From time95@borealis.cs.uregina.ca Thu Jul 7 14:08:10 EDT 1994 Article: 23011 of comp.ai Xref: glinda.oz.cs.cmu.edu comp.ai:23011 Newsgroups: comp.ai,net.announce.conferences Path: honeydew.srv.cs.cmu.edu!das-news.harvard.edu!news2.near.net!MathWorks.Com!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!library.ucla.edu!news.mic.ucla.edu!unixg.ubc.ca!quartz.ucs.ualberta.ca!tribune.usask.ca!sue!borealis.cs.uregina.ca!time95 From: time95@borealis.cs.uregina.ca (Time 95) Subject: Call for Papers: TIME-95 Sender: news@sue.cc.uregina.ca Message-ID: <1994Jul07.153356.57849@sue.cc.uregina.ca> Date: Thu, 07 Jul 1994 15:33:56 GMT Organization: University of Regina Lines: 113 TIME-95: Second International Workshop on Temporal Representation and Reasoning (in conjunction with FLAIRS-95) Melbourne Beach, Florida, USA April 26, 1995 CALL FOR PAPERS The purpose of this workshop is to bring together active researchers in the area of temporal representation and reasoning in Artificial Intelligence. Through paper presentations and discussions, the participants will exchange, compare, and contrast results in the area. The workshop is planned as a one-day event to immediately precede FLAIRS-95 (Eighth Annual Florida Artificial Intelligence Research Symposium, April 27-29). Workshop participants are also encouraged to submit papers to FLAIRS and attend the conference. The workshop will be conducted as a combination of paper presentations, a poster session, an invited talk, and a panel discussion. The format will provide ample time for discussions and exchange of ideas. The workshop registration fee will be waived for those who register for FLAIRS-95. Submission of high quality papers or extended abstracts describing mature results or on-going work are invited for all areas of temporal representation and reasoning, including, but not limited to: temporal logics and ontologies temporal languages and architectures planning, actions, and events frame problem continuous versus discrete time point versus interval representations temporal knowledge, belief, and uncertainty temporal learning and discovery multiple agents, communication, and synchronization foundational issues and applications To maximize interaction among participants, the size of the workshop will be limited. Accepted papers will be invited for full presentation or a poster presentation. All submissions must be received by November 10, 1994. Notification of acceptance or rejection will be sent to the first author (or designated author) on February 1, 1995. Prospective participants should submit 5 copies of a 5-8 page extended abstract to: TIME-95, Department of Computer Science, University of Regina, Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada S4S 0A2. For further information and future announcements send email to: time95@cs.uregina.ca. PUBLICATION All accepted papers will be published in the workshop proceedings. As well, a selected subset of the papers will be invited for inclusion (subject to refereeing) in a special issue of a journal. ORGANIZATION Workshop and Program Co-chairs: Scott Goodwin, University of Regina Howard Hamilton, University of Regina FLAIRS Conference General Chairs: Dan Tamir, Florida Institute of Technology Avelino Gonzalez, Univeristy of Central Florida PROGRAM COMMITTEE Frank Anger, University of West Florida, USA Tom Dean, Brown University, USA Jennifer Elgot-Drapkin, Arizona State Univeristy, USA Dov Gabbay, Imperial College, UK Michael Georgeff, Australian AI Institute, Australia Peter Haddawy, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA Pat Hayes, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA Keiji Kanazawa, University of California-Berkeley, USA Johannes Koomen, State University of New York, USA Peter Ladkin, University of Stirling, UK Gerard Ligozat, Universite Paris XI, France Leora Morgenstern, IBM Yorktown, USA Robert Morris, Florida Institute of Technology, USA Bernhard Nebel, Universitaet des Saarlandes, Germany Don Perlis, University of Maryland, USA Han Reichgelt, University of the West Indies, Jamaica Mark Reynolds, Imperial College, UK Erik Sandewall, Linkoping University, Sweden Len Schubert, University of Rochester, USA Murray Shanahan, Imperial College, UK Peter van Beek, University of Alberta, Canada SPONSORING ORGANIZATIONS Sponsorship for TIME-95 is being sought from the American Association for Artificial Intelligence (AAAI), Canadian Society for Computational Studies of Intelligence (CSCSI), Florida Artificial Intelligence Research Society (FLAIRS), and the University of Regina. SUMMARY OF IMPORTANT DATES November 10, 1994 Submission deadline February 1, 1995 Acceptance letters mailed March 31, 1995 Camera-ready copy deadline April 26, 1995 TIME-95 Workshop April 27-29, 1995 FLAIRS-95 Conference -- TIME-95 Co-chairs (Scott D. Goodwin and Howard J. Hamilton) Department of Computer Science, University of Regina, Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada S4S 0A2. FAX: 306/585-4745 Phone: 306/585-{5210,4079} Email: time95@cs.uregina.ca Article 24364 of comp.ai: Newsgroups: comp.ai,news.announce.conference Path: cantaloupe.srv.cs.cmu.edu!das-news.harvard.edu!news2.near.net!MathWorks.Com!