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All CFPs on WikiCFP | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Present CFP : 2019 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
As in prior AGI conferences, we welcome contributed papers on all aspects of AGI R&D, with the key proviso that each paper should somehow contribute specifically to the development of Artificial General Intelligence.
The proceedings of AGI-19 will be published as a book in Springer’s Lecture Notes in AI series, and all the accepted papers will be available online. Papers must be written in either LaTeX (preferred) or Word. Author guidelines and templates can be downloaded here and additional information about Springer’s Lecture Notes in AI and CS series is here. Two types of papers will be accepted: Regular papers, with a length limit of 10 pages, presenting new research results or rigorously describing new research ideas Short technical communications, with a limit of 4 pages, summarizing results and ideas of interest to the AGI audience, including reports about recent publications, position papers, and preliminary results. Appropriate topics for contributed papers include, but are not restricted to: Agent Architectures Autonomy Benchmarks and Evaluation Cognitive Modeling Collaborative Intelligence Creativity Distributed AI Formal Models of General Intelligence Implications of AGI for Society, Economy and Ecology Integration of Different Capabilities Knowledge Representation for General Intelligence Languages, Specification Approaches and Toolkits Learning, and Learning Theory Motivation, Emotion and Affect Multi-Agent Interaction Natural Language Understanding Neural-Symbolic Processing Perception and Perceptual Modeling Philosophy of AGI Reasoning, Inference and Planning Reinforcement Learning Robotic and Virtual Embodiment Simulation and Emergent Behavior Solomonoff Induction | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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