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AILog 2012 : 3rd International Workshop on Artificial Intelligence and Logistics at ECAI 2012 | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://ailog.spatial-cognition.de/ailog-2012 | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
== CALL FOR PAPERS ==
---------------------------------------------------- 3rd International Workshop on "Artificial Intelligence and Logistics (AILog-2012)" at ECAI 2012 Montpellier, France, August 27/28 2012 http://ailog.spatial-cognition.de/ailog-2012 ---------------------------------------------------- IMPORTANT DATES May 30, 2012 Paper submission deadline June 29, 2012 Notification of acceptance July 9, 2012 Camera-ready papers due Aug 27 or 28, 2012 Workshop at ECAI 2012 --------------------------------------------------------------------------- AILog-2012 is the 3rd International workshop on Artificial Intelligence and Logistics, succeeding two successful workshops at ECAI 2010 and IJCAI 2011. For this year, the focus topic of AILog is "Autonomous and Decentralized Approaches in Logistics". We explicitly invite submissions that tackle this field of research. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- MOTIVATION Logistics is concerned with the organization and control of processes in space and time in order to transport or manufacture goods and the coordination of the resulting flows of material and information, as well as monetary flows. In a globalized economy, these processes become increasingly hard to handle: the resulting logistic networks get complex and show great dynamics, which results in partial observability and more and more prevents centralized planning and control of these increasingly complex processes. Autonomous and decentralized Approaches in Logistics This workshop focuses on one approach to address these challenges: decentralized and autonomous decision making. This theme is taken up by much recent logistics research, but is also of great interest from a technical, AI perspective, e.g., in multi-agent systems. One fundamental problem of autonomy and decentralization, especially if performed by technical systems, is the difficulty to predict global system behavior, and the question of how to control such systems towards intended behavior (or at least how to reliably prevent unintended behavior). Low transparency and controllability especially for humans are in our view a major obstacle to introduce such systems in real logistics applications. Therefore this workshop especially welcomes submissions addressing the topic of controllability and monitoring of autonomous processes in logistics. This includes ways to support human stakeholders of such systems, but can also present hybrid approaches between centralization and decentralization aiming at combining the advantages of both approaches to plan, control, and monitor logistic systems. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- TOPICS OF INTEREST We encourage contributions that address issues of autonomy and decentralized control in one the following research areas and applied to a logistics problem as named in the application areas: Research Areas • Coordination in Space and Time, • Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, • Multi Modal Interaction, • Cognitive Robotics, Modeling, • Spatial and Temporal Reasoning, • Logic and Constraint Programming, • Planning and Scheduling, • Multi Agent Systems, • Case-Based Reasoning, • Machine Learning, • Human-machine Interfaces, • ... Application Areas • Transport logistics, • Production planning and control, • Assembly and disassembly, • Process modeling and monitoring, • Process planning, • Process scheduling, • Intelligent manufacturing systems, • Inventory organization and optimization, • Automated inspection and quality control, • Supply chain management, • Traffic management, • ... --------------------------------------------------------------------------- PROGAM COMMITTEE (tentative) John Bateman (University of Bremen, Germany) Jürgen Branke (University of Warwick, UK) Neil A. Duffie (University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA) Boi Faltings (EPFL Lausanne, Switzerland) Torsten Hildebrandt (University of Bremen, Germany) Stefan Kirn (University of Hohenheim, Germany) Alexander Kleiner (Linköping University, Sweden) Herbert Kopfer (University of Bremen, Germany) Andreas D. Lattner (University of Frankfurt, Germany) Martin Lauer (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany) Jacek Malec (Lund University, Sweden) Hedda Schmidtke (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany) Jaime Sichman (Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil) Gerhard Weiss (Maastricht University, Netherlands) Katja Windt (Jacobs University Bremen, Germany) Stefan Wölfl (University of Freiburg, Germany) --------------------------------------------------------------------------- ORGANIZERS Lutz Frommberger University of Bremen, Germany Kerstin Schill Collaborative Research Center "Spatial Cognition", Bremen, Germany Bernd Scholz-Reiter Collaborative Research Center "Autonomous Cooperating Logistic Processes", Bremen, Germany --------------------------------------------------------------------------- CONTACT For any inquiries about the workshop refer to the workshopp website at http://ailog.spatial-cognition.de/ailog-2012/ or contact Lutz Frommberger (lutz@informatik.uni-bremen.de). |
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