CALL FOR PAPERS 
                Sixth International Symposium on 
             ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND MATHEMATICS 

            January 5-7, 2000, Fort Lauderdale, Florida
                  http://rutcor.rutgers.edu/~amai
                  Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

This CFP is also available as a postscript file under
http://rutcor.rutgers.edu/~amai/cfp.ps

APPROACH OF THE SYMPOSIUM: The International Symposium on Artificial
Intelligence and Mathematics is the sixth of a biennial series. The
objective of the symposium is to foster interactions between
mathematics, theoretical CS, and artificial intelligence. 
Traditionally, the Symposium attracts around 100 participants from a
variety of disciplines, thereby providing a unique forum for active
scientific exchange. The series was started by Martin Golumbic. The
meeting includes paper presentation, invited speakers, and special
topic sessions. Topic sessions in the past have covered computational
learning theory, data mining, knowledge representation, nonmonotonic
reasoning, category theory, and computational complexity issues in AI.
The editorial board of the Annals of Mathematics and Artificial
Intelligence serves as the permanent Advisory Committee for the
series.

SUBMISSIONS: Authors must e-mail a short abstract (up to 200 words) in
plain text format to [EMAIL PROTECTED] by 23 SEPTEMBER
1999, and either e-mail postscript files or TeX/LaTeX source files
(including all necessary macros) of their extended abstracts (up to 10
double-spaced pages) to [EMAIL PROTECTED], or send five
copies to
       Bart Selman
       Department of Computer Science
       4130 Upson Hall
       Cornell University
       Ithaca, NY 14853-7501, USA 

to be received by 30 SEPTEMBER 1999.  Authors will be notified of
acceptance or rejection by 31 OCTOBER 1999.  The final versions of the
accepted extended abstracts, for inclusion in the conference volume,
are due by 30 NOVEMBER 1999.

Full versions of a selected set of papers from the Symposium will be
published in a special volume in the Annals of Mathematics and
Artificial Intelligence, J.C. Baltzer Scientific Publishing Co.

                    IMPORTANT DATES 
                    Abstracts received: September 23, 1999
                    Extended abstracts due: September 30, 1999
                    Authors notified: October 31, 1999
                    Final versions received: November 30, 1999 
                    AI  Math Symposium: January 5-7, 2000

SPONSORS: The Symposium is partially supported by the Annals of Math
and AI and Florida Atlantic University.

ORGANIZERS:
General Chair:          Martin Golumbic, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat Gan 
Conference Chair:       Frederick Hoffman, Florida Atlantic University 
Program Co-Chairs:      Bernhard Nebel, Albert-Ludwigs-Universitat, Freiburg
                        Bart Selman, Cornell University 
Publicity Chair:        Alex Kogan, Rutgers University

Program Committee: 
      Franz Baader (RWTH Aachen, Germany), Fahiem Bacchus
      (Univ. Waterloo, Canada), Peter van Beek (Univ. of Alberta,
      Canada), Endre Boros (Rutgers Univ.), Gerhard Brewka (Univ. of
      Leipzig, Germany), Marco Cadoli (Univ. of Roma ``La Sapienza'',
      Italy), Anthony Cohn (Univ. of Leeds, UK), Jimi Crawford (i2
      Technologies), Rina Dechter (UC Irvine), Thomas Eiter (Technical
      Univ. of Vienna, Austria), Boi Faltings (EPFL, Switzerland),
      Ronen Feldman (Bar-Ilan Univ., Ramat Gan), John Franco (Univ. of
      Cincinnati), Eugene Freuder (Univ. of New Hampshire), Hector
      Geffner (Universidad Simon Bolivar, Venezuela), Ian Gent
      (Univ. of Strathclyde, UK), Carla Gomes (Cornell University), 
      Georg Gottlob (Technical Univ. of Vienna, Austria), Russ Greiner 
      (Univ. of Alberta), Peter L. Hammer (Rutgers Univ.), David Heckerman 
      (Microsoft Corporation), Andreas Herzig (Univ. Paul Sabatier, IRIT,
      Toulouse, France), Peter Jonsson (Univ. of Linkoeping, Sweden),
      Henry Kautz (ATT), Helene Kirchner (CNRS-INRIA, Nancy, France),
      Richard Korf (UCLA), Gerhard Lakemeyer (RWTH Aachen, Germany),
      Jean-Claude Latombe (Stanford Univ.), Maurizio Lenzerini
      (Univ. of Roma ``La Sapienza'', Italy), Fangzhen Lin (Hong Kong
      Univ. of Science and Technology), Michael Littman (Duke Univ.),
      Alan Mackworth (UBC), Heikki Mannila (Univ. of Helsinki,
      Finnland), Eddy Mayoraz (IDIAP, Switzerland), Anil Nerode
      (Cornell), Werner Nutt (DFKI, Germany), Luc de Raedt
      (Albert-Ludwigs-Univ. Freiburg, Germany), Jeff Rosenschein
      (Hebrew Univ., Israel), Claude Sammut (UNSW, Australia), Dale
      Schuurmans (Univ. of Waterloo), Moshe Vardi (Rice Univ.)

INFORMATION: Further information and future announcements can be
obtained from the Conference Web Site at
http://rutcor.rutgers.edu/~amai or by (e)mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
or Professor Frederick Hoffman, Florida Atlantic University, Department
of Mathematics, PO Box 3091, Boca Raton, FL 33431, USA.

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