Government
The CIDOC Conceptual Reference Module: An Ontological Approach to Semantic Interoperability of Metadata
This article presents the methodology that has been successfully used over the past seven years by an interdisciplinary team to create the International Committee for Documentation of the International Council of Museums (CIDOC) CONCEPTUAL REFERENCE MODEL (CRM), a high-level ontology to enable information integration for cultural heritage data and their correlation with library and archive information. The CIDOC CRM is now in the process to become an International Organization for Standardization (ISO) standard. This article justifies in detail the methodology and design by functional requirements and gives examples of its contents. The CIDOC CRM analyzes the common conceptualizations behind data and metadata structures to support data transformation, mediation, and merging. It is argued that such ontologies are propertycentric, in contrast to terminological systems, and should be built with different methodologies. It is demonstrated that ontological and epistemological arguments are equally important for an effective design, in particular when dealing with knowledge from the past in any domain. It is assumed that the presented methodology and the upper level of the ontology are applicable in a far wider domain.
Calendar of Events
All accepted papers will appear in the conference proceedings published by AAAI Press. Selected authors will be invited to submit extended versions of their Ingrid Russell, University of Hartford papers to a special issue of the International Journal on Artificial Intelligence Tools irussell@hartford.edu The papers Valerie Barr, Hofstra University should not exceed 5 pages and is due by October 24, 2003. All submissions will be done Zdravko Markov, Central Connecticut State electronically via FLAIRS web submission system, which will be available through University the conference website. Please consult the conference web page for details on paper submission.
SPADES: A System for Parallel-Agent, Discrete-Event Simulation
Simulations are an excellent tool for studying AI. However, the simulation technology in use by, and designed for, the AI community often fails to take advantage of much of the work in the larger simulation community to produce stable, repeatable, and efficient simulations. I present SPADES (SYSTEM FOR PARALLEL-AGENT DISCRETE-EVENT SIMULATION) as a simulation substrate for the AI community. SPADES focuses on the agent as a fundamental simulation component. The "thinking time" of an agent is tracked and reflected in the results of the agents' actions. SPADES supports and manages the distribution of agents across machines while it is robust to variations in network performance and machine load. SPADES is not tied to any particular simulation and is a powerful new tool for creating simulations for the study of AI.
GRACE: An Autonomous Robot for the AAAI Robot Challenge
Simmons, Reid, Goldberg, Dani, Goode, Adam, Montemerlo, Michael, Roy, Nicholas, Sellner, Brennan, Urmson, Chris, Schultz, Alan, Abramson, Myriam, Adams, William, Atrash, Amin, Bugajska, Magda, Coblenz, Michael, MacMahon, Matt, Perzanowski, Dennis, Horswill, Ian, Zubek, Robert, Kortenkamp, David, Wolfe, Bryn, Milam, Tod, Maxwell, Bruce
In an attempt to solve as much of the AAAI Robot Challenge as possible, five research institutions representing academia, industry, and government integrated their research into a single robot named GRACE. This article describes this first-year effort by the GRACE team, including not only the various techniques each participant brought to GRACE but also the difficult integration effort itself.
The AAAI-2002 Robot Rescue
Casper, Jennifer L., Micire, Mark J.
The purpose of the AAAI-2002 Robot Rescue event is to challenge researchers to design useful robotic systems for urban search and rescue (USAR). The competition rules are written to simulate a real rescue response in a simulated disaster environment developed by the National Institute of Standards and Technology. This article provides an overview of the current state of the art for USAR robotics, an overview of the AAAI-2002 Robot Rescue event, and a discussion of the future of the Robot Rescue event.
In Memoriam: Charles Rosen, Norman Nielsen, and Saul Amarel
Hart, Peter E., Nilsson, Nils J., Perrault, Ray, Mitchell, Tom, Kulikowski, Casimir A., Leake, David B.
In the span of a few months, the AI community lost four important figures. The fall of 2002 marked the passing of Ray Reiter, for whom a memorial article by Jack Minker appears in this issue. As the issue was going to press, AI lost Saul Amarel, Norm Nielsen, and Charles Rosen. This section of AI Magazine commemorates these friends, leaders, and AI pioneers. We thank Tom Mitchell and Casimir Kulikowski for their memorial to Saul Amarel, Ray Perrault for his remembrance of Norm Nielsen, and Peter Hart and Nils Nilsson for their tribute to Charles Rosen. The AI community mourns our lost colleagues and gratefully remembers their contributions, which meant so much to so many and to the advancement of artificial intelligence as a whole.
AAAI-2002 Fall Symposium Series
Ohsawa, Yukio, McBurney, Peter, Parsons, Simon, Miller, Christopher A., Schultz, Alan, Scholtz, Jean, Goodrich, Michael, Eugene Santos, Jr., Bell, Benjamin, Charles L. Isbell, Jr., Littman, Michael L.
However, even if you become aware of the value of a chance event, for example, with a new behavior of a customer in the market you are selling in, it is still hard to persuade your colleagues to make actions in response to the rare event. "Interesting keywords arose, such as "You had a symposium on the creation The Symposium on Etiquette for Human-Computer "So was it a conference on knowledge Work began its meeting--with discovery inviting philosophers?" The first invited talk In this symposium, we had 17 papers, Jeanne Comeau, an author, speaker, gave us deep insight into customer 2 invited lectures, and 14 other and teacher on etiquette and the director networks in the market, and the last speakers. Six countries (Japan, United of the Etiquette School of panel extended to management, persuasion, States, United Kingdom, Germany, Boston. Comeau taught us a great communication, and trust, Portugal, and the Czech Republic) deal about etiquette's history and and so on.
The Fifth Symposium on Abstraction, Reformulation, and Approximation (SARA-2002)
The Fifth International Symposium on Abstraction, Reformulation, and Approximation (SARA-2002) was held from 2 to 4 August 2002 in Kananaskis, Alberta, Canada. This interdisciplinary conference brought together researchers from around the world to present recent progress on, and exchange ideas about, how abstraction, reformulation, and approximation techniques can be used in areas such as automatic programming, constraint satisfaction, design, diagnosis, machine learning, search, planning, reasoning, game playing, scheduling, and theorem proving.
Intelligent Control of a Water-Recovery System: Three Years in the Trenches
Bonasso, R. Peter, Kortenkamp, David, Thronesbery, Carroll
This article discusses our experience building and running an intelligent control system during a three-year period for a National Aeronautics and Space Administration advanced life support (ALS) system. The system under test was known as the Integrated Water-Recovery System (IWRS). We used the 3T intelligent control architecture to produce software that operated autonomously, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, for 16 months. The article details our development approach, the successes and failures of the system, and our lessons learned. We conclude with a summary of spin-off benefits to the AI community and areas of AI research that can be useful for future ALS systems.