But this conflicts with the requirements of an intelligent search, namely quickly reacting to the results of each step taken. Naturally, this can be fixed by communication, but too much communication drastically reduces the gains by the use of several computing nodes. Nevertheless, in the last few years several concepts have been developed that achieve the combined benefits of using several computing nodes and intelligent knowledge based search.
This special track aims at bringing together researchers from the different areas of artificial intelligence that are interested in parallelizing or distributing their particular search-based systems. The topics of interest include
All accepted papers will be included into the FLAIRS-99 proceedings that will be published by AAAI Press. Selected authors may be invited (by the FLAIRS-99 program committee) to submit a revised copy of their paper to a special issue of the International Journal of Pattern Recognition and Artificial Intelligence. The submitted paper should not exceed 5 (five) pages using the AAAI proceedings format. LaTeX-users may consult this link
The Program Committee's decisions will be mailed in early December 1998. Authors of accepted papers will be expected to submit the final camera-ready copy of their full papers to the publisher by Feb 3, 1999.
Bruce Spencer
Faculty of Computer Science
University of New Brunswick
P.O. Box 4400
Fredericton, New Brunswick
CANADA E3B 5A3
FAX: 506-453-3566
Phone: 506-453-4566
Email: bspencer@unb.caJörg Denzinger
Computer Science Department
University of Kaiserslautern
Postfach 3049
67653 Kaiserslautern
Germany
FAX: +49-631-205-3558
Phone: +49-631-205-2181
Email: denzinge@informatik.uni-kl.de
D. Cook, University of Texas at Arlington, USA
B. Fronhöfer, TU Munich, Germany
Y. Kitamura, University of Osaka, Japan
W. Küchlin, University of Tübingen, Germany
W. McCune, Argonne Nat. Lab., USA
G. Sutcliffe, James Cook U., Australia
M. Yokoo, NTT Communication Science Laboratories, Kyoto, Japan