Re: [agi] 2006 AGI Workshop Proceedings online...

2007-08-03 Thread Patrick McKown
Just signed up for your list. Hello everybody.

Question: Are there any AI software that could be recommended? I use
mac osx or unix.
Neural nets expert systems etc. that might be free. That are something
that can be actually used. Wanted to train and AI on my area of work.

I am sure this is already been covered  please just send some links.
Sorry to have to ask.

Also do you think that an AI should have at least two distinct
'brains' so that it can talk to itself? This talk could be it's sleep?

We have needs. Do you think that an AI could have a need?

Thanks,

Pat McKown

On 8/2/07, Thomas Clausen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Hi,

 Just wanted to say that putting the proceedings online is excellent. Thank
 you.

 Thomas

 --
 Thomas Clausen
 Use Linux

 -
 This list is sponsored by AGIRI: http://www.agiri.org/email
 To unsubscribe or change your options, please go to:
 http://v2.listbox.com/member/?;


-
This list is sponsored by AGIRI: http://www.agiri.org/email
To unsubscribe or change your options, please go to:
http://v2.listbox.com/member/?member_id=231415id_secret=28340324-b8cc87


[agi] 2006 AGI Workshop Proceedings online...

2007-08-02 Thread Benjamin Goertzel
I believe I mentioned before, on this list, that the proceedings of the 2006
AGI workshop
have been published, by IOS Press

http://www.amazon.com/Advances-Artificial-General-Intelligence-Architectures/dp/1586037587

The new piece of info in this email is that, as of now,  all the contents
are online, linked to under
the authors' names on this page...

http://www.agiri.org/forum/index.php?showtopic=23

We will use the same publication methodology (IOS Press + online) for the
AGI-08 Conference
Proceedings...

-- Ben

-
This list is sponsored by AGIRI: http://www.agiri.org/email
To unsubscribe or change your options, please go to:
http://v2.listbox.com/member/?member_id=231415id_secret=27936315-e68c93

Re: [agi] 2006 AGI Workshop Proceedings online...

2007-08-02 Thread Thomas Clausen
Hi,

Just wanted to say that putting the proceedings online is excellent. Thank you.

Thomas

-- 
Thomas Clausen
Use Linux

-
This list is sponsored by AGIRI: http://www.agiri.org/email
To unsubscribe or change your options, please go to:
http://v2.listbox.com/member/?member_id=231415id_secret=27937893-ec0782


[agi] an AGI workshop?

2003-09-15 Thread Pei Wang
I wonder if we have enough people interested in organizing/participating an
AGI workshop during AAAI-04 (or some other conference).

Pei

 

 Call for AAAI-04 Workshop Proposals
 Nineteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence
 July 25-29
 San Jose, California
 Sponsored by the American Association for Artificial Intelligence

 http://www.aaai.org/Workshops/2004/ws-04.html


 The AAAI-04 Program Committee invites proposals for the Workshop Program
 of the American Association for Artificial Intelligence's Nineteenth
 National Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AAAI-04).

 Workshops will be held at the beginning of the conference, July 25-26,
 2004. Workshop participants will have the opportunity to meet and
 discuss issues with a selected focus-providing an informal setting for
 active exchange among researchers, developers and users on topics of
 current interest. Members of all segments of the AI community are
 encouraged to submit proposals.

 To foster interaction and exchange of ideas, the workshops will be kept
 small, with 25-50 participants. Attendance is limited to active
 participants only. The format of workshops will be determined by their
 organizers, who are encouraged to leave ample time for general
 discussion.Workshops will typically be one full day in length, although
 half-day and two-day proposals will be considered.

 *** Proposal Content

 Proposals for workshops should be about two (2) pages in length, and
 should contain:
 * A description of the workshop topic. Identify the specific
   issues on which the workshop will focus.
 * A brief discussion of why the topic is of particular
   interest at this time.
 * A brief description of the proposed workshop format, regarding
   the mix of events such as paper presentations, invited talks,
   panels, and general discussion.
 * An indication as to whether the workshop should be considered
   for a half-day, one or two-day meeting.
 * The names and full contact information (e-mail and postal
   addresses, fax and telephone numbers) of the organizing committee -
   3 to 4 people knowledgeable in the field - and short descriptions
   of their relevant expertise. Strong proposals include organizers
   who bring differing perspectives to the workshop topic and
   who are actively connected to the communities of potential
   participants.
 * A list of potential attendees.

 Workshops are an excellent forum for exploring emerging approaches and
 task areas, for bridging the gaps between AI and other fields or between
 subfields of AI, for elucidating the results of exploratory research, or
 for critiquing existing approaches. Because workshops are intended for
 focused exploration of special topics, topics that are already the
 subject of regular meetings are not appropriate.

 *** Workshop Organization

 Workshop organizers will be responsible for:
 * Producing a call for participation. The Call is due November 14,
   2003. This Call will be mailed to AAAI members by AAAI and
   placed on the AAAI web site. Organizers are responsible for additional
   publicity such as distributing the Call to relevant newsgroups
   and electronic mailing lists, and especially to potential audiences
   from outside the AAAI community.
 * Selecting participants. Workshop attendance is by invitation of the
   organizers. Selection of attendees will be made by the organizers
   on the basis of submissions due March 12, 2004. Workshop organizers
   will need to provide AAAI with a preliminary list of the participants
   by April 23, 2004.
 * Coordinating the production of the workshop notes. AAAI provides  a
 small budget to cover publication, mailing and administrative  support.
 AAAI can reproduce and mail copies of the working  notes if materials
 are received by May 25, 2004. Working notes  may contain a collection of
 statements by participants or other  relevant material, but are limited
 to a total of 200 pages.

