kersch@gmu90x.UUCP (Larry Kerschberg) (05/13/88)
Second International Conference on Expert Database Systems A limited number of the Proceedings from the Second International Conference on Expert Database Systems are available at a cost of $40. Tutorial notes are being sold for $15 each. Please add a $5 handling charge for either the proceedings or any combination of tutorials up to 4; add $2 handling fee for each additional tutorial, $5 for each additional copy of the proceedings. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Please send me _____ copies of the Proceedings at $40 per copy (plus $5 handling fee for each copy). Please send me _____ set(s) of the tutorial notes (all four) at a cost of $60 for the set (plus $5 handling fee for each set ). Please send me _____ copies of each of the following tutorial notes at a cost of $15 per copy (plus a $5 handling fee for each set of 4 or less, with an additional $2 handling fee for each additional tutorial note): Tutorial Note Titles _____ I-Logic and Databases by Dr. Carlo Zaniolo of MCC, Austin, Texas _____ II-Distributed Problem Solving in Knowledge/Data Environments by Professor Victor Lesser of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst _____ III-Knowledge Representation and Data Semantics by Professor John Mylopoulos of the University of Toronto _____ IV-Acquisition of Knowledge from Data by Professor Gio Wiederhold of Stanford University I have enclosed a total of $ __________ to cover the costs of this order. (Please make all checks payable to the GMU Foundation) Master Card or Visa Number:______________________________ Signature: ____________________________________________ Mail to : EDS Conference Office of Conferences and Community Services George Mason University 4400 University Drive Fairfax, VA 22030, USA Please Fill in the following information for mailing purposes: Name: ________________________________________________ Address ________________________________________________ City, State, Zip _________________________________________ Country ________________________________________________ Please detach above this line and return the upper portion. ============================================================= Proceedings: Second International Conference on Expert Database Systems Table of Contents Session 1: Object-Oriented Systems Chairman: Jacob Stein, Servio Logic, USA Abstract Objects in an Object-Oriented Data Model J. Zhu and D. Maier, Oregon Graduate Center, USA The Design of KIVIEW: An Object-Oriented Browser A. Motro, Univ. of Southern California, USA , A. D'Atri and L. Tarantino, and Univ. of Rome, Italy Towards a Unified View of Design Data and Knowledge Representation B. Mitschang, Universitat Kaiserslautern, FRG Session 2: Constraint Management Chairman: Herve Gallaire, ECRC, FRG Implementing Constraints in a Knowledge-Base J.A. Wald, Schlumberger-Doll Research, USA Update-Oriented Database Structures L. Tucherman and A.L. Furtado, IBM Rio Scientific Center, Brazil Distribution Design of Integrity ConstraintsX. Qian, Stanford University, USA Session 3: Panel Session: Constraint-Based Systems: Knowledge about Data Chairman: Matthew Morgenstern, SRI International, USA Panelists: A. Borgida, Rutgers University, C. Lassez, IBM T.J. Watson Research, D. Maier, Oregon Graduate Center, and G. Wiederhold, Stanford University Session 4: Expert Database System Architectures Chairmen: Robert Meersman, Tilburg University, Netherlands and Sushil Jajodia, NSF, USA BERMUDA -- An Architectural Perspective on Interfacing Prolog to a Database Machine Y.E. Ioannidis, J. Chen, M.A. Friedman and M.M. Tsangaris, Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison, USA A Look at Loosely-Coupled Prolog/Database Systems B. Napheys and D. Herkimer, Martin Marietta, USA Combining Top Down and Bottom Up Computation in Knowledge Based Systems M. Nussbaum, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH),Switzerland Session 5A: Knowledge/Data System Architectures Chairmen: Roger King, Univ. of Colorado and Robert Abarbanel, Apple Computer, Inc. A Distributed Knowledge Model for Multiple Intelligent Agents Y.P. Li, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, USA The Relational Production Language: A Production Language for Relational Databases L.M.L. Delcambre and J.N. Etheredge, Univ. of Southwestern Louisiana, USA A Transaction Oriented Mechanism to Control Processing in a Knowledge Base Management System L. Raschid, Univ. of Maryland, USA and S.Y.W. Su, Univ. of Florida, USA Session 5B: Recursive Query Processing Chairman: Tim H. Merrett, McGill University Transitive Closure of Transitively Closed Relations P. Valduriez and S. Khoshafian, MCC, USA Transforming Nonlinear Recursion to Linear Recursion Y.E. Ioannidis, Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison and E. Wong, UC-Berkeley, USA A Compressed Transitive Closure Technique for Efficient Fixed-Point Query Processing H.V. Jagadish, AT&T Bell Laboratories, USA Session 6A: Learning and Adaptation in Expert Databases Chairmen: Alex Borgida, Rutgers University and Don Potter, Univ. of Georgia An Automatic Improvement Processor for an Information Retrieval System K.P. Brunner, Merit Technology, Inc. and R.R. Korfhage, Univ. of Pittsburgh, USA Supporting Object Flavor Evolution through Learning in an Object-Oriented Database System Q. Li and D. McLeod, Univ. of Southern California, USA Implicit Representation of Extensional Answers C.D. Shum and R. Muntz, UCLA, USA Session 6B: Knowledge Management in Deductive Databases Chairmen: Sham Navathe, Univ. of Florida Deep Compilation of Large Rule Bases T.K. Sellis and N. Roussopoulos, Univ. of Maryland, USA Handling Knowledge by its Representative C. Sakama and H. Itoh, ICOT, Japan Integrity Constraint Checking in Deductive Databases using a Rule/Goal Graph B. Martens and M. Bruynooghe, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium Session 7: Panel Session: Knowledge Distribution and Interoperability Chairman: Michael Brodie, GTE Labs, USA Panelists: Danny Bobrow, Xerox PARC, Carl Hewitt, MIT, Victor