Background
Logics provide a formal basis, and key descriptive
notation, for the study and development of applications and systems
in Artificial Intelligence (AI). With the depth and maturity of
formalisms, methodologies and systems today, such logics are
increasing important. The European Conference on Logics in
Artificial Intelligence (or Journées Européennes 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 official language, and
with proceedings published in Springer-Verlag's Lecture Notes in
Artificial Intelligence. Previous meetings took place in Roscoff,
FR (1988), Amsterdam, NL (1990), Berlin, DE (1992), York, UK (1994),
Évora, PT (1996), Dagstuhl, DE (1998), Màlaga, ES (2000),
Cosenza, IT (2002), and Lisbon, PT (2004). 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.
Aim and Scope
The aim of JELIA06 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 a 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to submit papers presenting original and unpublished research in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 AI. A non-exhaustive
list of topics of interest includes:
-- Abductive and inductive reasoning
-- Applications and foundations of logic-based AI systems
-- Automated reasoning and theorem proving
-- Computational complexity and expressiveness in AI systems
-- Foundations of logic programming and knowledge-based
-- Hybrid reasoning systems
-- Knowledge representation and reasoning
-- Logic based applications to the Semantic Web
-- Logic based planning and diagnosis
-- Logic programming and nonmonotonic reasoning
-- Logics and multi-agent systems
-- Logics in machine learning
-- Non-classical logics, including modal, temporal, spatial, hybrid and
description logics
-- Nonmonotonic reasoning, belief revision and updates
-- Reasoning about actions, causal reasoning and causation
-- Uncertain and probabilistic reasoning
Paper Submission
Proceedings will be published by Springer-Verlag in the
Lecture Notes on Artificial Intelligence series. All submissions
must be received (in PS or PDF only) by 1st May, 2006, and should be
electronically submitted via the form available at the JELIA06 web
page. Papers should be written in English, and should be formatted
according to the Springer LNCS
style
(with standard margins). There are two categories of
submission:
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. Simultaneous submission to
other conferences with proceedings or submission of material that
has already been published elsewhere is strictly forbidden.
B. Tool descriptions. Submissions should not exceed 4
pages, and should describe the implemented tool and its novel
features. A demonstration is expected to accompany a tool
presentation. Papers describing tools that have already been
presented in this conference before will be accepted only if
significant and clear enhancements to the tool are reported and
implemented.
Important Dates
- Deadline for submission: 1st May, 2006
- Notification of acceptance: 8th June, 2006
- Camera Ready Copy: 26th June, 2006