Logic List Mailing Archive

HLAI 2018: Multiconference on human-level AI

22-25 Aug 2018
Prague, Czech Republic

Dear all,

Following the success of the first HLAI multi-conference in New York in 
2016 (http://www.hlai2016.org/), the second edition will be held in Prague 
(Czech Republic), from August 22-25, 2018: https://www.hlai-conf.org/

HLAI 2018 will (again) combine?

?AGI?18, the Eleventh Annual Conference on Artificial General 
Intelligence.

?NeSy?18, the Thirteenth International Workshop on Neural-Symbolic 
Learning and Reasoning.

?BICA?18, the Ninth Annual International Conference on Biologically 
Inspired Cognitive Architectures.

Please find the corresponding Calls for Papers below:

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AGI'18: Eleventh Annual Conference on Artificial General Intelligence

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When: August 22-24, 2018

Where: Prague, Czech Republic

Event URL:  <http://agi-conference.org/2018/> 
http://agi-conference.org/2018/

The Eleventh Annual Conference on Artificial General Intelligence (AGI?18) 
will take place in Prague, Czech Republic, on August 22-24, 2018. The AGI 
conference series is the premier international event aimed at advancing 
the state of knowledge regarding the original goal of the AI field ? the 
creation of thinking machines with general intelligence at the human level 
and possibly beyond. Information on the previous AGI conferences may be 
found at <http://agi-conf.org/> http://agi-conf.org.

As in prior AGI conferences, we welcome contributed papers on all aspects 
of AGI R&D, with the key proviso that each paper should somehow contribute 
specifically to the development of Artificial General Intelligence. The 
EasyChair submission page will open soon.

Two types of papers will be accepted:

Regular papers, with a length limit of 10 pages, presenting new research 
results or rigorously describing new research ideas.

Short technical communications, with a limit of 4 pages, summarizing 
results and ideas of interest to the AGI audience, including reports about 
recent publications, position papers, and preliminary results.

The submission deadline is April 25, 2017. The EasyChair submission page 
will be opened a couple weeks prior: please keep track of it on the 
<http://agi-conference.org/2018/> event website.

Appropriate topics for contributed papers include, but are not restricted 
to: - Agent Architectures - Autonomy - Benchmarks and Evaluation - 
Cognitive Modeling - Collaborative Intelligence - Creativity - Distributed 
AI - Formal Models of General Intelligence - Implications of AGI for 
Society, Economy and Ecology - Integration of Different Capabilities - 
Knowledge Representation for General Intelligence - Languages, 
Specification Approaches and Toolkits - Learning, and Learning Theory - 
Motivation, Emotion and Affect - Multi-Agent Interaction - Natural 
Language Understanding - Neural-Symbolic Processing - Perception and 
Perceptual Modeling - Philosophy of AGI - Reasoning, Inference and 
Planning - Reinforcement Learning - Robotic and Virtual Embodiment - 
Simulation and Emergent Behavior - Solomonoff Induction.

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NeSy'18: Thirteenth International Workshop on Neural-Symbolic Learning and 
Reasoning

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When: August 23 & 24, 2018

Where: Prague, Czech Republic

Event URL:  <http://www.neural-symbolic.org/> 
http://www.neural-symbolic.org/

The International Workshop series on Neural-Symbolic Learning and 
Reasoning (NeSy) will come to Prague in August 2018 as part of the 
Multi-conference on Human-level AI (HLAI 2018).

Having started in Edinburgh at IJCAI 2005, NeSy is the premier event 
worldwide for the study and integration of neural computation and symbolic 
AI. Deep networks now offer the state-of-the-art for a large number of 
perceptual tasks such as image and speech recognition, and for complex 
games, having achieved impressive super-human levels of proficiency at the 
games of Go and Chess recently.

It is generally accepted though that AI requires a bridge from perception 
to cognition, including an ability to address a number of high-level 
cognitive tasks, typically associated with symbolic systems, such as 
reasoning, planning, abstraction, explanation, transfer learning and 
knowledge consolidation.

