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*Following requests, the deadline for proposal submission has been
extended. Please circulate and forward. *


*CALL FOR SYMPOSIA PROPOSALS: deadline 16 September 2019*

AISB convention 2020 (AISB-2020): Communication and conversation

6 – 9 April 2020, St Mary’s University, Twickenham, London, UK

The society for the study of Artificial Intelligence and the Simulation of
Behaviour (the AISB) annual convention will be held at St Mary’s
University, Twickenham in London, UK from 6 - 9 April 2020. This year the
theme broadly covers topics in language, communication and conversation,
though symposia on other topics are also welcome.

The convention will follow the same overall structure as previous
conventions, namely a set of co-located parallel symposia, as well as
invited and plenary lectures and sessions. We are currently seeking
proposals for these symposia. Typical symposia last for one or two days,
and can include any type of event of academic benefit: talks, posters,
panels, discussions, demonstrations, outreach sessions, etc. Proposals to
run symposia are welcomed across all areas of Artificial Intelligence and
the Simulation of Behaviour, broadly understood. This includes
interdisciplinary topics rooted in the social sciences, arts, and
humanities.

Possible themes are listed below (not an exhaustive list):

   - Knowledge Representation
   - Discourse and dialogue
   - Natural Language Processing
   - Computational Intelligence
   - Computational theory of mind
   - Philosophical Foundations of Artificial Intelligence
   - Consciousness and Machine Consciousness
   - Human and Machine Creativity
   - Simulation of Human and Animal Behaviour
   - Neural Networks and Machine Learning
   - Computational Neuroscience
   - Robotics and Robot Ethics
   - Epigenetic and developmental robotics
   - Autonomous Agents and Agent Based Computing
   - Enactivism
   - Embodied Cognition
   - Ecological Cognition
   - Embedded [Social] Cognition
   - Extended Cognition
   - Affective Intelligence and Behaviour
   - Embodied Audio-Visual Interaction
   - Style in text; textual forensics
   - Robotics, Perception and Art
   - Live Algorithms
   - Cultural, social and media theory and computing
   - Sensorimotor Theory
   - Cybernetics and Human knowing
   - Sensory Substitution
   - Distributed Thinking
   - Robot language and communication

*Proposing a Symposium*

Each symposium is organised by its own organising committee. The committee
proposes the symposium, defines the area(s) and structure for it, issues
calls for abstracts/papers etc., manages the process of selecting submitted
papers for inclusion, and compiles an electronic file for inclusion in the
convention proceedings. Organisers are welcome and encouraged to invite
keynote speakers to their symposia, but they are also encouraged to seek
external funding in order to pay keynote speakers’ registration fees and
other costs. Symposium organisers and speakers will also be expected to pay
registration fees.

   - Proposers are welcome to submit, or be involved with more than one
   proposal
   - Proposers need not already be members of the AISB (though you will be
   expected to join the AISB if your symposium proposal is accepted)
   - The deadline for symposium proposals: 16 September 2019
   - Notification of acceptance: 30 September 2019

*Submissions should consist of the following*

   - A title
   - A 300-1000 word description of the scope of the symposium, and its
   relevance to the convention along with the nature of the academic events
   (talks, posters, panels, demonstrations, etc.)
   - Whether the symposium is intended as a sequel to a symposium at a
   previous AISB conference
   - An indication of whether submissions will be by abstract, extended
   abstract or full paper
   - Your preferences about the intended length of the symposium as a
   number of days (preferably one or two days, but anything from half a day to
   three days), together with a brief justification
   - A description (up to 500 words) of any experience you have in
   organisation of academic research meetings (please note that it is not a
   requirement that you have such experience)
   - Names and affiliations of any invited speakers that you may have in
   mind for the symposium
   - Your names and full contact details, together with, if possible, names
   and workplaces of the members of a preliminary, partial programme committee
   - Please email your completed proposal to Dr Yasemin J. Erden:
   [log in to unmask]

*Venue*

Based in the leafy Richmond borough, St Mary's University has a long and
distinguished history. Established in 1850 and with a deep heritage in
education, the main campus sits between rugby-famous Twickenham, and leafy
Teddington. Strawberry Hill House, located in the University grounds, is
Britain's finest example of Georgian Gothic Revival architecture (known
locally as the Gothic Castle). The institute benefits from lots of green
spaces, whilst being only a short distance from The Thames, Richmond Park,
and central London (it’s just 35 minutes on the train from Waterloo). You
can view a virtual tour of the campus here:
https://www.stmarys.ac.uk/contact/virtual-tour.aspx




-- 
Dr Yasemin J. Erden

AISB Vice Chair
Senior Lecturer, Philosophy
St Mary's University

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