Dear all,

Please allow me to remind you that the extended deadline for the workshop is 
approaching, so we would appreciate your last efforts to diffuse the call and 
to try to attract at least a couple of submissions from your communities.
Of course, your own submissions are also very welcome.

Also, please notice that the workshop is now held in coordination with :

The Twenty-first International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence 
(IJCAI-09),
The Third IEEE International Conference on Space Mission Challenges for 
Information Technology (SMC-IT-09),
The Sixth International Workshop on Planning and Scheduling for Space (IWPSS-09)


Thanks again,
Kind Regards,
Christos Ampatzis

====================================
Christos Ampatzis, Ph.D.
Research Fellow, European Space Agency
Advanced Concepts Team (http://www.esa.int/act)
ESTEC, Keplerlaan 1, 2201 AZ Noordwijk, The Netherlands
Tel: +31(0)71 5658587, Fax: +31(0)71 5658018
=====================================

----------------------------------------------------------

Apologies for multiple postings.
----------------------------------------------------------

The Advanced Concepts Team of the European Space Agency and the Artificial 
Intelligence Group of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory of the National Aeronautics 
and Space Administration will be organising a workshop on Artificial 
Intelligence in Space held in coordination with IJCAI-09<http://ijcai-09.org/>, 
SMC-IT-09<http://smc-it.org/>, and IWPSS-09<http://smc-it.org/iwpss/> in 
Pasadena, California. We invite your high quality submissions to this workshop.


----------------------------------------------------------
CALL FOR ABSTRACTS
----------------------------------------------------------
The IJCAI-09 Workshop on Artificial Intelligence in Space
Twenty-first International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence 
(IJCAI-09)
Third IEEE International Conference on Space Mission Challenges for Information 
Technology (SMC-IT-09)
Sixth International Workshop on Planning and Scheduling for Space (IWPSS-09)

Pasadena, California, U.S.A., 17-18 July 2009
Workshop website: http://www.congrex.nl/09c17/
Conference website: http://ijcai-09.org/
----------------------------------------------------------

Important Dates - UPDATED
----------------------------------------------------------
* Submission deadline: 01.04.09
* Notification of acceptance: 30.04.09
* Full paper submission: 06.07.09
* Workshop: 17-18.07.09

Brief description
----------------------------------------------------------
Intelligent machines, programs, or agents, are systems that adapt, learn or 
perceive their environment and take actions which maximize their chances of 
success. The design of intelligent systems for operation in known and 
predictable environments or under a well-defined set of conditions is a 
demanding task that has been widely addressed in the past decades. However, 
existing machine intelligence has not been extensively tried and tested in 
highly unpredictable and hazardous environments, as space. Arguably, successful 
operation in space is a far more challenging endeavour than operation in, e.g., 
controlled robotic arenas. Similarly, space applications may need novel 
programming paradigms, far more flexible and adaptive than conventional 
computing.

Two keywords in our quest for designing artificially intelligent entities are 
autonomy and adaptivity. Spacecrafts, satellites, rovers and other machines 
need to be able to autonomously make decisions, to quickly process and 
categorise vast amounts of incoming data, monitor their health status, detect 
and self-heal faults. Machines need to learn to adapt fast to growing user 
demands, to interact in more complex ways with other machines and humans, and 
new algorithms need to emerge to tackle the complexity of real-world problems. 
The research field of Artificial Intelligence with its many flavours can 
significantly contribute to this goal. From solutions inspired by the behaviour 
of social animals, to imitating how the human brain functions during 
decision-making; from robust optimisation algorithms to natural language 
interfaces for human-computer interactions; from efficient control algorithms 
to data mining and knowledge discovery, advances in AI research can be applied 
to space related problems.

