11.2442, Calls: Coordination & Action, Evolutionary Computation

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LINGUIST List:  Vol-11-2442. Fri Nov 10 2000. ISSN: 1068-4875.

Subject: 11.2442, Calls: Coordination & Action, Evolutionary Computation

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            Helen Dry, Eastern Michigan U. <hdry at linguistlist.org>
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         Rob Beltz, E. Michigan U. <rob at linguistlist.org>
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         Jody Huellmantel, Wayne State U. <jody at linguistlist.org>
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	 Naomi Ogasawara, E. Michigan U. <naomi at linguistlist.org>
	 James Yuells, Wayne State U. <james at linguistlist.org>
         Ljuba Veselinova, Stockholm U. <ljuba at linguistlist.org>

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=================================Directory=================================

1)
Date:  Thu, 9 Nov 2000 10:19:30 +0100
From:  "Peter Kühnlein"       <pkuehnle at lili59.lili.uni-bielefeld.de>
Subject:  Workshop "Coordination & Action"

2)
Date:  Thu, 9 Nov 2000 09:30:33 -0500
From:  GECCO-2001 <gecco-2001 at egr.msu.edu>
Subject:  Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference - GECCO-2001

-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------

Date:  Thu, 9 Nov 2000 10:19:30 +0100
From:  "Peter Kühnlein"       <pkuehnle at lili59.lili.uni-bielefeld.de>
Subject:  Workshop "Coordination & Action"


                     Coordination and Action
                     =======================

     Workshop at ESSLLI XIII (Helsinki) August 20th - 24th, 2001
        http://www.lili.uni-bielefeld.de/~pkuehnle/HELSINKI

Background & Scope:
===================
Coordination is at present one of the most powerful explanatory
devices used in various cognitive sciences (philosophy, psychology,
linguistics, logics, AI). The original impetus came from philosophy,
especially from D. Lewis' work on coordination and convention (Lewis,
1969). Later on the concept gained considerable acceptance due to the
work of the psychologist H. Clark and his collaborators (Clark (ed.),
1992; Clark, 1996) who investigated various problems of language use,
such as reference and agents' information states.

They showed that multi-agent dialogue is based on coordination and
joint action, grounding and mutual belief. These concepts rapidly
found their way into dialogue theories based on discourse analysis or
speech act theory. A slightly different perspective on coordination
can be found in theories using the notion of dialogue game (Levin and
Moore, 1978; Mann, 1988; Carletta et al., 1997; Ginzburg, 1997; Power,
1979).

Dialogue games are applied in a variety of research contexts, inter
alia in the research initiatives VERBMOBIL (Germany) and TRINDI (UK,
Germany, Sweden). The concept of dialogue games also stimulated
reconstructions in more formal theories such as DRT (Lascarides &
Asher, 1999; Poesio, 1998) or various forms of update semantics
(Hulstijn, 2000). The notion of joint action received support from
philosophy (e.g. Bratman (1992) on cooperativity, Searle (1990) on
collective intention) and especially from the AI community working on
shared plans in interaction (Grosz and collaborators, 1996). It was
repeatedly taken up by logicians, especially those working on
information states, mutuality or BDI-architectures (Fagin et al.,
1995; Herzig and collaborators, 1999; Sadek, 1992). Research topics
coming to the fore at present are coordination of information between
different hierarchical levels of language and speech, a topic already
discussed in H. Clark's work, and coordination of information coming
from different channels (such as visual-gestural and verbal-auditory).
Especially research with a multi-media objective contributed by
linguistics, psychology and AI is of relevance in this context. The
intention-based concept of coordination is also used in robotics and
simulation work for agent-architectures combining high-level
deliberative patterns with low-level reactive devices for which the
well-known RoboCup setting provides a good example.

Workshop format:
================
The workshop will be held on five subsequent days. Each session will
consist of two talks plus discussion (30" + 15" each). The workshop
language will be English.

