Reasoning About Function
Special Track to be held during
The Tenth Florida Artificial Intelligence
Research Symposium
(FLAIRS '97)
May 10-14, 1997, Daytona Beach, Florida
CALL FOR PAPERS
The explicit representation and use of function knowledge is gaining considerable attention
in various research communities because of:
- its potential to organize and provide access to causal knowledge of an
object (eg., focuses on missing causality during redesign),
- the improved resolution it brings to the reasoning process (eg.,
discriminates among suspects during diagnosis) and
- its utility in addressing the scaling problem.
Function is an abstraction of behavior, and relates behavior to human notions
of utility, i.e., purpose/goal. It forms a useful bridge between objective and
quantifiable knowledge about a component (of a
device/organization/organism/environment/argument), and subjective notions of
its use/purpose. Hence, the interest in reasoning about function.
Function has been used to motivate decisions (such as in design),
discriminate among choices at hand (such as in diagnosis, vision), or explain an
observation (such as in explanation generation). It is being used, in addition
to structure and behavior knowledge in domains as varied as Electrical,
Aerospace, Industrial and Chemical Engineering, mechatronics, Architecture, Law,
Medicine, Human Physiology, and Software Engineering.
Papers are invited for the special track from researchers in all
fields/domains on topics including:
- Reasoning techniques that use function
- Representation formalisms for function
- Applications of reasoning about function: reports, results
IMPORTANT DEADLINES:
November 21st, 1996: Submission of paper
January 3rd, 1996: Notification of Acceptance/Rejection
Feb 17, 1997: Camera Ready Copy due to
FLAIRS '97 Program Chair: Douglas D. Dankel II
ddd@cis.ufl.edu
SUBMISSION DETAILS:
Maximum Length: 3000 words
Preferred Submission
Method:
- Fold your paper into one postscript or text file: This must be anonymous,
i.e., author's name and affiliation should not be included in this file;
- Put it in the users/amruth directory at
ftp.cs.buffalo.edu
site by anonymous
ftp; The file name should be the first author's last name;
- Send a mail message to
amruth@ramapo.edu,
listing: the name of the paper, names, affiliations, phone/fax and email addresses of all the
authors, and the name of the submitted file. This step is mandatory!
Alternatively, you may send 4 hard copies of the paper to:
Amruth Kumar
Computer Science, TAS
Ramapo College of New
Jersey
505, Ramapo Valley Road
Mahwah, NJ 07430-1680
Ph: (201)
529-7712
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
If you are unsure whether your work fits into the
above topic, please refer to the following reports for clarification.
- AI Magazine, 15(1): Spring 94 issue, pp 64-65
- SIGART Bulletin 5(3): July 94 issue, pp 49-51
- The Knowledge Engineering Review, Vol. 9(3), 9/94, pp 301-304.
- Special Issues of `International Journal of Applied Artificial
Intelligence', Vol 8(2), 8/94 and Vol9(1), 1/95.
You may also want to visit the following sites:
Please direct any enquiries to:
Amruth Kumar
mailto:amruth@ramapo.edu
Luca Chittaro
mailto:chittaro@dimi.uniud.it
Co-Chairs