Lesser, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Stuart Madnick, MIT, Dennis Tsichritzis, University of Geneva, Switzerland Session 8: Intelligent Database Interfaces Chairman: Larry Reeker, BDM Corporation Musing in an Expert Database S. Fertig and D. Gelernter, Yale University, USA Cooperative Answering: A Methodology to Provide Intelligent Access to Databases F. Cuppens and R. Demolombe, ONERA-CERT, France G+: Recursive Queries without Recursion I.F. Cruz, A.O. Mendelzon and P.T. Wood, Univ. of Toronto, Canada Session 9: Semantic Query Optimization Chairman: Matthias Jarke, Univ. of Passau, FRG Automatic Rule Derivation for Semantic Query Optimization M.D. Seigel, Boston University, USA A Metainterpreter to Semantically Optimize Queries in Deductive Databases J. Lobo and J. Minker, Univ. of Maryland, USA From QSQ towards QoSaQ: Global Optimization of Recursive Queries L. Vieille, ECRC, FR G Session 10: Panel Session: Knowledge Management Chairman: Adrian Walker, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center, USA Panelists: R. Kowalski, Imperial College, London, D. Lenat, MCC, Austin, Texas, E. Soloway, Yale University and M. Stonebraker, UC - Berkeley =================================================================== EDS'88 Tutorial Speaker Bios and Note Contents Tutorial I Logic and Databases Instructor: Dr. Carlo Zaniolo, MCC, Austin, Texas Dr. Zaniolo heads a group at MCC performing research on deductive databases and logic programming. He has held positions at Sperry Research and Bell Laboratories. He is the author of over 40 technical papers, a member of numerous Program Committees, and edited the December 1987 Data Engineering special issue on Databases and Logic. Course Description: There is a growing demand for supporting knowledge-based applications by means of Knowledge Management Systems; these will have to combine the inference mechanisms of Logic with the efficient and secure management of data provided by Database Management Systems(DBMS). The major topics are: Logic and relational query languages; Semantics of Horn Clauses; Prolog and DBMSs; Coupling Prolog with a DBMS; Making Prolog a database language; Integrating Logic and Database Systems: Sets, Negation and Updates; Choosing an Execution Model; Compilation: magic sets to support recursive predicates; Optimization and Safety; Overview of selected R&D projects. Tutorial II Distributed Problem Solving in Knowledge/Data Environments Instructor: Prof. Victor Lesser, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Dr. Lesser is Professor of Computer and Information Science at UMASS, where he heads research groups in Distributed Artificial Intelligence and Intelligent User Interfaces. Prior to joining UMASS in 1977, he was on the faculty of Carnegie-Mellon University, where he was a Principal in the development of the HEARSAY Speech Understanding System and responsible for the system architecture. Course Description: This tutorial will explore the major concepts and systems for cooperative knowledge-based problem solving. The major topics include: Connectionist, Actor and Cooperating ES paradigms; Conceptual Issues including: examples of distributed search, interpretation, planning and cooperation, global coherence, dealing with inconsistency and incompleteness, sharing world views, and design rules for a cooperating ES; System Architectures for satisficing, negotiation, tolerance of inconsistency in problem-solving, organizational structuring, integration of local and network control, and expectation-driven communication; Discussion of working systems including Contract Nets, Partial Global Planning, AGORA MACE, ABE, DPS, and MINDS. Tutorial III Knowledge Representation and Data Semantics Instructor: Prof. John Mylopoulos, University of Toronto, Canada Dr. John Mylopoulos is Professor of Computer Science at the University of Toronto and research fellow of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research. His research interests include knowledge representation and its applications to Databases and Software Engineering. Dr. Mylopoulos has edited three books on the general topic of AI and Databases. He received his Ph.D degree from Princeton University. Course Description: Knowledge Representation including history, basic paradigms such as semantic nets, logic-based representations, productions, frames, role of uncertainty, and inference mechanisms, examples such as KL-ONE and OMEGA; Semantic Data Models including historical models such as AbrialUs Binary Model, Entity/Relationship, RM/T and SDM, detailed study of ADAPLEX, TAXIS, and GALILEO, implementation techniques; Comparison of SDMs to Object-Oriented model such as POSTGRES and GEM as well as Deductive Databases. Tutorial IV Acquisition of Knowledge from Data Instructor: Prof. Gio Wiederhold, Stanford University, California Dr. Gio Wiederhold is Associate Professor of Medicine and Computer Science (Research) at Stanford University. His research involves knowledge-based approaches to medicine, design, and planning. He is the Editor-in-Chief of ACM's Transactions on Database Systems and associate editor of M.D. Computing and IEEE Expert magazine. Wiederhold has over 130 publications, including a widely used textbook on Database Design. In 1987, McGraw-Hill published his new book, File Organization for Database Design. Course Description: The architecture of an operational system, RX, is presented which uses knowledge-based techniques to extract new knowledge from a large clinical database. RX exploits both frame-based knowledge and rules, as well as a database. Frames are used to store deep and interconnected knowledge about disease states and medical actions. Definitional and causal knowledge is represented by inter-connections between frames that go across the hierarchies, sideways as well as up and down, so that the aggregate knowledge is represented by a network. Rules select the appropriate statistical methods used to reduce the volume of data into information. The database contains observations on rheumatic diseases, collected over a dozen years.