kersch@usceast.UUCP (Larry Kerschberg) (02/12/86)
Conference Advance Program and Registration Forms First International Conference on Expert Database Systems Sheraton Charleston Hotel April 1-4, 1986 Sponsored by: Institute of Information Management, Technology and Policy College of Business Administration University of South Carolina In Cooperation With: American Association for Artificial Intelligence (AAAI) Association for Computing Machinery -- SIGMOD, SIGART, and SIGPLAN IEEE Computer Society -- Technical Committee on Data Base Engineering Agence de l'Informatique, France Tuesday, April 1, 1986 Tutorial Day 8:30 am - 12:00 pm Morning Parallel Tutorials I IA: Introduction to Artificial Intelligence Instructor: Dr. Elaine Rich, MCC, Austin, Texas Dr. Rich is currently leading a natural language research team at MCC. She is the author of the widely-read book, Artificial Intelligence, as well as numerous technical papers. Course Description: This tutorial will provide an introduction to the important concepts and techniques of Artificial Intelligence (AI). The major topics are: What is an AI technique?; Problem solving as heuristic search; Heuristic search techniques such as hill climbing, best first search, problem decomposition, constraint satisfaction; Knowledge representation and inference including logic-based methods, default reasoning, slot and filler methods and production rules. IB: Database Management Instructor: Professor Michael Stonebraker, UC - Berkeley, California Dr. Stonebraker is a full professor of Computer Science at the University of California, Berkeley. He is the original implementor of the INGRES system and is a co-founder of Relational Technology, Inc. which markets INGRES to engineering and business users. Course Description: This tutorial will provide an overview of Database Management. The major topics are: Traditional data models and query languages including network, hierarchical, and relational models; Database services such as transaction management, query optimization, protection, views, integrity control; New approaches to data models including semantic data models, logic programming, CAD/CAM data models; Themes of Expert Database Systems such as extended views, active databases, procedural objects, inheritance, and new data types. 1:30 pm - 5:00 pm Afternoon Parallel Tutorials II IIA: Expert Systems -- An Introduction Instructor: Professor Charles Rich, MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts Dr. Rich is Principal Research Scientist at the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory of Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is co-principal investigator of the Programmer's Apprentice Project at MIT. Course Description: This is an introductory tutorial for those who intend to develop or manage the development of new expert systems, as well as those who want to evaluate the potential for using expert systems in their own work. No previous background is assumed. The topics include: Expert systems features including expert-level performance, symbolic and heuristic information, and the separation of Knowledge from Inference; Application areas for expert systems; Programming techniques used for expert system development including rules, frames, logic programming; and the use of incremental prototypes for expert systems development. IIB: Logic Programming and Databases Instructor: Dr. Steve Hardy, Teknowledge, Inc., Palo Alto, California Dr. Hardy is currently Product Manager at Teknowledge. He was the Principal Designer of the M.1 Expert System Shell. Course Description: This tutorial will provide an overview of the important concepts relating to logic programming and databases. The major topics are: Logic and databases; Prolog: A logic language; Prolog: Its practical difficulties; High-level logic languages including shells for Prolog; Current applications; What the future holds. Wednesday, April 2, 1986 8:00-12:00 am Registration 8:45-9:00 am Opening Remarks Chairman: Donald A. Marchand, University of South Carolina, USA 9:00-10:00 am Keynote Address Chairman: Larry Kerschberg, University of South Carolina, USA To be announced Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque*, AT&T Bell Labs, USA and University of Toronto*, Canada 10:00-10:30 am Coffee Break 10:30-12:00 am Session 1: Object-Oriented Systems Chairman: Reid Smith, Schlumberger-Doll Research, USA Object Prototypes and Database Samples for Expert Database Systems G.T. Nguyen, IMAG, Universite de Grenoble, France Displaying Database Objects D. Maier, P. Nordquist* and M. Grossman, Oregon Graduate Center and Intel Corp.