10.0544 Conferences: OPSIS; IBERAMIA '98

WILLARD MCCARTY (willard.mccarty@kcl.ac.uk)
Sat, 21 Dec 1996 16:20:55 +0000 (GMT)

Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 10, No. 544.
Center for Electronic Texts in the Humanities (Princeton/Rutgers)
Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
Information at http://www.princeton.edu/~mccarty/humanist/

[1] From: Willard McCarty <Willard.McCarty@kcl.ac.uk> (44)
Subject: OPSIS: interdisciplinary conference on perception

[2] From: Gabriel Pereira Lopes <gpl@di.fct.unl.pt> (194)
Subject: cfp- IBERAMIA98

--[1]----------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sat, 21 Dec 1996 10:50:07 +0000 ()
From: Willard McCarty <Willard.McCarty@kcl.ac.uk>
Subject: OPSIS: interdisciplinary conference on perception

The following, from the Classical Association of Canada Bulletin,
should be of interest to some Humanists:

b) OPSIS: An Interdisciplinary Graduate Student Conference
April 4-6, 1997
Department of Classics, SUNY at Buffalo

Under the theme OPSIS, the graduate students at the State University of
New York at Buffalo are planning an interdisciplinary conference dealing
with issues of PERCEPTION. Papers are encouraged from graduate students
in a variety of disciplines: Classics, Art History, Philosophy,
Anthropology, Classical Archaeology, English, Comparative Literature,
Media Studies, Political Science, et alia. One of our main goals is to
continue the precedent begun with last year's successful conference,
TRANSLATIO (translation or transformation). This year we have chosen the
theme of OPSIS, for which papers should address questions of perception
relating to the ancient world - id est, interpretations of the
archaeological record, women and gender, race, the individual within the
collective, theatrical performance and audience, the source material for
aesthetic writing in modern literature, the portrayal of ancient
archetypes in popular cinema....

Papers should be 15-20 minutes in presentation. All submissions should be
one-page abstracts of approximately 300 words (no full-length papers,
please). Mail submissions to:

OPSIS Conference
c/o Department of Classics
712 Clemens Hall
SUNY Buffalo
Buffalo, NY 14260

DEADLINE: February 7, 1997
Notifications are scheduled for early March.

For more information, contact:

Holly An' Oyster or Melissa Considine
(716) 885-3788
oyster@acsu.buffalo.edu

or:

Allison Glazebrook
amg5@acsu.buffalo.edu

Conference Co-sponsored by: Graduate Student Association, Sub Board I,
Inc., Raymond Chair, Department of Classics, and Classics Graduate Student
Association

------------------------------------------------
Dr. Willard McCarty, Senior Lecturer
King's College London / Strand / London WC2R 2LS
+44 0171 873-2784 / Willard.McCarty@kcl.ac.uk
http://www.kcl.ac.uk/kis/schools/hums/ruhc/wlm/

--[2]----------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Fri, 20 Dec 1996 09:51:07 -0500
From: Gabriel Pereira Lopes <gpl@di.fct.unl.pt>
Subject: cfp- IBERAMIA98

Could you please forward this announcement to those you think may be interested
in applying?

IBERAMIA-98

SIXTH IBEROAMERICAN CONFERENCE
ON ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
Lisbon, Portugal, October 5-9, 1998
(Under the auspices of the Portuguese Association for Artificial Intelligence)

The age of AI atlantic discoveries

"The portuguese dared to engage the great oceanic sea. They entered it
fearlessly. They discovered new islands, new lands, new seas, new peoples,
and what is more important, new heavens and new stars ... Now it is clear
that these discoveries ... were not achieved through guesswork: our seamen
set off well trained and provided with instruments and rules of astronomy
and geometry."
from Pedro Nunes, 1537