We invite submissions of novel research and practice papers addressing any 
of the aspects of neurosymbolic integration: representation of symbolic 
knowledge by neural networks, structured learning and relational learning 
in neural networks, reasoning in neural networks, knowledge extraction and 
distilling, neural-symbolic cognitive models and agents, and applications 
of neurosymbolic systems in robotics, simulation, fraud prevention, 
planning, natural language processing, semantic web, software engineering, 
autonomous systems verification, multimodal and online learning, 
semi-supervised and reinforcement learning, fault-tolerant computing, data 
science and analytics, bioinformatics, visual intelligence, etc.

In its 13th edition, and follows on from two successful Dagstuhl seminars 
on the topic in 2014 and 2017, and the sister Cognitive Computation 
symposium series, NeSy will take the shape of a 3-day conference with an 
associated journal publication in the prestigious IfCoLog online Journal 
of Applied Logic (JAL).

As in all previous editions (c.f.  <http://www.neural-symbolic.org/> 
www.neural-symbolic.org), NeSy will bring together world-leading academics 
and practitioners, including keynote and invited talks, contributed papers 
and a round table discussion, to present the latest results in 
neurosymbolic computing.

Authors of contributed papers are encouraged to use the LaTex article 
style, a 12pt font, and to submit a paper with no more than 12 pages plus 
references.

Papers should be submitted as electronic attachments in pdf format by 
email to the College Publications managing director, Ms Jane Spurr ( 
<mailto:jal@kcl.ac.uk> jal@kcl.ac.uk). The email message should include 
the author(s) names and affiliations, the title of the paper and the name 
of the NeSy'18 co-chair best suited to handle the submission. Please use 
the phrase "NeSy18 JAL submission" in the subject line.

The paper submission deadline is June 11, 2018.

Accepted papers must be presented at the conference. Feedback will be 
provided in writing by the programme committee and verbally at the 
conference, and is expected to be incorporated into the final version of 
the paper for publication in the JAL. Since the journal is online, papers 
will be published as soon as they are ready.

Late breaking papers can be submitted for presentation at the conference 
by 01/08/2018. Such papers may be accepted for publication at the JAL 
following a second round of reviews after the conference.

Programme Co-chairs: Artur d'Avila Garcez, Tarek R. Besold.

Keywords: neurosymbolic computing, neural networks, machine learning, 
knowledge representation and reasoning.

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BICA'18: Ninth Annual International Conference on Biologically Inspired 
Cognitive Architectures

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When: August 23 & 24, 2018
Where: Prague, Czech Republic

Event URL:  <http://bica2018.bicasociety.org/> 
http://bica2018.bicasociety.org/

Ninth Annual International Conference on Biologically Inspired Cognitive 
Architectures (BICA 2018) will be held as a part of HLAI-18 in Prague, 
Czech Republic, on August 22-24.

Since 2010, the annual BICA conference attracts researchers from the edge 
of scientific frontiers, showing steady growth success over eight years. 
In contrast with major conferences in AI and cognitive science, we offer 
informal brainstorming atmosphere together with publication venues to 
ambitious ideas, regardless of their immediate practical value or solid 
empirical justification. If you believe that you have a constructive 
contribution to the future human-like AI, then you should present your 
work at BICA 2018. BICAns understand "biological inspirations" broadly, 
borrowing them from cognitive psychology, educational, neurosciences, 
linguistics, ethics, narratology, studies of design and creativity, and 
more. The "filter" is the question of whether your contribution may help 
us make machines our friends or understand how the mind works.

Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures (BICA) are computational 
frameworks for building intelligent agents that are inspired from 
biological intelligence. Biological intelligent systems, notably humans, 
have many qualities that are often lacking in artificially designed 
systems including robustness, flexibility and adaptability to 
environments. At a point in time where visibility into naturally 
intelligent systems is exploding, thanks to modern brain imaging and 
recording techniques allowing us to map brain structures and functions, 
our ability to learn lessons from nature and to build biologically.

Further details will be announced on http://bica2018.bicasociety.org/.
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