatchewan Mary McLeish U of Guelph Robert Mercer U of Western Ontario John Mylopoulos U of Toronto Monty Newborn McGill University Eric Neufeld U of Saskatchewan David Poole U of British Columbia Proposals for workshops are invited and should be sent to the program chair. From honeydew.srv.cs.cmu.edu!das-news.harvard.edu!noc.near.net!howland.reston.ans.net!math.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!sparky!rick Thu Aug 26 12:34:34 EDT 1993 Article: 4561 of news.announce.conferences Xref: honeydew.srv.cs.cmu.edu news.announce.conferences:4561 Newsgroups: news.announce.conferences Path: honeydew.srv.cs.cmu.edu!das-news.harvard.edu!noc.near.net!howland.reston.ans.net!math.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!sparky!rick From: janice@qucis.queensu.ca (Janice Glasgow) Subject: CFP: 10th Biennial Conference of the Canadian Society for Computational Studies of Intelligence Message-ID: <1993Aug26.005929.26807@sparky.sterling.com> Keywords: conference call, artificial intelligence Sender: rick@sparky.sterling.com (Richard Ohnemus) Organization: Computing & Information Science, Queen's University Date: Thu, 26 Aug 1993 00:59:29 GMT Approved: rick@sparky.sterling.com Expires: Tue, 16 Nov 1993 08:00:00 GMT Lines: 88 X-Md4-Signature: d1f8aca96af1fb7d691bbd2e3268ed7a CALL FOR PAPERS AI-94 The 10th Biennial Conference of the Canadian Society for Computational Studies of Intelligence (CSCSI) Banff Alberta, May 16-20, 1994 ai94@cs.ualberta.ca AI-94 is the tenth biennial conference on Artificial Intelligence sponsored by the Canadian Society for the Computational Study of Intelligence. It will be held in conjunction with the Vision Interface and Graphics Interface conferences. Tony Marsland (tony@cs.ualberta.ca), University of Alberta, is the general chair. Contributions are invited that present original, unpublished results in all areas of Artificial Intelligence. They should be sent to the program chair, Renee Elio, Department of Computing Science, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta (ai94@cs.ualberta.ca).Papers must be received by November 15,1993. Submitted papers must not exceed 5000 words in length, including abstract and bibliography. Theoretical and position papers will be judged on their originality and contribution to the field of AI, and applied papers on the importance and originality of the application. To help in the review process, authors should list, in decreasing order of relevance, 1 to 3 of the following keywords: applications learning reasoning(indicate subarea) cognitive modelling search knowledge representation planning architectures knowledge acquisition perception robotics language understanding problem solving theorem proving neural nets/connectionism Authors should submit four (4) complete copies of the paper in hardcopy form, for review by members of the program committee. Acceptance depends on the overall merit and significance of the reported research, as well as the quality of the written presentation. Each copy of the paper must include a cover page, separate from the body of the paper, which includes, in order, (1) title of the paper, (2) full names, postal addresses, phone numbers, and email addresses of all authors, (3) an abstract of no more than 250 words, and (4) keywords to classify the paper for review purposes. As a condition of acceptance, the author or a co-author must present the paper at the conference. If the paper is being submitted to other conferences, either in verbatim or in essence, authors must clearly indicate this on the cover page. Notification of acceptance or rejection will be mailed to the first author by February 7, 1994. Camera- ready copy of accepted papers is due March 24, 1994. Each paper will be allotted up to eight (8) double column pages in the conference proceedings, formatted using 12pt LaTeX or equivalent. Authors will be provided with appropriate LaTeX macros. The journal Artificial Intelligence also intends to publish the "best paper" of the conference, and to provide a prize. Selection of the best paper will be done by the program committee. All correspondence concerning the conference should be directed to ai94@cs.ualberta.ca. Program Committee: Fahiem Bacchus Veronica Dahl Brian Gaines Russell Greiner Lev Goldfarb Scott Goodwin Rainer van Konigslow Bruce MacDonald Gordon McCalla Mary McLeish Robert Mercer John Mylopoulos Monty Newborn Eric Neufeld David Poole