The Sixth IberoAmerican Conference on Artificial Intelligence will be held
at Lisbon, Portugal, on October 5-9, 1998, under the auspices of the
Portuguese Association for Artificial Intelligence (APPIA), in a unique
cultural environment, precisely the headquarters of Fundacao Calouste
Gulbenkian (two museums, one for Modern Art and another for Classical Art,
covering also the private collection of the founder, a library, permanent
expositions, and a beautiful garden). At the same time the World Exposition
(Expo'98), around the main topic of Oceans and commemorating the portuguese
sea discovery of India (1498), will be open in the oriental side of Lisbon,
creating a historic context for discussing the cooperation within the
sciences of the artificial among the countries of the Atlantic rein, and
under the theme of AI atlantic discoveries.

Established in 1988 (Barcelona) by three Iberoamerican Associations of AI
(AEPIA, SMIA and APPIA), after a first meeting in Morelia (Mexico) in 1986
of SMIA and AEPIA, the event was organized every two-years since then in
Morelia (1990), La Habana (1992), Caracas (1994) and Cholula (1996), taking
Portuguese and Spanish as oficial languages and with the aim to promote and
difuse the research and development carried out in the countries associated
with those two latin languages and connected by strong historical links
from XVI century. Along the years, the Executive Committee of IBERAMIA was
enlarged with the inclusion of AVINTA (Venezuela), SMC (Cuba) and SBC
(Brazil).

IBERAMIA-98 will run for the first time in a decade with a paper track in
English (for submission and presentation) in order to close the links now
with other AI communities where AI is more developed and explored.

Structure

The scientific program will be structured along two main modules, the open
discussion and the paper track. October 5, a bank holiday in Portugal, may
be dedicated to see the World Fair Expo'98. The first day of the Conference
(tuesday) is organized with tutorials directed to informatics
professionals, the formal opening, the IBERAMIA lecture delivered by a
distinguished iberoamerican researcher, and the declaration of the prize
Jose Negrete awarded by the Scientific Committee to the best paper
submitted. Also, and in parallel, working groups will be organized in order
to discuss general topics (eg. scientific and industrial joint
cooperation). The open discussion track (wednesday) will be composed by
working sessions devoted to the most important areas of research in
iberoamerican countries, the AI Education Symposium dedicated to confront
ideas about the best ways to teach AI, a session to present the best M. Sc.
or Ph. D. thesis of the whole region, and a video conference panel to
establish bridges between Europe and America (involving those unable to
attend this panel). The paper track (thursday and friday) will be composed
by invited talks and paper presentations from all over the world on the
full range of AI research and covering both theoretical and foundational
issues, and applications as well.

Some Workshops will be organized the week before, namely one on Distributed
Artificial Intelligence (following the first one in Xalapa (Mexico) in
1996, before IBERAMIA-96, and on any other topics to be proposed by those
interested in activating the current research.

During the Conference there will be an exposition of books written by
iberoamerican researchers and academics, access to the WWW pages of the AI
associations sponsering the event, and demonstrations of AI industrial
products designed in eberoamerican countries.

The portuguese association (APPIA) will organize the week before the Sixth
Advanced School on AI (EAIA-98) adopting English as the official language.

Paper presentations

The first track will be held mainly in latin languages (Portuguese and
Spanish), but also in English (depending on the preference of the authors).
The papers may be written in English. The second track will be conducted
only in English.

Publication

The invited lecture and the papers of the open discussion track will be
published in the Proceedings of the Conference. The organizers intend to
arrange the publication of the contributions to the paper track by some
international publishing house.

