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                                    AI'2003

         The Sixteenth Canadian Conference on Artificial Intelligence

                                Call for Papers

    Sponsored by Canadian Society for Computational Studies of Intelligence
                                    (CSCSI)
  Soci�t� Canadienne pour l'�tude de l'intelligence par ordinateur (SCEIO).

                               June 11-13, 2003

              Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

                Conference Website: http://www.csd.uwo.ca/AI03/

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AI'2003, the Sixteenth Canadian Conference on Artificial Intelligence, is a
forum that showcases current research in artificial intelligence from
researchers around the world. The conference will be held in conjunction
with GI'2003 (Graphics Interface) and VI'2003 (Vision Interface). Conference
participants who register for any one conference can attend all three
conferences. AI'2003 invites papers that present original work in all areas
of Artificial Intelligence, either theoretical or applied, including, but
not limited to

  Knowledge Representation
  Automated Reasoning                  Agent and Multiagent Systems
  Search                               User Modeling
  Constraint Satisfaction              AI and Smart Graphics
  Natural Language                     AI and E-Commerce
  Planning                             AI and Information Processing
  Machine Learning                     AI and Bioinformatics
  Neural Nets and Evolutional          AI and Web Applications
  Computing                            AI and Education
  Reasoning under Uncertainty          AI in Games
  Data Mining                          AI and Manufacturing
  Robotics

Papers will be reviewed by the Program Committee members and judged
according to their originality, technical merit and clarity of presentation.
Papers will be accepted according to two categories: full papers or poster
papers (with less number of pages allotted in the proceedings). All accepted
papers will be published in the conference proceedings as Lecture Notes in
Artificial Intelligence by Springer-Verlag. A best paper will be awarded at
the conference.

  Program Co-Chairs
  Yang Xiang, University of Guelph
  Brahim Chaib-draa, Laval University

  Conference Chair
  Charles Ling, University of Western Ontario

  Local Organizer
  Malcolm Haywood, Dalhousie University

Program Committee

  Aijun An         York U.             Evangelos Milios  Dalhousie U.
  Cory Butz        U. Regina           Guy Mineau        U. Laval
  Nick Cercone     U. Waterloo         Eric Neufeld      U. Saskatchewan
  David Chiu       U. Guelph           Petra Perner      IBaI Leipzig
  Jim Delgrande    SFU                 David Poole       UBC
  Jorg Denzinger   U. Calgory          Fred Popowich     SFU
  Renee Elio       U. Alberta          Gregory Provan    Rockwell
  Richard Frost    U. Windsor          Dale Schuurmans   U. Waterloo
  Ali Ghorbani     UNB                 Weiming Shen      NRC
  Scott Goodwin    U. Windsor          Danel Silver      Acadia U.
  Jim Greer        U. Saskatchewan     Bruce Spencer     NRC and UNB
  Gary Grewal      U. Guelph           Deb Stacey        U. Guelph
  Howard Hamilton  U. Regina           Stan Szpakowicz   U. Ottawa
  Bill Havens      SFU                 Andre Trudel      Acadia U.
  Michael Horsch   U. Saskatchewan     Peter van Beek    U. Waterloo
  Finn Jensen      Aalborg U.          Julita Vassileva  U. Saskatchewan
  Stefan Kremer    U. Guelph           Michael Wong      U. Regina
  James Little     UBC                 Jia You           U. Alberta
  Stan Matwin      U. of Ottawa        Eric Yu           U. Toronto
  Gord McCalla     U. Saskatchewan     Kaizhong Zhang    U. Western Ontario
  Bob Mercer       U. Western Ontario

Invited Speakers

             Victor Lesser University of Massachusetts at Amherst
             Tom Mitchell  Carnegie Mellon University
             Pierre Baldi  University of California at Irvine

Submissions

Papers may be up to 15 pages in length in Springer LNCS style and the Latex
style (using LaTeX2e) is strongly encouraged. Authors must first submit
abstracts by November 30, 2002 and submit the full paper (in PDF, POSTSCRIPT
or WORD format) by December 3, 2002 at http://ai2003.cis.uoguelph.ca/. Paper
acceptance will be notified by February 18, 2003 and the final versions of
accepted papers are due on March 18, 2003. Accepted full papers will be
alloted 15 pages in the conference proceedings and poster papers will be
alloted 5 pages. Up to two additional pages may be alloted with a page
charge of Can$50 per page.

Authors who have difficulty submitting abstract through WWW may
alternatively send a plain text message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with subject
header AI2003 Abstract, indicating the paper's title, authors, authors
addresses, abstract, and topic areas, as well as the e-mail address of the
contact author. Authors who have difficulty submitting the full paper
through WWW may submit the PDF, (compressed) POSTSCRIPT or WORD file to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] with subject header AI2003 Submission xxx, where xxx is
the paper reference number assigned during abstract submission.

Graduate Student Symposium

Following the success in AI'2002, the AI'2003 will continue with the
Graduate Student Symposium. Graduate students are invited to submit an
extended abstract of up to two pages for possible inclusion in the Symposium
to be held during AI'2003. The Symposium will take the form of a poster
presentation session. Program Chairs based on the quality will select
submissions. Selected papers will be presented at the poster session and
will be allotted two pages in the conference proceedings.

By December 4, 2002, please submit the two-page abstract, and a letter from
the student advisor to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] with subject header AI2003
Graduate Symposium. Final version of accepted papers should be formatted in
Springer LNCS Latex style with 2 pages (see
http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html). Students will be notified of
acceptance on February 25, 2003. Final version of accepted papers must be
received by March 18, 2003. General inquiries should be directed to the
Conference Chair, Charles Ling, at [EMAIL PROTECTED] .

Student Travel Assistance

According to the availability of funds, graduate student authors enrolled
full time in a Canadian university with accepted papers or Graduate Student
Symposium abstracts may be selected for travel awards. A letter from the
student's advisor, attesting to the student's full time status, should be
emailed at the time of submission to the Conference Chair at [EMAIL PROTECTED]
. At most one author of each selected paper or Graduate Student Symposium
abstract may be awarded funds covering the cost of Conference early
registration for one student CSCSI member and some additional travel costs.

Important dates

*Paper abstract submission due: November 30, 2002.
*Paper submission due: December 3, 2002.
*Graduate Student Symposium abstract submission due: December 4, 2002.
*Notification of paper acceptance: February 18, 2003.
*Notification of Graduate Student Symposium abstract acceptance: February
25, 2003.
*Camera-ready copy of accepted paper and Graduate Student Symposium
abstract: March 18, 2003.
*Conference: June 11-13, 2003.

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