[news.announce.conferences] CFP JAPAN KNOWLEDGE ACQUISITION WORKSHOP 1990

john@bcsaic (John Boose) (07/11/89)

		    Call for Participation:

  1ST JAPANESE KNOWLEDGE ACQUISITION FOR KNOWLEDGE-BASED SYSTEMS
			    WORKSHOP

		    Co-Sponsored by
	  Advanced Research Laboratory, Hitachi, Ltd.
	  Kansai Institute of Information System

		    In Cooperation with
	  Information Processing Society of Japan
	  Japanese Society for Artificial Intelligence
	  Japan Society for Software Science and Technology
	  The Institute of Electronics, Information and Communication
	  Engineers


	  Kyoto International Conference Hall (Kyoto)
		      October 25 - 26, 1990

	  Advanced Research Laboratory, Hitachi Ltd. (Tokyo)
		      October 29 - 31, 1990

A problem in the process of building knowledge-based systems is
acquiring and modeling appropriate problem-solving knowledge.  The
objective of this workshop is to assemble theoreticians and
practitioners of AI who recognize the need for developing methods and
systems that assist the knowledge acquisition process.

The workshop will be in two parts: a two-day open meeting in Kyoto and
three-day closed workshop in Tokyo.  To encourage vigorous interaction
and exchange of ideas the closed workshop will be kept small - about
40 participants, one author for each paper accepted.  Some papers will
be presented at the open meeting and the remainder in the closed
workshop. There will be Tutorial and invited talk sessions in the open
workshop.

Papers are invited for consideration in all aspects of knowledge
acquisition for knowledge-based systems, including (but not restricted
to):

o Transfer/modeling of expertise - systems that obtain and model
  knowledge from experts.
o Transfer/modeling of expertise - manual knowledge acquisition
  methods and techniques.
o Apprenticeship, explanation-based, and other learning systems;
  integration of such systems with other knowledge acquisition
  techniques.
o Methods for capturing design knowledge and requirements.
o Issues in cognition and expertise that affect the knowledge
  acquisition process.
o Extracting and modeling of knowledge from text.
o Eliciting and modeling knowledge from multiple sources.
o Integration of knowledge acquisition techniques within a single
  system; integration of knowledge acquisition systems with other
  systems (hypermedia, database management systems, simulators,
  spreadsheets...).
o Knowledge acquisition methodology and training.
o Validation of knowledge acquisition techniques; the role of
  knowledge acquisition techniques in validating knowledge-based
  systems.

Five copies of a draft paper (up to 20 pages) should be sent to
Hiroshi Motoda before February 28th, 1990. Acceptance notices will be
mailed by May 30th. Camera-ready copies should be returned before
August 15th. A preprint volume will be distributed at the workshop.

Workshop Co-chairmen:

John Boose			   Brian Gaines
Advanced Technology Center	   Department of Computer Science
Boeing Computer Services	   University of Calgary
john@boeing.com			   gaines@calgary.cdn

Hiroshi Motoda			   Riichiro Mizoguchi
Advanced Research Laboratory	   Institute of Scientific and
Hitachi, Ltd.			   Industrial Research
Kokubunji, Tokyo 185, Japan	   Osaka University
motoda%harl.hitachi.junet	   miz%sanken.osaka-u.junet@relay.cs.net
      @uunet.uu.net


Program Committee

Tom Addis, University of Reading, UK
Guy Boy, Centre d'Etudes et de Recherches de Toulouse, France
Jeffrey Bradshaw, Boeing Computer Services
B. Chandrasekaran, Ohio State University
William Clancey, Institute for Research on Learning
Jean-Gabriel Ganascia, University Pierre et Marie Curie, France
Thomas Gruber, Stanford University
Koichi Hori, University of Tokyo
Nancy Johnson, Brunel University, UK
Georg Klinker, Digital Equipment Corp.
Shigenobu Kobayashi, Tokyo Institute of Technology
Yves Kodratoff, Universite Paris-Sud, France
Marc Linster, GMD. Bonn, Germany
John McDermott, Digital Equipment Corporation
Ryszard Michalski, George Mason University
Katharina Morik, TU Berlin, Germany
Toyoaki Nishida, Kyoto University
Mark Musen, Stanford University
Bruce Porter, University of Texas at Austin
Ross Quinlan, New South Wales Institute of Technology, Australia
Alain Rappaport, Neuron Data, USA
Mildred Shaw, University of Calgary
Hirokazu Taki, Institute for New Generation Computer Technology
Masanobu Watanabe, NEC Corporation
Bob Wielinga, University of Amsterdam, Holland