In order to briefly summarize the up-to-date contributions from different 
fields of AI to space science and applications, to indicate how recent AI 
findings can be utilized and to identify new areas of AI which could be of use 
in space exploration, the Advanced Concepts Team of ESA and the Artificial 
Intelligence Group of NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab will be organising a workshop 
on Artificial Intelligence in Space held in coordination with 
IJCAI-09<http://ijcai-09.org/>, SMC-IT-09<http://smc-it.org/>, and 
IWPSS-09<http://smc-it.org/iwpss/> in Pasadena, California, on July 17-18, 
2009. IJCAI is the largest AI conference in the world.

Submission to the workshop is encouraged for scientists involved in both 
space-related and non-space related research. The topics covered in this 
workshop will be of particular interest to scientists involved in space 
engineering and in the various fields related to Artificial Intelligence 
research. The aim of the workshop is to bring together AI experts and space 
engineers, stimulating the exchange of ideas between the two groups. The former 
can provide with new tools, and the latter with expertise and hands-on 
experience on space applications.

This workshop is the follow-up to the workshop "Artificial Intelligence In 
Space", held at IJCAI-07, Hyderabad, India, which was co-organised by the 
Advanced Concepts Team, together with the Artificial Intelligence group of JPL 
and the Department of Computer Science of the University of Texas at El Paso.


Call for Abstracts
----------------------------------------------------------
The workshop will place emphasis on AI topics, which already are, or may be of 
particular interest in the future from the space applications point of view. 
Suggested topics include the following, but should not be viewed as being 
exclusive:

    * Emerging AI fields such as Artificial Life or Swarm Intelligence;
    * AI methods for intelligent interfaces and presentation of data;
    * Autonomous decision making and control;
    * AI methods for data analysis;
    * AI methods for design automation and support;
    * AI search and optimization methods;
    * AI methods for monitoring and diagnosis.


Submission Instructions
----------------------------------------------------------
Abstracts will be accepted electronically through the official online 
submission form (http://www.congrex.nl/09c17/submission.asp).

The deadline for receipt of abstracts is April 1, 2009. The workshop organisers 
will announce acceptance/rejection decision by April 30, 2009, including 
recommendation for oral or poster presentation. Authors of all poster papers 
will be invited to present a five-minute overview presentation during the 
regular session.

Accepted papers should be then developed into full-length papers to be 
submitted by July 6, 2009. (exact format and instructions will appear on the 
conference website).

Official ESA Proceedings will be published in electronic format and delivered 
to the participants in the weeks following the workshop event. ESA proceedings 
are diffused to libraries and databases for scientific dissemination.

Organising Committee
----------------------------------------------------------
* Steve Chien, Jet Propulsion Lab, NASA 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>)
* Christos Ampatzis, Advanced Concepts Team, ESA 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>)
* Marek Rucinski, Advanced Concepts Team, ESA 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>)
* Dario Izzo, Advanced Concepts Team, ESA 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>)

Programme Committee
----------------------------------------------------------
* Anders Lyhne Christensen
Departamento de Ciências e Tecnologias da Informação, Instituto Superior de 
Ciências do Trabalho e da Empresa, Lisbon

* Iain D. Couzin
Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University

* Roderich Gross
Laboratoire de Systèmes Robotiques, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

*Michèle R. Lavagna
Dipartimento di Ingegneria Aerospaziale, Politecnico di Milano

* Slawomir Jaroslaw Nasuto
Cybernetic Intelligence Research Group, School of Systems Engineering, 
University of Reading

* Jason Noble
School of Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton

* Georgios Yannakakis
IT-University of Copenhagen, Center for Computer Games Research

* Alessandro Donati
European Space Operations Centre, ESA

* Robert Morris
Ames Research Center, NASA

* Nicola Policella
European Space Operations Centre, ESA

* Debra Schreckenghost
NASA Johnson Space Center/Metrica/TRACLabs

*Ashit Talukder
Jet Propulsion Lab, NASA

* David Thompson
Jet Propulsion Lab, NASA

_______________________________________________
uai mailing list
[email protected]
https://secure.engr.oregonstate.edu/mailman/listinfo/uai

Reply via email to