Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 14, No. 515.
Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
<http://www.princeton.edu/~mccarty/humanist/>
<http://www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/humanist/>
Date: Mon, 27 Nov 2000 18:19:16 +0000
From: Arun-Kumar Tripathi <tripathi@statistik.uni-dortmund.de>
Subject: [CFP]Symposium on Nonconscious Intelligence: From Natural
To Artificial
Dear Humanists,
((On behalf of Professor Pawel Lewicki, Co-Chair, University of Tulsa, USA
I would like to invite the submission of extended abstracts for the following
two-day symposium to be held in York next March as part of AISB'01 - the
2001 Annual Convention of the British Society for the Study of Artificial
Intelligence and the Simulation of Behaviour. The symposium will be
devoted to interdisciplinary discussion of the processes of nonconscious
information processing and implicit learning, in humans and in artificial
intelligent agents. Best Regards.-AKT))
============================================================================
Date: Sat, 25 Nov 2000 17:44:42 +0200
From: Felix Goldberg <sgefelix@techst02.technion.ac.il>
[--]
[Our most sincere apologies if you happen to receive this call for
papers more than once.]
We are pleased to invite the submission of extended abstracts for
the following two-day symposium to be held in York next March as part of
AISB'01 - the 2001 Annual Convention of the British Society for the
Study of Artificial Intelligence and the Simulation of Behaviour.
The homepage for the symposium is at:
<http://srsc.ulb.ac.be/AISB.html>
*********
Motivation
*********
This symposium will be devoted to interdisciplinary discussion of
the processes of nonconscious information processing and implicit
learning, in humans and in artificial intelligent agents. AI systems
with implicit learning capabilities and computational models of implicit
learning will be presented, reflecting cognitive, connectionist and
composite methodologies and paradigms. A major issue examined will be
the degree of salience that is to be ascribed to the possession of
implicit knowledge and the ability to acquire and employ it through
nonconscious mechanisms exhibited by different classes of
information-processing agents: humans, artificial agents and animals.
The role of nonconscious information processing in many central
issues of artificial intelligence and the cognitive sciences will be
explored, including but not limited to, representation and inference,
problem-solving, perception, natural language understanding, learning
and induction, creativity and scientific discovery. Theoretical
contributions, computer simulations and reports of empirical studies
are solicited from researchers in artificial intelligence, cognitive
science, psychology, computer science and philosophy.
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