*, USA A Personal Universal Filing System Based on the Concept-Relation Model H. Fujisawa, A. Hatakeyama and J. Higashino, Hitachi, Ltd., Japan 12:00-1:30 pm Lunch 1:30-3:00 pm Afternoon Parallel Sessions Session 2A: Theory of Knowledge Bases Chairman: Setsuo Ohsuga, University of Tokyo, Japan Control of Processes by Communication over Ports as a Paradigm for Distributed Knowledge-Based System Design A.S. Cromarty, Advanced Information and Decision Systems, USA Representing and Manipulating Knowledge Within "Worlds" H. Kaufmann and A. Grumbach*, C.G.E..-- Laboratoires de Marcoussis and Ecole Superieure d'Electricite*, France Completeness and Consistency in Knowledge Base Systems W. Marek, University of Kentucky, USA Session 2B: Intelligent Database Interfaces Chairman: Bonnie L. Webber, University of Pennsylvania, USA Supporting Goal Queries in Relational Databases A. Motro, University of Southern California, USA Design and Experimentation of IR-NLI: An Intelligent User Interface to Bibliographic Databases G. Brajnik, G. Guida and C. Tasso, Universita di Udine, Italy When does Non-Linear Text Help? D. Shasha, New York University, USA 3:00-3:30 pm Coffee Break 3:30-5:00 pm Panel Session: Are Data Models Dead? Chairman: Michael L. Brodie, Computer Corporation of America, USA 6:30-9:30 pm Great Gatsby Night Thursday, April 3, 1986 8:30-10:00 am Session 4: Knowledge System Architectures Chairman: Michele Missikoff, IASI-CNR, Italy The Do-Loop Considered Harmful in Production System Programming M. van Biema, D.P. Miranker and S.J. Stolfo, Columbia University, USA A Relational Representation for Knowledge Bases R.M. Abarbanel and M.D. Williams, IntelliCorp, USA Interfacing Relational Databases and Prolog Efficiently S. Ceri, G. Gottlob and G. Wiederhold, Stanford University, USA 10:00-10:30 am Coffee Break 10:30-12:00 am Morning Parallel Sessions Session 5A: Deductive Databases Chairman: D. Stott Parker, Jr., UCLA and Silogic, USA Negative Queries in Horn Databases Shamin Naqvi, AT&T Bell Laboratories, USA Safety and Compilation of Non-Recursive Horn Clauses Carlo Zaniolo, MCC, USA Recursive Axioms in Deductive Databases: The Query/Subquery Approach L. Vieille, European Computer-Industry Research Center (ECRC), West Germany Session5B: Reasoning in Expert Database Systems Chairman: James Bezdek, University of South Carolina, USA Evaluation of Recursive Queries Using Join Indices P. Valduriez and H. Boral, MCC, USA An Algebraic Approach to Recursive Inference Y.E. Ioannidis and E. Wong, University of California - Berkeley, USA A Fuzzy Relational Calculus A. Zvieli, Louisiana State University, USA 12:00-1:30 pm Lunch 1:30-3:30 pm Afternoon Parallel Sessions Session 6A: Semantic Query Optimization Chairman: Matthias Jarke, New York University, USA A Knowledge-Based Approach to Query Optimization C.V. Malley and S.B. Zdonik, Brown University, USA Semantic Query Optimization: Additional Constraints and Control Strategies U.S. Chakravarthy, J. Minker and J. Grant*, University of Maryland and Towson State University*, USA Integrity Enforcement on Prolog-based Deductive Databases H. Decker, ECRC, West Germany Session 6B: Knowledge-Based Modeling and Design Chairman: Edgar H. Sibley, George Mason University, USA Modeling Linguistic User Interfaces M. Pilote, Toronto, Canada How Abstraction Can Reduce Ambiguity in Explanation Problems S. Letovsky, Yale University, USA A Framework for Design/Redesign Experts A.L. Furtado, M.A. Casanova* and L. Tucherman*, Pontificia Universidade Catolica do Rio de Janeiro and IBM do Brasil*, Brazil Flexible Interfaces and the Support of Physical Database Design Reasoning M. Prietula and G. Dickson*,Dartmouth College and University of Minnesota*, USA 3:30-4:00 pm Coffee Break 4:00-5:30 