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IJCAI-11

19-22 Jul 2011
Barcelona, Spain

[Please help distributing this call for papers. Apologies for multiple 
postings.]

22nd International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence IJCAI-11
Barcelona, Spain,
July 19-22, 2011

Call for Papers

The IJCAI-11 Program Committee invites submissions of
technical papers for IJCAI-11, to be held in Barcelona,
Spain, July 19-22, 2011. Submissions are invited on
significant, original, and previously unpublished research
on all aspects of artificial intelligence.

The theme of IJCAI-11 is ''Integrated and Embedded
Artificial Intelligence'' (IEAI) with a focus on artificial
intelligence that crosses discipline boundaries within AI,
and between AI and other disciplines. Building systems
often requires techniques from more than one area (e.g.
both machine learning and natural language processing, or
both planning and preference representation). In addition,
larger systems often have AI components embedded within
that provide intelligent functionalities such as learning
and reasoning. The conference will include a special track
dedicated to such work.

Important dates

Abstract submission: Jan 19, 2011 (11:59PM, UTC-12)
Paper submission: Jan 24, 2011 (11:59PM, UTC-12)
Author feedback: Feb 28-Mar 3, 2011 (11:59PM, UTC-12).
Notification of acceptance/rejection: Mar 31, 2011
Camera-ready copy due: Apr 15, 211
Technical sessions: Jul 19-22, 2011

Submission Details

Submitted papers must be formatted according to IJCAI
guidelines and submitted electronically through the
IJCAI-11 paper submission site. Full instructions including
formatting guidelines and electronic templates are
available on the IJCAI-11 website: http://www.ijcai-11.org
(see the link titled Submission Details). Submission is
only electronic using the IJCAI-11 paper submission
software (this will be linked from the IJCAI-11 website
during the first week of December, 2010).

Papers will be accepted for either oral or poster
presentation. However, no distinction will be made between
accepted papers in the conference proceedings. At least one
author of each accepted paper is required to attend the
conference to present the work. Authors will be required to
agree to this requirement at the time of submission.

The paper title, author names, contact details, and a brief
abstract must be submitted electronically by January 19,
2011 (11:59 UTC-12). Authors will also be required to
indicate if their submission is for the special track on
''Integrated and Embedded Artificial Intelligence'' (IEAI),
in which case authors are required to clarify the
synergistic aspects of the integrated and embedded system.
All technical papers are due electronically on January 24,
2011 (11:59 UTC-12). Submissions received after the
deadline or that do not meet the length or formatting
requirements will not be accepted for review. No email or
fax submissions will be accepted. Notification of receipt
of an electronically submitted paper will be emailed to the
designated contact author soon after receipt. If there are
problems with the electronic submission, the program chair
will contact the designated author by email. The last day
for enquiries regarding lost submissions is January 28,
2011. The designated author will be emailed notification of
acceptance or rejection by March 31, 2011. Authors will
also be able to respond to preliminary reviews during the
period Feb. 28 to March 3, 2011. Guidelines for such
responses, along with details of the reviewing process will
be posted on the IJCAI-11 website. Camera-ready copy of
accepted papers must be received by the publisher by April
15, 2011.

Authors who do not have access to the web should contact
the program chair at pcchair11@ijcai.org no later than
January 1, 2011 for alternative submission instructions.

Content Areas

When submitting their abstract, authors will be required to
choose at least two and at most four content area keywords.
General categories should only be used if specific
categories do not apply or do not accurately reflect the
main contributions. Each keyword is placed within one of
ten major areas; however, many of the keywords cut across
multiple areas, and authors should feel free to select
keywords from multiple areas.

Policy on Multiple Submissions

IJCAI-11 will not accept any paper which, at the time of
submission,  is under review for or has already been
published or accepted for publication in a journal or
another conference. Authors are also required not to submit
their papers elsewhere during IJCAI's review period. These
restrictions apply only to journals and conferences, not to
workshops and similar specialized presentations with a
limited audience and without archival proceedings. Authors
will be required to confirm that their submissions conform
to these requirements at the time of submission.

Paper Length and Format

Submitted technical papers must be no longer than six
pages, including all figures and references, and must be
formatted according to posted IJCAI-11 guidelines. Papers
must be formatted for letter-size(8.5 x 11 paper, in
double-column format with a 10pt font. Electronic templates
for the LaTeX typesetting package, as well as a Word
template, that conform to IJCAI-11 guidelines will be made
available at the conference website in December.

Authors are required to submit their electronic papers  in
PDF format. Files in Postscript (ps), or any other format
will not be accepted.

Over-length papers will not be considered for review.  Each
accepted paper will be allowed six pages in the
proceedings; up to two additional pages may be purchased at
a price of $275 per page.

In order to make blind reviewing possible,  authors must
omit their names and affiliations from the paper. Also,
while the references should include all published
literature relevant to the paper, including previous works
of the authors, it should not include unpublished works.
When referring to one's own work, use the third person
rather than the first person. For example, say
''Previously, Foo and Bar [7] have shown that...'', rather
than ``In our previous work [7] we have shown that... Such
identifying information can be added back to the final
camera-ready version of accepted papers.