Submission

Submissions are namely requested in the following topics:

Agent-oriented programming
Case-based reasoning
Computer vision
Constraint programming
Database mining tools and aplications
Explanation mechanisms
Foundations issues
Genetic algorithms
Hypothetical reasoning
Intelligent information retrieval
Intelligent tutoring and learning environments
Knowledge acquisition
Knowledge representation
Knowledge-based systems validation
Model-based reasoning
Multi-agent and distributed problem-solving
Natural language processing
Neural nets
Robotics
Temporal and spatial reasoning
Symbolic learning

Important Dates

Deadline for submission of papers (Open Discussion and Full International
tracks): February, 1, 1998
Deadline for submission of tutorials, working groups and workshops
proposals: April 2, 1998
Deadline for submission of proposals for the concurse of the best thesis
(M. Sc. or Ph. D.): April 2, 1998 (Chair: Dr. Jaime Sichman, Escola
Politecnica, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Av. Professor Luciano Gualberto, no
158, travessa 3, CEPO 5508-900 Sao Paulo, SP, Brasil, jaime@pcs.usp.br)

Notification of acceptance of papers: May 15, 1998
Notification of acceptance of tutorials, working groups, and workshops:
June 1, 1998
Deadline for receipt of paper's final version: June 15, 1998

Conference site

The Conference takes place in Lisbon within the installations of Fundacao
Calouste Gulbenkian.

President and Local Chairman:
prof. Gabriel Pereira Lopes (P)
Departamento de Informatica
Faculdade de Ciencias e Tecnologia, Universidade Nova de Lisboa Quinta da Torre
2825 Monte da Caparica, Portugal
Phone: (351 1) 294 85 36 Fax: (351 1) 294 85 41
gpl@di.fct.unl.pt

Program and Scientific Chairman:
prof. Helder Coelho (P)
Departamento de Informatica
Faculdade de Ciencias, Universidade de Lisboa
Bloco C5, Piso 1, Campo Grande
1700 Lisboa, Portugal
Phone: (351 1) 7500087 Fax: (351 1) 7500084
hcoelho@di.fc.ul.pt

2nd DAI IBERAMIA Workshop Chair
Dr. Francisco Garijo
Telefonica I+D
Emilio Vargas 6
28043 Madrid, Spain
Phone: +34 1 337 4518 Fax: +34 1 337 4602
fgarijo@tid.es

Scientific Committee:

Alexis Drogoul (F)
Alfred Kobsa (G)
Alvaro del Val (S)
Angel Puerta (S)
Antonio Sanchez (M)
Carlos Pinto Ferreira (P)
Christian Lemaitre (M)
Cristiano Castelfranchi (I)
Ernesto Costa (P)
Felisa Verdejo (S)
Francisco Cantu (M)
Gabriel Pereira Lopes (P)
Guillermo Simari (A)
Hector Geffner (V)
Hermann Steffen (U)
Jaime Sichman (B)
Javier Pinto (Ch)
John Self (UK)
Jorge Villalobos (C)
Jose Cuena (S)
Jose Felix Costa (P)
Jose Moreno (V)
Jose Ramirez (V)
Juan Carlos Santamaria (V)
Leopoldo Bertossi (Ch)
Luciano Garcia (Cu)
Olga Padron (Cu)
Pedro Barahona Fonseca (P)
Ramon Lopez de Mantaras (S)
Raul Carnota (A)
Rosa Viccari (B)
Suresh Manandhar (UK)
Tarcisio Pequeno (B)
Veronica Dahl (C)
Werner Nutt (G)
Werner DePauli-Schimanovich (A)
Wilmer Pereira (V)

Sponsored by:

APPIA (Associacao Portuguesa para a Inteligencia Artificial), AEPIA
(Asociacion Espanola para la Inteligencia Artificial), SMIA (Sociedad
Mexicana de Inteligencia Artificial), AVINTA (Asociacion Venezolana de
Inteligencia Artificial), SMCC (Sociedad de Matematica y Computacion de
Cuba) and SBC (Sociedade Brasileira de Computacao).

******************************************************************************
Prof. Helder Coelho
Departamento de Informatica
Faculdade de Ciencias
Universidade de Lisboa
Bloco C5, Piso 1, Campo Grande
1700 Lisboa, Portugal
telephone: 351.1.7573141 ext.2562 Telefax:351.1.7500084
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