pm 7. Panel Session: Inference in Expert Database Systems Chairman: Herve Gallaire, ECRC, West Germany 6:00-9:00 pm Red, White and Bluegrass Night Friday, April 4, 1986 8:00-10:00 am Session 8: Knowledge Management Chairman: Alain Pirotte, Philips Research Lab, Belgium An Analysis of Rule Indexing Implementations in Data Base Systems M. Stonebraker, T. Sellis and E. Hanson, UC-Berkeley, USA Querying a Rule Base L. Cholvy and R. Demolombe, Centre d'Etudes et de Recherches de Toulouse, France Updating Propositional Formulas A. Weber, Universitat Karlsruhe, West Germany Invited Lecture: Beyond the Knowledge Level Mark. S. Fox, Carnegie-Mellon University, USA 10:00-10:30 am Coffee Break 10:30-12:00 am 9. Panel Session: Open Issues in Expert Database Systems Chairman: Robert Balzer, USC- Information Sciences Institute, USA 12:00-12:15 pm Closing Ceremony Chairman: Donald A. Marchand, University of South Carolina, USA -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Please fill out, detach and mail the Registration and Hotel forms with your remittance -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- First International Conference on Expert Database Systems Sheraton Charleston Hotel April 1-4, 1986 Conference Registration Form All Payments must be made in US Currency. Make checks payable to the Institute of Information Managment, Technology and Policy and mail the form to Ms. Libby Shropshier, Conference Treasurer Institute of IMTP College of Business Administration University of South Carolina Columbia, SC, 29208 Telephone: (803) 777-5766 Please complete the requested information: Name ________________________________________________________ Affiliation ______________________________________________________ Address _______________________________________________________ City, State ZIP ___________________________________________________ Country ___________________________ Business Telephone __________________________________ Indicate your ACM, AAAI, or IEEE Membership Number: Society ________________ Number _________________ Conference Registration Fee remitted ______________________ Tutorial Registration Fee remitted ______________________ Indicate desired tutorials Morning ______ IA: Introduction to Artificial Intelligence ______ IB: Database Management Afternoon ______ IIA: Expert Systems -- An Introduction ______ IIB: Logic Programming and Databases Additional Social Function Tickets (For Guest/Spouse) ______ Hospitality Hour -- $10.00 each _______________________ ______ Great Gatsby Night -- $40.00 each _______________________ ______ Red, White and Bluegrass Night -- $38.00 each _________________ Total _______________________ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- First International Conference on Expert Database Systems Sheraton Charleston Hotel April 1-4, 1986 Hotel Registration Form Room Rates: $65.00 Single/ $78.00 Double These rates are valid until March 11, 1986 Please fill out and mail to: Sheraton Charleston Hotel 170 Lockwood Drive Charleston, SC 29403 Attention: Reservation Manager Name ___________________________________________________ Address ___________________________________________________ City, State, ZIP _____________________________________________ Country ____________________________ Phone (Home) ___________________ (Work) ___________________ Company Name _____________________________________________ Arrival Date ____________________ Number of nights ________________ Number of Persons ______________ Departure Date ________________ Sharing with __________________________________________________ Reservations will be held until 4:00 pm Charleston time. A deposit or guarantee by a major credit card at one night's rate is required to hold a room after 4:00 pm. Check out time is 12:00 noon. Check in time is 3:00 pm. Credit cards honored are American Express, Carte Blanche, Diners Club, Visa, and MasterCard. Guaranteed Reservation? _________ If so, provide Credit Card Name __________________________________ Credit Card Number __________________________________ Expiration Date: __________________________________ -------------------------------------------------------------------------------