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!howland.reston.ans.net!news.sprintlink.net!uunet!newsflash.concordia.ca!nstn.ns.ca!dragon.acadiau.ca!dragon.acadiau.ca!900073s From: 900073s@dragon.acadiau.ca (Donald Smith) Subject: Time95: Call for Papers Message-ID: <1994Sep22.192903.6640@relay.acadiau.ca> Summary: Call for papers for the Time95 workshop Keywords: Time95, CFP, Workshop, FLAIRS, AI Sender: news@relay.acadiau.ca Nntp-Posting-Host: dragon.acadiau.ca Reply-To: time95@cs.uregina.ca Organization: Acadia University Date: Thu, 22 Sep 1994 19:29:03 GMT Lines: 119 TIME-95: Second International Workshop on Temporal Representation and Reasoning (in conjunction with FLAIRS-95) Melbourne Beach, Florida, USA April 26, 1995 CALL FOR PAPERS The purpose of this workshop is to bring together active researchers in the area of temporal representation and reasoning in Artificial Intelligence. Through paper presentations and discussions, the participants will exchange, compare, and contrast results in the area. The workshop is planned as a one-day event to immediately precede FLAIRS-95 (Eighth Annual Florida Artificial Intelligence Research Symposium, April 27-29). Workshop participants are also encouraged to submit papers to FLAIRS and attend the conference. The workshop will be conducted as a combination of paper presentations, a poster session, an invited talk, and a panel discussion. The format will provide ample time for discussions and exchange of ideas. The workshop registration fee will be waived for those who register for FLAIRS-95. Submission of high quality papers or extended abstracts describing mature results or on-going work are invited for all areas of temporal representation and reasoning, including, but not limited to: temporal logics and ontologies temporal languages and architectures frame problem, planning, actions, and events temporal databases continuous versus discrete time point versus interval representations temporal knowledge, belief, and uncertainty temporal learning and discovery multiple agents, communication, and synchronization foundational issues and applications To maximize interaction among participants, the size of the workshop will be limited. Accepted papers will be invited for full presentation or a poster presentation. All submissions must be received by November 10, 1994. Notification of acceptance or rejection will be sent to the first author (or designated author) on February 1, 1995. Prospective participants should submit 5 copies of a 5-8 page extended abstract to: TIME-95, Department of Computer Science, University of Regina, Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada S4S 0A2. Or preferably, email a postscript version of your abstract to: time95@cs.uregina.ca. The above email address may also be used to obtain further information and future announcements. PUBLICATION All accepted papers will be published in the workshop proceedings. As well, a selected subset of the papers will be invited for inclusion (subject to refereeing) in a special issue of a journal. ORGANIZATION Workshop and Program Co-chairs: Scott Goodwin, University of Regina Howard Hamilton, University of Regina FLAIRS Conference General Chairs: Dan Tamir, Florida Institute of Technology Avelino Gonzalez, Univeristy of Central Florida PROGRAM COMMITTEE Frank Anger, University of West Florida, USA Luca Chittaro, Universita di Udine, Italy Tom Dean, Brown University, USA Jennifer Elgot-Drapkin, Arizona State Univeristy, USA Dov Gabbay, Imperial College, UK Michael Georgeff, Australian AI Institute, Australia Peter Haddawy, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA Pat Hayes, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA Keiji Kanazawa, University of California-Berkeley, USA Johannes Koomen, State University of New York, USA Peter Ladkin, University of Stirling, UK Gerard Ligozat, Universite Paris XI, France Angelo Montanari, Universita di Udine, Italy Leora Morgenstern, IBM Yorktown, USA Robert Morris, Florida Institute of Technology, USA Bernhard Nebel, Universitaet des Saarlandes, Germany Don Perlis, University of Maryland, USA Han Reichgelt, University of the West Indies, Jamaica Mark Reynolds, Imperial College, UK Erik Sandewall, Linkoping University, Sweden Len Schubert, University of Rochester, USA Murray Shanahan, Imperial College, UK Peter van Beek, University of Alberta, Canada SPONSORING ORGANIZATIONS Sponsorship for TIME-95 is being sought from the American Association for Artificial Intelligence (AAAI), Canadian Society for Computational Studies of Intelligence (CSCSI), Florida Artificial Intelligence Research Society (FLAIRS), and the University of Regina. SUMMARY OF IMPORTANT DATES November 10, 1994 Submission deadline February 1, 1995 Acceptance letters mailed March 31, 1995 Camera-ready copy deadline April 26, 1995 TIME-95 Workshop April 27-29, 1995 FLAIRS-95 Conference -- TIME-95 Co-chairs (Scott D. Goodwin and Howard J. Hamilton) Department of Computer Science, University of Regina, Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada S4S 0A2. FAX: 306/585-4745 Phone: 306/585-{5210,4079} Email: time95@cs.uregina.ca -- Donald Smith, 900073s@dragon.acadiau.ca Disclaimer: I may be wrong.