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AI-2019: Cambridge, UK, December 17th-19th 2019

Organised by BCS SGAI: The British Computer Society Specialist Group on
Artificial Intelligence (a EurAi Member Society).

The leading series of UK-based international conferences on Artificial
Intelligence and one of the longest running AI conference series in Europe.


*FINAL CALL FOR PAPERS AND POSTERS*

http://www.bcs-sgai.org/ai2019/


The proceedings of the AI-20xx conference series are now published by
Springer in Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence (LNAI), a sub-series
of the distinguished Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series of
conference proceedings.



There will be an optional (free) walking tour of Cambridge, including the
celebrated King's College Chapel, on the second day.


CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS


AI-2019 is the thirty-ninth SGAI International Conference on Innovative
Techniques and Applications of Artificial Intelligence.



The scope of the conference comprises the whole range of AI technologies
and application areas. AI-2019 reviews recent technical advances in AI
technologies and shows how these advances have been applied to solve
business problems. Key features are:



- Papers will be published by Springer in the Lecture Notes in Artificial
Intelligence (LNAI) subseries of the popular Lecture Notes in Computer
Science (LNCS) series (www.springer.com/lncs).



- Papers will be presented in two streams. The Technical Stream presents
the best of recent developments in AI, covering a wide range of technical
areas. The Application Stream is the largest annual showcase in Europe of
real applications using AI technology.



- It is expected that the best papers will be reprinted in a special issue
of an international journal.



- A mixture of full papers (maximum 14 A4 pages) presented orally and short
papers (maximum 6 A4 pages) presented as posters. Papers of both kinds will
be included in the proceedings.



- Prizes for best paper and best student paper in each stream and best
short paper.



- Invited keynote lectures.

Technical Keynote Speaker: Professor Marc Cavazza, University of Greenwich
Application Keynote Speaker: James Chappell, Digital Shadows


- The first day comprises tutorials and workshops to provide greater depth
in selected topics, including UK CBR-19, the twenty-fourth CBR symposium.
(Separate one-day registration for this day is also available.)



- A panel session on 'What will be the impact of AI on society over the
next 25 years?'.



- An 'AI Open Mic' session to allow delegates to have their say about any
aspect of AI.



- In addition to the formal sessions, the conference programme includes a
welcome reception and a Gala Dinner.



AI-2019 offers a valuable opportunity to keep up to date with developments
in AI and to share experiences in the practical issues of developing AI
systems.


FAIRS '19, the thirteenth annual forum for AI research students will
immediately precede the AI-2019 conference at Peterhouse College on Monday
December 16th, 2019. The aim of FAIRS is to support student members of the
AI community providing advice and feedback on their research plans and
work. This event is free of charge for research students except for a
contribution towards the cost of refreshments and lunch in the College and
no conference registration is required.



IMPORTANT DATES

- Paper/Poster Submission: Friday 5th July 2019
This deadline is considerably later than for previous conferences in this
series and will not be extended.

- Notification of Acceptance: Monday 2nd September 2019

- Camera Ready Paper: Monday 16th September 2019



CONTRIBUTIONS

Contributions presenting original work in AI are invited for both the
technical and the application stream. Contributions may be submitted either
as full papers of up to fourteen A4 pages for oral presentation or as short
papers of up to six A4 pages for poster presentation.



Technical Stream

Areas of interest include (but are not restricted to): knowledge
engineering; semantic web; constraint satisfaction; intelligent agents;
machine learning; model based reasoning; verification and validation of AI
systems; natural language understanding; speech-enabled systems; case based
reasoning; neural networks; genetic algorithms; data mining and knowledge
discovery in databases; knowledge representation, inference and reasoning;
robotics and pervasive computing; qualitative and temporal reasoning;
knowledge management; AI languages and environments; robotics and pervasive
computing.



Application Stream

Case studies are welcomed describing the application of AI to real-world
problems. Papers in recent years have covered all application domains,
including commerce, manufacturing and government, and every major AI
technique. In addition to case studies and specific applications of AI, we
would welcome papers that discuss issues such as managing the transfer from
research to production of AI-based products. Papers are selected to
highlight critical areas of success (and failure) and to present the
benefits and lessons of value to other developers. Submitted papers should
make these points clear.



Short Papers for Poster Presentation

Short papers are intended for the presentation of work which meets the high
standards of the conference, but which is more topical and preliminary than
the work presented in full papers. They provide an excellent forum for
disseminating new developments and latest work in progress, especially
suited to PhD students. Work submitted in the form of full-length papers
that fall short of the standard for oral presentation will automatically be
considered as candidates for reworking as short papers for poster
presentation.



Submission of Papers

Final versions of accepted papers must be prepared in either Microsoft Word
or Latex together with a copy in PDF format. Initial versions of papers
should be submitted in PDF format only and uploaded to the conference
website by the deadline given above. Instructions for authors and templates
for both Word and Latex are given at

http://www.springer.com/gb/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-guidelines



In order for an accepted paper to be published at least one author must
register for the conference and undertake to attend and present the paper
in person. Presenting authors will be asked to register for the conference
at the discounted speakers' rate when they return the final camera-ready
versions of their papers.



Tutorials & workshops

The Conference Committee invites proposals for tutorials and workshops to
be presented on the first day of the conference. These should be directed
in the first instance to the Tutorial/Workshop Organiser.



Prizes

There are cash prizes for the best paper and best student paper submitted
in each stream, chosen by the relevant program committee, and also a prize
for the best short paper, awarded on the basis of delegate voting.



All further information including details of the conference committee,
program committees, paper format and uploading instructions is given on the
conference website.



ALL CORRESPONDENCE SHOULD BE SENT BY EMAIL TO THE CONFERENCE SECRETARIAT:
[log in to unmask]

----------
Professor Max Bramer
Vice-President, International Federation for Information Processing
Emeritus Professor, School of Computing, University of Portsmouth, UK
Chair, British Computer Society Specialist Group on Artificial Intelligence
http://www.maxbramer.org

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