Submission guidelines:
======================
The organizers welcome contributions from different fields of
Cognitive Science, especially from projects implementing
interdisciplinary research strategies. Above all, masters students and
PhD candidates are encouraged to submit contributions. For the
abstracts, LaTeX, DVI, PostScript, Word, and PDF documents will be
accepted. Please, send abstracts until Feb., 28th 2001 to
  pkuehnle at lili.uni-bielefeld.de
For the final papers, we will accept LaTeX2e only. A LaTeX2e class will
be provided in due time.

Important dates (2001):
=======================
Feb., 28th: Deadline for abstracts
Mar., 31st: Notification of acceptance
May,  31st: Deadline for accepted papers
Aug., 20th-
      24th: Workshop at ESSLLI

Further information:
====================
For local arrangements, please contact the ESSLLI organizers, and see
http://www.helsinki.fi/esslli
For further information on the workshop, please contact
pkuehnle at lili.uni-bielefeld.de, and see
http://www.lili.uni-bielefeld.de/~pkuehnle/HELSINKI

Organization:
=============
Peter Kuehnlein (Bielefeld Univ., Germany), Alison Newlands (Univ. of
Strathclyde, UK) and Hannes Rieser (Bielefeld Univ., Germany)


-------------------------------- Message 2 -------------------------------

Date:  Thu, 9 Nov 2000 09:30:33 -0500
From:  GECCO-2001 <gecco-2001 at egr.msu.edu>
Subject:  Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference - GECCO-2001


		      *******************************
                      SECOND, UPDATED CALL FOR PAPERS

		                GECCO-2001
                      *******************************

                Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference

  (A recombination of the Sixth Annual Genetic Programming Conference (GP-2001)
                          -----------------------------------------------------
       and the International Conference on Genetic Algorithms (ICGA-2001))
               ----------------------------------------------------------

    Co-Sponsored by AAAI (American Association for Artificial Intelligence)

                  July 7-11, 2001 (Saturday - Wednesday)
                      San Francisco, California USA
                     Holiday Inn Golden Gateway Hotel
   ***(IN THE HEART of downtown San Francisco, a block from the cable car)***

                 One Conference:  Many "Mini-Conferences":
     GECCO = GP + GA + ES + EP + EH + ER + DNA + CS + RWA + AAA + ACO + ...

See the latest in YOUR favorite branch of Evolutionary Computation, AND explore
developments in other, related tracks. The Genetic and Evolutionary Computation
Conference (GECCO-2001) will present the latest high-quality results in the
growing field of genetic and evolutionary computation.  Topics include, but are
not limited to, genetic algorithms (GA); genetic programming (GP); evolution
strategies (ES); evolutionary programming (EP); evolvable hardware (EH);
evolutionary robotics (ER); real-world applications (RWA); classifier systems
(CS); DNA and molecular computing (DNA); artificial life, adaptive behavior
and agents (AAA); ant colony optimization (ACO); optimal design of engineered
structures; methodology, pedagogy, and philosophy (MPP); evolutionary
scheduling and routing (GS); and other areas to be announced.

Papers are now invited (see further information below), with manuscripts to be
received for review no later than January 24, 2001.  Each paper submitted to
GECCO will be rigorously reviewed, in a blind review process, by one of at
least seven separate and independent program committees specializing in
various aspects of genetic and evolutionary computation.  These committees
make their own final decisions on submitted papers for their areas, subject
only to conference-wide space limitations and procedures.

                           STUDENT TRAVEL GRANTS
Travel grants to assist graduate students in meeting the expenses of attending
GECCO to present a paper will be available (see web site for details).

                                 WORKSHOPS
Proposals for Birds-of-a-Feather Workshops for GECCO-2001 are now being
solicited.  In addition to a Graduate Student Workshop, many other workshops
on a variety of EC-related topics will be held during GECCO-2001, on Saturday,
July 7.  See the web pages (www.isgec.org/GECCO-2001/workshops) or contact
the Workshops Chair, Soraya Rana-Stevens, sstevens at bbn.com, for the latest
list of topics or for information on submitting a proposal to organize a
workshop.  Workshops already in planning include Optimal Scheduling and
Routing, Optimal Design of Engineered Structures, and the Fourth
International Workshop on Learning Classifier Systems.

