Dear List moderator,

I wil appreciate if you could post the attached announcement to your
list.

With best regards,
>Georgi Stojanov

------------------------------------
Georgi Stojanov, PhD
Assistant Professor

Computer Science Institute
Electrical Engineering Faculty
Sts Cyril and Methodius University in Skopje
Macedonia

T ++389 2 3099154
F ++389 2 3064262
E [EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------------


------------------------------------
Georgi Stojanov, PhD
Assistant Professor

Computer Science Institute
Electrical Engineering Faculty
Sts Cyril and Methodius University in Skopje
Macedonia

T ++389 2 3099154
F ++389 2 3064262
E [EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------------


---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.600 / Virus Database: 381 - Release Date: 28.02.2004


EPIROB2004--EPIROB2004--EPIROB2004--EPIROB2004--EPIROB2004
EPIROB2004--EPIROB2004--EPIROB2004--EPIROB2004--EPIROB2004
EPIROB2004
EPIROB2004              FINAL CALL FOR PAPERS
EPIROB2004
EPIROB2004              Fourth International Workshop on Epigenetic Robotics:
EPIROB2004      Modeling Cognitive Development in Robotic Systems
EPIROB2004      http://www.epigenetic-robotics.org
EPIROB2004
EPIROB2004
EPIROB2004      August 25-27, 2004
EPIROB2004      Location: LIRA-Lab, University of Genoa
EPIROB2004      Genoa, Italy
EPIROB2004
EPIROB2004
EPIROB2004      Extended Submission Deadline: March 21st, 2004
EPIROB2004
EPIROB2004--EPIROB2004--EPIROB2004--EPIROB2004--EPIROB2004
EPIROB2004--EPIROB2004--EPIROB2004--EPIROB2004--EPIROB2004

This workshop focuses on combining developmental psychology, neuroscience, 
biology, and robotics with the goal of understanding the functioning of 
biological systems. Epigenetic systems, either natural or artificial, share 
a prolonged developmental process through which varied and complex 
cognitive and perceptual structures emerge as a result of the interaction of 
an embodied system with a physical and social environment.
Epigenetic robotics includes the two-fold goal of understanding biological 
systems by the interdisciplinary integration between neural and engineering 
sciences and, simultaneously, that of enabling robots and artificial systems 
to develop skills for any particular environment instead of programming them 
for specific environments. To this aim, psychological theory and empirical 
evidence should be used to inform epigenetic robotic models, and these models 
should be used as theoretical tools to make experimental predictions in 
developmental psychology.
We encourage the submission from different disciplines such as robotics, 
artificial intelligence, developmental psychology, biology or neurophysiology, 
as well as interdisciplinary work bridging the gap between science and 
engineering.


Subject Areas include, but are not limited to:
* The role of motivations, emotions, and value systems in development;
* The development of: concepts, consciousness and self-awareness, emotion, 
imitation, intentionality, intersubjectivity, joint attention, learning, 
motivation, non-verbal and verbal communication, self, sensorimotor schemata, 
shared meaning and symbolic reference, social learning, social relationships, 
social understanding (�mind reading�, �theory of mind�), value systems;
* Interaction between innate structure, ongoing developing structure, and 
experience;
* Related issues in algorithms, robotics, simulated robots, and embodied 
systems;
* Strong AI (true intelligence and autonomy) versus weak AI;
* Related issues from human and nonhuman empirical studies.


For summaries of the papers from the latest workshops see:
Zlatev and Balkenius (2001), Prince (2002), and Berthouze and Prince (2003).

Please send any questions to the workshop co-chairs: 
Giorgio Metta ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) and Luc Berthouze ([EMAIL PROTECTED]).

Sponsors
LIRA-Lab, University of Genoa, Italy
Communications Research Laboratory, Japan


Location
University of Genoa, Italy


Invited Speakers
        Luciano Fadiga, Dept. of Biomedical Sciences, University of Ferrara, Italy
        Claes von Hofsten, Dept. of Psychology, University of Upssala, Sweden
        J�rgen Konczak, Human Sensorimotor Control Lab, University of Minnesota, USA
        Jacqueline Nadel, CNRS, University Pierre & Marie Curie, Paris, France


Submissions
Papers not exceeding eight (8) pages should be submitted electronically (PDF or 
Postscript) as attachment files to Luc Berthouze ([EMAIL PROTECTED]). Extended 
abstracts (maximum two pages) can also be submitted, and will be presented as posters 
(extended abstracts should also be submitted in PDF or Postscript as attachments to 
Luc Berthouze ([EMAIL PROTECTED]). Further instructions to authors will be 
posted on the workshop web page: http://www.epigenetic-robotics.org


Special issues
Authors of a selection of the best papers will be invited to submit an extended 
version of their manuscript to one of two special issues on Epigenetic Robotics to 
appear in Interaction Studies:
  http://www.benjamins.com/cgi-bin/t_seriesview.cgi?series=IS
and the Cognitive Systems Research Journal:
  http://www.cecs.missouri.edu/~rsun/journal.html.


