(apologies if this has been sent to you before)
Call for Papers
The RoboCup 2002 International Symposium
June 24-25, 2002 Fukuoka, Japan
http://www.robocup2002.org/
Purpose and Scope
The 6th RoboCup International Symposium will be held in conjunction
and immediately after the RoboCup 2002 Competitions and Demonstrations
as the core meeting for the presentation of scientific contributions
in areas of relevance to RoboCup. Its scope is mainly within the
fields of Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, and Education with a
broad range of areas of interest, including:
* Multi-Agent/Robot Systems * Robotics, Science Education
* Sensor/Motor Control * Adversarial Planning
* Self-localization and Navigation * Planning, Reasoning, and Modeling
* Vision and Image-Processing * Learning and Adaptive Systems
* Cooperation and Collaboration * Simulation and Visualization
* Realtime and Concurrent Programming * Embedded and Mobile Hardware
* Non-conventional actuation systems * Artificial muscles
* Next generation sensors for robotics * Mobile Robots and Humanoids
* Search and rescue robots * Adjustable Autonomy
* Disaster rescue information systems * System integration
* Computer and Robotic Entertainment * Speech Synthesis
* Natural Language Generation * Distributed Sensor Fusion
* Omnidirectional Vision * Smart Materials
* Fuel Cell Batteries * Software Engineering
* Dynamic Resource Allocation * Heterogeneous Agents
We invite submissions of papers reporting on high quality, original
work to the RoboCup Symposium. Due to its interdisciplinary nature,
the RoboCup International Symposium provides an excellent opportunity
to introduce and spread novel ideas and approaches into various
scientific disciplines. We invite people who do not actively
participate in RoboCup to submit their work on the topics above or
related ones. The experimental character of the RoboCup games gives in
addition the possibility to get novel ideas and approaches adopted and
field-tested by a constantly growing community. Papers describing
real-world research as well as papers dealing with strong theoretical
results are both welcome. We also encourage the submission of
high-quality overview articles for any field related to the scope of
RoboCup, especially the ones listed above. The proceedings of RoboCup
are published within the Springer LNAI-series. All submissions to the
International Symposium enter the selection process for the RoboCup
"Scientific Challenge Award", which recognizes outstanding research
within a field related to the scope of RoboCup.
Submission format and instructions
Submitted papers should follow the Springer LNAI format, and are
limited to 16 pages. For formatting instructions, take a look at:
http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html. We strongly encourage
electronic submissions per the instructions at
http://spiderfish.coral.cs.cmu.edu/robocup2002/. The electronic
submission process requires a postscript or pdf file of the full
paper, and the separate submission of an abstract. Authors who cannot
submit their papers electronically should contact the program chairs
for instructions on submitting hard copies. All submission materials
are due Feb 1, 2002.
Important dates
Feb 1, 2002 Submission deadline
March 15 Notification of acceptance
April 15 Camera-ready copies due
June 19-23 RoboCup International Competitions and Demonstrations
June 24-25 RoboCup International Symposium
Conference Chairs
Gal A. Kaminka, Carnegie Mellon University, USA (galk+rc02@cs.cmu.edu)
Pedro U. Lima, Instituto de Sistemas e Robótica, IST, Portugal
(pal@isr.ist.utl.pt)
Raul Rojas, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany (rojas@inf.fu-berlin.de)
International Program Committee
Richard Alami, France Tomio Arai, Japan
Ronald Arkin, USA Minoru Asada, Japan
Tucker Balch, USA Suzanne Barber, USA
Mike Bowling, USA Henrik Christensen, Sweden
Brad Clement, USA Jorge Dias, Portugal
Ian Frank, Japan Dani Goldnerg, USA
Claudia Goldman, Israel Steffen Guttman, Germany
Joao Hespanha, USA Adele Howe, USA
Huosheng Hu, UK Mansour Jamzad, Iran
Jeffrey Johnson, UK Pieter Jonker, The Netherlands
Hyuckchul Jung, USA Gerhard Kraetzschmar, Germany
Pradeep Khosla, USA Sarit Kraus, Israel
Sanjeev Kumar, USA Kostas Kyriakopoulos, Greece
Stacy Marsella, USA Robin Murphy, USA
Ranjit Nair, USA Itsuki Noda, Japan
Masayuki Ohta, Japan Daniel Polani, Germany
David Pynadath, USA Martin Riedmiller, Germany
Alessandro Saffiotti, Denmark Paul Scerri, USA
Sandeep Sen, USA Onn Shehory, Israel
Roland Siegwart, Switzerland Elizabeth Sklar , USA
Elizabeth Sonenberg, Australia Peter Stone , USA
Katya Sycara, USA Satoshi Tadokoro, Japan
Will Uther, USA Tom Wagner, USA
Marco Wiering, Netherlands Laura Winer, Canada
-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Gal A. Kaminka, Ph.D. galk@cs.cmu.edu http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~galk Post Doctoral Fellow Computer Science Dept. Carnegie Mellon University Only those who see the invisible can do the impossible "Death is an engineering problem." -- Bart Kosko, "Fuzzy Thinking" "But life is not an engineering task." -- Gal A. Kaminka
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Sun Jan 06 2002 - 11:01:32 PST