                                  TUTORIALS

Twenty-eight tutorials are being planned, for presentation on Sunday, July 8,
2001 (see the current list on www.isgec.org/GECCO-2001).  Tutorials and
the tutorials notes book are free to all registered GECCO-2001 attendees.
The tutorials are grouped into four broad categories:  Introductions to
Topics in Evolutionary Computation (EC), advanced topics in EC, New Directions
in EC, and Specialized Applications of EC, and will be presented by
outstanding leaders in each field.


                               KEYNOTE SPEAKERS

LOTFI ZADEH:
    "From Computing with Numbers to Computing with Words -- from Manipulation
     of Measurements to Manipulations of Perceptions"

JOHN KOZA:
    "Human Competitive Machine Intelligence"

CONFERENCE CHAIR:  Erik Goodman (goodman at egr.msu.edu)
PROCEEDINGS EDITOR-IN-CHIEF:  Lee Spector
CHAIRS OF CORE PROGRAM POLICY COMMITTEES:
   GA -- Annie Wu  		  GP - Bill Langdon
   ES & EP - Hans-Michael Voigt   Real-World Apps:  Mitsuo Gen
CHAIRS OF SPECIAL PROGRAM COMMITTEES:
(Additional Special Program Committees are still being organized)
   Evolutionary Scheduling and Routing:  Edmund Burke
   Optimal Design of Engineered Structures:  Shahram Pezeshk
   Fourth International Workshop on Learning Classifier Systems:
                 Pier Luca Lanzi, Wolfgang Stolz, Stewart Wilson

BUSINESS COMMITTEE:  David  Goldberg and John Koza

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
For information concerning hotel reservations, travel discounts, student
housing, student travel grants, graduate student workshop, proposals for
workshops, proposals for additional tutorials, late-breaking papers, and other
matters, visit www.isgec.org/GECCO-2001.  For technical matters, email:  Erik
Goodman, GECCO-2001 Gen. Chair, goodman at egr.msu.edu.  For administrative
matters, email:  gecco at aaai.org.  Conference administered by the American
Association for Artificial Intelligence, 445 Burgess Drive, Menlo Park, CA
94025 USA.  Phone:  650-328-3123.  Fax 650-321-4457.  Conference operated by
the International Society for Genetic and Evolutionary Computation, Inc., a
not-for-profit corporation.


HOW TO SUBMIT A PAPER TO THE GECCO CONFERENCE		

The deadline for ARRIVAL at the physical address below of the eight (8) paper
copies of each submitted paper is WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 24, 2001.  The address is
GECCO-2001, c/o AAAI, 445 Burgess Drive, Menlo Park, CA 94025, USA.  Phone
650-328-3123.

Submitted papers are to be in single-spaced, 10-point type on 8-1/2" x 11" OR
A4 paper with 1" margins at top and 3/4" margin at left, right, and bottom,
and are a maximum of eight (8) pages.  Papers may not be submitted by email
or fax.  Details regarding the formatting and content of the papers are
contained at the web site, www.isgec.org/GECCO-2001.

Review criteria will include significance of the work, novelty, clarity,
writing quality, and sufficiency of information to permit replication (if
applicable).

The first-named author (or other corresponding author designated by the authors
when submitting) will be notified of acceptance or rejection (on approximately
the first week of March, 2001).  It is preferred (but not required) that the
format of submitted papers roughly follow the required format for final
camera-ready papers.  The required style for the final camera-ready papers is
posted on the GECCO web page and is similar to that of GECCO-2000.

FOR THE LATEST INFORMATION, see the web site, www.isgec.org/GECCO-2001

-
Erik Goodman, General Chair, GECCO-2001 (goodman at egr.msu.edu)
Genetic Algorithms Research and Applications Group (GARAGe)
Michigan State University

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