Special Track on
Spatio-Temporal Reasoning
2010
FLAIRS-23
The Shores Resort & Spa
Daytona Beach, Florida, USA
May 19-21, 2010
Description
Reasoning about space and time is a major field of interest in many areas of theoretical and applied AI, especially in the theory and application of temporal and spatial models in planning, high-level navigation of autonomous mobile robots, natural language understanding, temporal databases, and concurrent and distributed programming.
The Special Track on Spatio-Temporal Reasoning focuses on research and development aspects in the area of reasoning about models of space and time. We are seeking submissions of papers that describe original results addressing issues such as the following
- Representation of and reasoning about spatial or temporal information
- Spatial and spatio-temporal cognition
- Granularity of different representation formalisms
- Ontologies for spatio-temporal reasoning
- Reasoning with imprecise or incomplete spatio-temporal knowledge
- Spatio-temporal data mining
- Spatial and temporal databases
NEW: Invited Speaker
We are very pleased to announce that Prof. Anthony Cohn from the University of Leeds will be giving a keynote presentation.
Submissions
Submitted papers must be original, and not submitted concurrently to a journal or another conference. Full papers may be up to 6 pages, and poster papers up to 2 pages. Papers must be in AAAI format, and submitted as PDF through the EasyChair conference system. Fake author names and affiliations must be used on submitted papers, to provide double-blind reviewing. (N.B. Do not use a fake name for your EasyChair login - your EasyChair account information is hidden from reviewers.) The proceedings of FLAIRS will be published by the AAAI. Authors of accepted papers will be required to sign a form transferring copyright of their contribution to AAAI. An author of each accepted paper is required to register, attend, and present the paper at FLAIRS.
- Paper submission deadline: 23rd November 2009
- Notification of paper decisions: 22nd January 2010
- Final version of papers due (to AAAI): 22nd February 2010
ST Program Committee
(to be advised)
- Carl Schultz
(chair, primary contact), The University of Auckland, New Zealand
csch050@aucklanduni.ac.nz - Bernhard Heinemann, FernUniversitaet in Hagen, Germany
bernhard.heinemann@fernuni-hagen.de - Lina Khatib, PSGS/NASA Ames Research Center, USA
Lina.Khatib-1@nasa.gov - Jason Li, The Australian National University, Australia
jason.li@anu.edu.au - André Trudel, Acadia University, Canada
andre.trudel@acadiau.ca - Zygmunt Vetulani, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland
vetulani@amu.edu.pl