Important Dates
March 1st, 2004:        Deadline for submission of papers and posters
March 21st, 2004:       Extended submission deadline
April 21st, 2004:       Notification of acceptance for papers and posters
May 21st, 2004:         Deadline for camera ready-papers & posters
August 25-27, 2004:     Workshop



Organizing Committee
Christian Balkenius (Cognitive Science, Lund University, Sweden)
Luc Berthouze (Neuroscience Research Institute, AIST, Japan)
Hideki Kozima (Communications Research Laboratory, Japan)
Giorgio Metta (LIRA-Lab, University of Genoa, Italy)
Christopher G. Prince (Computer Science, University of Minnesota Duluth, USA)
Giulio Sandini (LIRA-Lab, University of Genoa, Italy)
Georgi Stojanov (Computer Science Institute, SS Cyril and Methodius University, 
Macedonia)


Program Committee
Christian Balkenius (Cognitive Science, Lund University, Sweden)
Luc Berthouze (Neuroscience Research Institute, AIST, Japan)
Aude Billard (Autonomous Systems Laboratory, EPFL, Switzerland)
Daniel Bullock (Cognitive & Neural Systems Department, Boston University, USA)
Kerstin Dautenhahn (Adaptive Systems Research Group, University of Hertfordshire, UK)
Yiannis Demiris (Intelligent and Interactive Systems, Imperial College, UK)
Luciano Fadiga (University of Ferrara, Italy)
Peter G�rdenfors (Cognitive Science, Lund University, Sweden)
Philippe Gaussier (Universite de Cergy-Pointoise & ENSEA, France)
Gyorgy Gergely (Institute for Psychological Research, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 
Hungary)
Fr�d�ric Kaplan (Sony Computer Science Lab Paris, France)
Hideki Kozima (Communications Research Laboratory, Japan)
Valerie Kuhlmeier (Yale University, Department of Psychology, USA)
Max Lungarella (Neuroscience Research Institute, AIST, Japan)
Yuval Marom (School of Computer Science and Software Engineering, Monash University, 
Australia)
Giorgio Metta (LIRA-Lab, Genoa, Italy)
Jacqueline Nadel (CNRS, France)
Chrystopher Nehaniv (Adaptive Systems Research Group, University of Hertfordshire, UK)
Rolf Pfeifer (AI Lab, University of Zurich, Switzerland)
Christopher G. Prince (Computer Science, University of Minnesota Duluth, USA)
Deb Roy (Media Laboratory, MIT, USA)
Giulio Sandini (LIRA-Lab, Genoa, Italy)
Brian Scassellati (Department of Computer Science, Yale University, USA)
Stefan Schaal (Computer Science Department, USC, USA)
Matthew Schlesinger (Psychology Department, Southern Illinois University, USA)
Sylvain Sirois (Department of Psychology, Manchester University, UK)
Michael Spratling (School of Psychology, Birkbeck College, UK)
Georgi Stojanov (Computer Science Institute, SS Cyril and Methodius University, 
Macedonia)
Gert Westermann (Department of psychology, Oxford Brookes University, UK)
Tom Ziemke (Department of Computer Science, University of Skovde, Sweden)


Publication of Papers & Poster Abstracts
Papers and poster abstracts will be published in the proceedings, and archived at 
CogPrints (http://cogprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk).



REFERENCES

Zlatev, J. & Balkenius, C. (2001). Introduction: Why �epigenetic robotics�? 
Proceedings of the First International Workshop on Epigenetic Robotics: 
Modeling Cognitive Development in Robotic Systems (pp. 1-4). Lund University 
Cognitive Studies, Volume 85.
Available at: 
http://www.lucs.lu.se/Epigenetic-robotics/Papers/Zlatev.Balkenius.2001.pdf

Prince, C. G. (2002). Introduction: The Second International Workshop on 
Epigenetic Robotics. In C. G. Prince, Y. Demiris, Y. Marom, H. Kozima, & 
C. Balkenius (Eds.) Proceedings of the Second International Workshop on 
Epigenetic Robotics: Modeling Cognitive Development in Robotic Systems. 
Lund, Sweden: Lund University Cognitive Studies Volume 94.
Available at: http://www.cprince.com/PubRes/EpigeneticRobotics2002/Prince-Intro.pdf

Weng, J., McClelland, J., Pentland, A., Sporns, O., Stockman, I., Sur, M., 
& Thelen, E. (2001). Autonomous mental development by robots and animals. 
Science, 291, 599-600. 
Available at: http://www.cse.msu.edu/dl/SciencePaper.pdf

Berthouze, L. and Prince, C. G. (2003). Introduction: The Third International 
Workshop on Epigenetic Robotics. In C. G. Prince, L. Berthouze, H. Kozima, 
D. Bullock, G. Stojanov, & C. Balkenius (Eds.) 
Proceedings of the Third International Workshop on Epigenetic Robotics: Modeling 
Cognitive Development in Robotic Systems. Lund, Sweden: Lund University Cognitive 
Studies Volume 101. 
Available at: http://www.d.umn.edu/~cprince/epigenetic-robotics/2003/intro.pdf

Reply via email to