Overview
- Editors:
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Norman Foo
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School of Computer Science and Engineering, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia
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Table of contents (54 papers)
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Automated Reasoning
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- Gernot Stenz, Andreas Wolf
Pages 231-243
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- Marianne Brown, Geoff Sutcliffe
Pages 244-254
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Neural Learning
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- Ivan Jordanov, Robert Brown
Pages 255-267
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- Robert Cox, David Clark, Alice Richardson
Pages 268-277
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- Richard Willgoss, Javaid Iqbal
Pages 278-290
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Knowledge Representation II
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- Arun K. Pujari, G. Vijaya Kumari, Abdul Sattar
Pages 291-303
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Heuristics
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- Ian Horrocks, Lin Padgham, Laura Thomson
Pages 328-339
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- Matt Vernooy, William S. Havens
Pages 340-352
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- Masahito Kurihara, Hisashi Kondo
Pages 353-364
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Knowledge Representation III
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- Abhaya C. Nayak, Norman Y. Foo
Pages 365-377
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- Mikhail Prokopenko, Maurice Pagnucco, Pavlos Peppas, Abhaya Nayak
Pages 378-392
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- Nathalie Jitnah, Ann E. Nicholson
Pages 393-404
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Machine Learning II
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- Murlikrishna Viswanathan, Chris S. Wallace, David L. Dowe, Kevin B. Korb
Pages 405-416
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- Chris Gaskett, David Wettergreen, Alexander Zelinsky
Pages 417-428
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Applications
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- Victor Korotkich, Noel Patson
Pages 429-439
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- Edmund Burke, Graham Kendall
Pages 453-464
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Poster Papers (Extended Summary)
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- Yasufumi Takama, Mitsuru Ishizuka
Pages 465-466
About this book
The 12th Australian Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AI'QQ) held in Sydney, Australia, 6-10 December 1999, is the latest in a series of annual re gional meetings at which advances in artificial intelligence are reported. This series now attracts many international papers, and indeed the constitution of the program committee reflects this geographical diversity. Besides the usual tutorials and workshops, this year the conference included a companion sympo sium at which papers on industrial appUcations were presented. The symposium papers have been published in a separate volume edited by Eric Tsui. Ar99 is organized by the University of New South Wales, and sponsored by the Aus tralian Computer Society, the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), Computer Sciences Corporation, the KRRU group at Griffith University, the Australian Artificial Intelligence Institute, and Neuron- Works Ltd. Ar99 received over 120 conference paper submissions, of which about o- third were from outside Australia. Prom these, 39 were accepted for regular presentation, and a further 15 for poster display. These proceedings contain the full regular papers and extended summaries of the poster papers. All papers were refereed, mostly by two or three reviewers selected by members of the program committee, and a list of these reviewers appears later. The technical program comprised two days of workshops and tutorials, fol lowed by three days of conference and symposium plenary and paper sessions.
Editors and Affiliations
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School of Computer Science and Engineering, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia
Norman Foo