 Workshop organizers who want to publish the papers from their workshop
 (or significant portions of it) will have the opportunity to do so
 through the AAAI Press. The Press (which retains the right of first
 refusal to publish) will furnish details of its program to interested
 organizers and authors.

 AAAI will provide logistic support, and meeting places for the
 workshops, and will determine the dates and times of the workshops. AAAI
 reserves the right to drop any workshop if the organizers miss the above
 deadlines.Workshops are not to be used as a vehicle for marketing
 products. All workshop participants must register for the AAAI-04
 Technical Program.

 *** Proposal Submission

 Workshop proposals must be received no later than October 3, 2003.
 E-mail submissions in PDF format are preferred. Organizers will be
 notified of the committee's decision by October 27, 2003.

 The Workshop Program is chaired by Milos Hauskrecht of the University of
 Pittsburgh

Re: [agi] an AGI workshop?

2003-09-15 Thread Stephen Reed
I participated in a AAAI-02 workshop and I would be interested in 
participating in one for AAAI-04.  The bar for research paper submission 
is much lower - basically the organizers review the submissions. 

-Steve

On Mon, 15 Sep 2003, Pei Wang wrote:

 I wonder if we have enough people interested in organizing/participating an
 AGI workshop during AAAI-04 (or some other conference).
 
 Pei
 
  
 
  Call for AAAI-04 Workshop Proposals
  Nineteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence
  July 25-29
  San Jose, California
  Sponsored by the American Association for Artificial Intelligence
 
  http://www.aaai.org/Workshops/2004/ws-04.html
 
 
  The AAAI-04 Program Committee invites proposals for the Workshop Program
  of the American Association for Artificial Intelligence's Nineteenth
  National Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AAAI-04).
 
  Workshops will be held at the beginning of the conference, July 25-26,
  2004. Workshop participants will have the opportunity to meet and
  discuss issues with a selected focus-providing an informal setting for
  active exchange among researchers, developers and users on topics of
  current interest. Members of all segments of the AI community are
  encouraged to submit proposals.
 
  To foster interaction and exchange of ideas, the workshops will be kept
  small, with 25-50 participants. Attendance is limited to active
  participants only. The format of workshops will be determined by their
  organizers, who are encouraged to leave ample time for general
  discussion.Workshops will typically be one full day in length, although
  half-day and two-day proposals will be considered.
 
  *** Proposal Content
 
  Proposals for workshops should be about two (2) pages in length, and
  should contain:
  * A description of the workshop topic. Identify the specific
issues on which the workshop will focus.
  * A brief discussion of why the topic is of particular
interest at this time.
  * A brief description of the proposed workshop format, regarding
the mix of events such as paper presentations, invited talks,
panels, and general discussion.
  * An indication as to whether the workshop should be considered
for a half-day, one or two-day meeting.
  * The names and full contact information (e-mail and postal
addresses, fax and telephone numbers) of the organizing committee -
3 to 4 people knowledgeable in the field - and short descriptions
of their relevant expertise. Strong proposals include organizers
who bring differing perspectives to the workshop topic and
who are actively connected to the communities of potential
participants.
  * A list of potential attendees.
 
  Workshops are an excellent forum for exploring emerging approaches and
  task areas, for bridging the gaps between AI and other fields or between
  subfields of AI, for elucidating the results of exploratory research, or
  for critiquing existing approaches. Because workshops are intended for
  focused exploration of special topics, topics that are already the
  subject of regular meetings are not appropriate.
 
  *** Workshop Organization
 
  Workshop organizers will be responsible for:
  * Producing a call for participation. The Call is due November 14,
2003. This Call will be mailed to AAAI members by AAAI and
placed on the AAAI web site. Organizers are responsible for additional
publicity such as distributing the Call to relevant newsgroups
and electronic mailing lists, and especially to potential audiences
from outside the AAAI community.
  * Selecting participants. Workshop attendance is by invitation of the
organizers. Selection of attendees will be made by the organizers
on the basis of submissions due March 12, 2004. Workshop organizers
will need to provide AAAI with a preliminary list of the participants
by April 23, 2004.
  * Coordinating the production of the workshop notes. AAAI provides  a
  small budget to cover publication, mailing and administrative  support.
  AAAI can reproduce and mail copies of the working  notes if materials
  are received by May 25, 2004. Working notes  may contain a collection of
  statements by participants or other  relevant material, but are limited
  to a total of 200 pages.
 
  Workshop organizers who want to publish the papers from their workshop
  (or significant portions of it) will have the opportunity to do so
  through the AAAI Press. The Press (which retains the right of first
  refusal to publish) will furnish details of its program to interested
  organizers and authors.
 
  AAAI will provide logistic support, and meeting places for the
  workshops, and will determine the dates and times of the workshops. AAAI
  reserves the right to drop any workshop if the organizers miss the above
  deadlines.Workshops are not to be used as a vehicle for marketing
  products. All workshop participants must register