Review Process

Papers will be subject to blind peer review. Selection
criteria include accuracy and originality of ideas, clarity
and significance of results and quality of the
presentation.  IEAI papers will be judged based on the
usual measures of quality, with consideration of
the synergistic aspect of the integrated and embedded
components. Comparisons are
encouraged to be made against single-discipline systems.

The review process will include a short period for the
authors to view reviews and respond to technical questions
on the submitted work raised by the reviewers before
discussion starts within the programme committee. The
decision of the Program Committee will be final and cannot
be appealed.

Please send enquiries about paper submissions to
Toby Walsh, Program Chair IJCAI-11, pcchair11@ijcai.org.

For further information please visit the conference web
site: http://www.ijcai-11.org


List of keywords:

Agent-based and Multiagent Systems

 	Agent Theories and Architectures
 	Agent Communication
 	Agreement Technologies
 	Argumentation
 	Auctions and Market-Based Systems
 	Coordination and Collaboration
 	Distributed AI
 	E-Commerce
 	Game Theory
 	Multiagent Learning
 	Multiagent Planning
 	Multiagent Systems
 	Simulation and Emergent Behavior
 	Social Choice

Constraints, Satisfiability, and Search

 	Applications
 	Constraint Optimization
 	Constraint Satisfaction
 	Distributed Constraints
 	Dynamic Programming
 	Evaluation and Analysis
 	Global Constraints
 	Heuristic Search
 	Meta-heuristics
 	Quantifier Formulations
 	Satisfiability
 	Modeling
 	Search
 	Solvers and Tools
 	Symmetry

Knowledge Representation, Reasoning and Logic

 	Action, Change and Causality
 	Automated Reasoning and Theorem Proving
 	Beliefs and Knowledge
 	Common-Sense Reasoning
 	Computational Complexity
 	Description Logics and Ontologies
 	Diagnosis and Abductive Reasoning
 	Geometric, Spatial, and Temporal Reasoning
 	Knowledge Representation
 	Logic Programming
 	Many-Valued and Fuzzy Logics
 	Nonmonotonic Reasoning
 	Preferences
 	Qualitative Reasoning
 	Reasoning with Beliefs


Machine Learning

 	Active Learning
 	Case-based Reasoning
 	Classification
 	Cost-Sensitive Learning
 	Data Mining
 	Deep Learning
 	Ensemble Methods
 	Evolutionary Computation
 	Feature Selection/Construction
 	Kernel Methods
 	Learning Graphical Models
 	Learning Preferences or Rankings
 	Learning Theory
 	Machine Learning
 	Neural Networks
 	Online Learning
 	Reinforcement Learning
 	Relational Learning
 	Semi-Supervised/Unsupervised Learning
 	Structured Learning
 	Time-series/Data Streams
 	Transfer, Adaptation, Multi-task Learning

Multidisciplinary Topics and Applications

 	AI and Natural Sciences
 	AI and Social Sciences
 	Art and Music
 	AI and Ubiquitous Computing Systems
 	Autonomic Computing
 	Brain Sciences
 	Cognitive Modeling
 	Computational Biology and e-Health
 	Computer Games
 	Computer-Aided Education
 	Human-Computer Interaction
 	Intelligent Database Systems
 	Intelligent User Interfaces
 	Interactive Entertainment
 	Knowledge-based Software Engineering
 	Personalization and User Modeling
 	Philosophical and Ethical Issues
 	Real-Time Systems
 	Security and Privacy
 	Validation and Verification

Natural-Language Processing

 	Dialogue
 	Discourse
 	Information Extraction
 	Information Retrieval
 	Machine Translation
 	Morphology and Phonology
 	Natural Language Generation
 	Natural Language Semantics
 	Natural Language Summarization
 	Natural Language Syntax
 	Natural Language Processing
 	Psycholinguistics
 	Question Answering
 	Speech Recognition and Understanding
 	Text Classification

Planning and Scheduling

 	Activity and Plan Recognition
 	Applications of Planning
 	Conformant/Contingent Planning
 	Hierarchical Task Networks
 	Hybrid Systems
 	Markov Decisions Processes
 	POMDPs
 	Plan Execution and Monitoring
 	Planning Algorithms
 	Planning under Uncertainty
 	Real-time Planning
 	Robot Planning
 	Scheduling
 	Search in Planning and Scheduling
 	Theoretical Foundations of Planning

Robotics and Vision

 	Behavior and Control
 	Cognitive Robotics
 	Human Robot Interaction
 	Localization, Mapping, State Estimation
 	Manipulation
 	Motion and Path Planning
 	Multi-Robot Systems
 	Robotics
 	Sensor Networks
 	Vision and Perception

Uncertainty in AI

 	Approximate Probabilistic Inference
 	Bayesian Networks
 	Decision/Utility Theory
 	Exact Probabilistic Inference
 	Graphical Models
 	Preference Elicitation
 	Sequential Decision Making
 	Uncertainty

Web and Knowledge-based Information Systems

 	Information Extraction
 	Information Integration
 	Information Retrieval
 	Knowledge Acquisition
 	Knowledge Engineering
 	Knowledge-based Systems
 	Ontologies
 	Recommender Systems
 	Semantic Web
 	Social Networks
 	Source Wrapping
 	Web Mining
 	Web Search
 	Web Technologies