Spring Symposia
Reports of the AAAI 2012 Spring Symposia
Alani, Harith (The Open University) | An, Bo (University of Southern California) | Jain, Manish (University of Southern California) | Kido, Takashi (Rikengenesis) | Konidaris, George (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) | Lawless, William (Paine College) | Martin, David (Apple Computer) | Pantofaru, Caroline (Willow Garage, Inc.) | Sofge, Donald (Naval Research Laboratory) | Takadama, Keiki (University of Electro-Communications) | Tambe, Milind (University of Southern California) | Vitvar, Tomas (Czech Technical University)
The Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence, in cooperation with Stanford University's Department of Computer Science, was pleased to present the 2012 Spring Symposium Series, held Monday through Wednesday, March 26–28, 2012 at Stanford University, Stanford, California USA. The six symposia held were AI, The Fundamental Social Aggregation Challenge (cochaired by W. F. Lawless, Don Sofge, Mark Klein, and Laurent Chaudron); Designing Intelligent Robots (cochaired by George Konidaris, Byron Boots, Stephen Hart, Todd Hester, Sarah Osentoski, and David Wingate); Game Theory for Security, Sustainability, and Health (cochaired by Bo An and Manish Jain); Intelligent Web Services Meet Social Computing (cochaired by Tomas Vitvar, Harith Alani, and David Martin); Self-Tracking and Collective Intelligence for Personal Wellness (cochaired by Takashi Kido and Keiki Takadama); and Wisdom of the Crowd (cochaired by Caroline Pantofaru, Sonia Chernova, and Alex Sorokin). The papers of the six symposia were published in the AAAI technical report series.
Reports of the AAAI 2011 Spring Symposia
Buller, Mark (Brown University) | Cuddihy, Paul (General Electric Research) | Davis, Ernest (New York University) | Doherty, Patrick (Linkoping University) | Doshi-Velez, Finale (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) | Erdem, Esra (Sabanci University) | Fisher, Douglas (Vanderbilt University) | Green, Nancy (University of North Carolina, Greensboro) | Hinkelmann, Knut (University of Applied Sciences Northwestern Switzerland FHNW) | Maher, Mary Lou (University of Maryland) | McLurkin, James (Rice University) | Maheswaran, Rajiv (University of Southern California) | Rubinelli, Sara (University of Lucerne) | Schurr, Nathan (Aptima, Inc.) | Scott, Donia (University of Sussex) | Shell, Dylan (Texas A&M University) | Szekely, Pedro (University of Southern California) | Thönssen, Barbara (University of Applied Sciences Northwestern Switzerland FHNW) | Urken, Arnold B. (University of Arizona)
The Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence, in cooperation with Stanford University's Department of Computer Science, presented the 2011 Spring Symposium Series Monday through Wednesday, March 21–23, 2011 at Stanford University. The titles of the eight symposia were AI and Health Communication, Artificial Intelligence and Sustainable Design, AI for Business Agility, Computational Physiology, Help Me Help You: Bridging the Gaps in Human-Agent Collaboration, Logical Formalizations of Commonsense Reasoning, Multirobot Systems and Physical Data Structures, and Modeling Complex Adaptive Systems As If They Were Voting Processes.
Reports of the AAAI 2010 Spring Symposia
Barkowsky, Thomas (University of Bremen) | Bertel, Sven (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) | Broz, Frank (University of Hertfordshire) | Chaudhri, Vinay K. (SRI International) | Eagle, Nathan (txteagle, Inc.) | Genesereth, Michael (Stanford University) | Halpin, Harry (University of Edinburgh) | Hamner, Emily (Carnegie Mellon University) | Hoffmann, Gabe (Palo Alto Research Center) | Hölscher, Christoph (University of Freiburg) | Horvitz, Eric (Microsoft Research) | Lauwers, Tom (Carnegie Mellon University) | McGuinness, Deborah L. (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute) | Michalowski, Marek (BeatBots LLC) | Mower, Emily (University of Southern California) | Shipley, Thomas F. (Temple University) | Stubbs, Kristen (iRobot) | Vogl, Roland (Stanford University) | Williams, Mary-Anne (University of Technology)
The Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence, in cooperation with Stanford University's Department of Computer Science, is pleased to present the 2010 Spring Symposium Series, to be held Monday through Wednesday, March 22–24, 2010 at Stanford University. The titles of the seven symposia are Artificial Intelligence for Development; Cognitive Shape Processing; Educational Robotics and Beyond: Design and Evaluation; Embedded Reasoning: Intelligence in Embedded Systems Intelligent Information Privacy Management; It's All in the Timing: Representing and Reasoning about Time in Interactive Behavior; and Linked Data Meets Artificial Intelligence.
Reports of the AAAI 2009 Spring Symposia
Bao, Jie (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute) | Bojars, Uldis (National University of Ireland) | Choudhury, Ranzeem (Dartmouth College) | Ding, Li (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute) | Greaves, Mark (Vulcan Inc.) | Kapoor, Ashish (Microsoft Research) | Louchart, Sandy (Heriot-Watt University) | Mehta, Manish (Georgia Institute of Technology) | Nebel, Bernhard (Albert-Ludwigs University Freiburg) | Nirenburg, Sergei (University of Maryland Baltimore County) | Oates, Tim (University of Maryland Baltimore County) | Roberts, David L. (Georgia Institute of Technology) | Sanfilippo, Antonio (Pacific Northwest National Laboratory) | Stojanovic, Nenad (University of Karlsruhe) | Stubbs, Kristen (iRobot Corportion) | Thomaz, Andrea L. (Georgia Institute of Technology) | Tsui, Katherine (University of Massachusetts Lowell) | Woelfl, Stefan (Albert-Ludwigs University Freiburg)
The titles of the nine symposia were Agents that Learn from Human Teachers, Benchmarking of Qualitative Spatial and Temporal Reasoning Systems, Experimental Design for Real-World Systems, Human Behavior Modeling, Intelligent Event Processing, Intelligent Narrative Technologies II, Learning by Reading and Learning to Read, Social Semantic Web: Where Web 2.0 Meets Web 3.0, and Technosocial Predictive Analytics. The aim of the Benchmarking of Qualitative Spatial and Temporal Reasoning Systems symposium was to initiate the development of a problem repository in the field of qualitative spatial and temporal reasoning and identify a graded set of challenges for future midterm and long-term research. The Intelligent Event Processing symposium discussed the need for more AI-based approaches in event processing and defined a kind of research agenda for the field, coined as intelligent complex event processing (iCEP). The Intelligent Narrative Technologies II AAAI symposium discussed innovations, progress, and novel techniques in the research domain.