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KI 2009: Advances in Artificial Intelligence

32nd Annual German Conference on AI, Paderborn, Germany, September 15-18, 2009, Proceedings

  • Conference proceedings
  • © 2009

Overview

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS, volume 5803)

Part of the book sub series: Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence (LNAI)

Included in the following conference series:

Conference proceedings info: KI 2009.

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Table of contents (91 papers)

  1. Planning and Scheduling

  2. Vision and Perception

  3. Machine Learning and Data Mining

Other volumes

  1. KI 2009: Advances in Artificial Intelligence

Keywords

About this book

The 32nd Annual German Conference on Arti?cial Intelligence, KI 2009 (KI being the German acronym for AI), was held at the University of Paderborn, Germany on September 15–18, 2009, continuing a series of successful events. Starting back in 1975 as a national meeting, the conference now gathers - searchers and developers from academic ?elds and industries worldwide to share their research results covering all aspects of arti?cial intelligence. This year we received submissions from 23 countries and 4 continents. Besides the inter- tional orientation, we made a major e?ort to include as many branches of AI as possible under the roof of the KI conference. A total of 21 area chairs represe- ing di?erent communities within the ?eld of AI selected further members of the program committee and helped the local organizers to acquire papers. The new approach appealed to the AI community: we had 126 submissions, which cons- tuted an increase of more than 50%, and which resulted in 14 parallel sessions on the following topics agents and intelligent virtual environments AI and engineering automated reasoning cognition evolutionary computation Robotics experience and knowledge management history and philosophical foundations knowledge representation and reasoning machine learning and mining natural language processing planning and scheduling spatial and temporal reasoning vision and perception o?ering cutting edge presentations and discussions with leading experts. Thirty-one percent of the contributions came from outside German-speaking countries.

Editors and Affiliations

  • GET Lab, University of Paderborn, Paderborn, Germany

    Bärbel Mertsching, Marcus Hund, Zaheer Aziz

Bibliographic Information

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