Advances in Artificial Intelligence — IBERAMIA 2002 [electronic resource] : 8th Ibero-American Conference on AI Seville, Spain, November 12–15, 2002 Proceedings / edited by Francisco J. Garijo, José C. Riquelme, Miguel Toro.

Contributor(s): Garijo, Francisco J [editor.] | Riquelme, José C [editor.] | Toro, Miguel [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service)Material type: TextTextSeries: Lecture Notes in Computer Science ; 2527Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2002Description: XXXVI, 958 p. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783540361312Subject(s): Computer science | Artificial intelligence | Computer Science | Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics) | Computation by Abstract DevicesAdditional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification: 006.3 LOC classification: Q334-342TJ210.2-211.495Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Knowledge Representation and Reasoning -- Machine Learning -- Uncertainty and Fuzzy Systems -- Genetic Algorithms -- Neural Nets -- Distributed Artificial Intelligence and Multi-agent Systems -- Natural Language Processing -- Intelligent Tutoring Systems -- Control and Real Time -- Robotics -- Computer Vision.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: The 8th Ibero-American Conference on Artificial Intelligence, IBERAMIA 2002, took place in Spain for the second time in 14 years; the first conference was organized in Barcelona in January 1988. The city of Seville hosted this 8th conference, giving the participants the opportunity of enjoying the richness of its historical and cultural atmosphere. Looking back over these 14 years, key aspects of the conference, such as its structure, organization, the quantity and quality of submissions, the publication policy, and the number of attendants, have significantly changed. Some data taken from IBERAMIA’88 and IBERAMIA 2002 may help to illustrate these changes. IBERAMIA’88 was planned as an initiative of three Ibero-American AI associations: the Spanish Association for AI (AEPIA), the Mexican Association for AI (SMIA), and the Portuguese Association for AI (APIA). The conference was organized by the AEPIA staff, including the AEPIA president, José Cuena, the secretary, Felisa Verdejo, and other members of the AEPIA board. The proceedings of IBERAMIA’88 contain 22 full papers grouped into six areas: knowledge representation and reasoning, learning, AI tools, expert systems, language, and vision. Papers were written in the native languages of the participants: Spanish, Portuguese, and Catalan. Twenty extended abstracts describing ongoing projects were also included in the proceedings.
Item type: E-BOOKS
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Knowledge Representation and Reasoning -- Machine Learning -- Uncertainty and Fuzzy Systems -- Genetic Algorithms -- Neural Nets -- Distributed Artificial Intelligence and Multi-agent Systems -- Natural Language Processing -- Intelligent Tutoring Systems -- Control and Real Time -- Robotics -- Computer Vision.

The 8th Ibero-American Conference on Artificial Intelligence, IBERAMIA 2002, took place in Spain for the second time in 14 years; the first conference was organized in Barcelona in January 1988. The city of Seville hosted this 8th conference, giving the participants the opportunity of enjoying the richness of its historical and cultural atmosphere. Looking back over these 14 years, key aspects of the conference, such as its structure, organization, the quantity and quality of submissions, the publication policy, and the number of attendants, have significantly changed. Some data taken from IBERAMIA’88 and IBERAMIA 2002 may help to illustrate these changes. IBERAMIA’88 was planned as an initiative of three Ibero-American AI associations: the Spanish Association for AI (AEPIA), the Mexican Association for AI (SMIA), and the Portuguese Association for AI (APIA). The conference was organized by the AEPIA staff, including the AEPIA president, José Cuena, the secretary, Felisa Verdejo, and other members of the AEPIA board. The proceedings of IBERAMIA’88 contain 22 full papers grouped into six areas: knowledge representation and reasoning, learning, AI tools, expert systems, language, and vision. Papers were written in the native languages of the participants: Spanish, Portuguese, and Catalan. Twenty extended abstracts describing ongoing projects were also included in the proceedings.

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