cfp: AI in Space
lunes, 25 de mayo de 2009
AI in Space
Submissions due for review: 19 February 2010.
Submissions due for review: 19 February 2010.
IEEE Intelligent Systems seeks original papers describing research on the special topic "AI in Space". This topic has been the focus of special issues, but the present call is interested in a glimpse of the future from our standpoint in 2010, and hence the theme AI Space Odyssey.
In anticipation of long duration space exploration missions to the Moon and Mars, likely by many nations, we are looking for papers describing how AI has made missions possible and will help make missions a success. Whereas in the 1980s and 1990s, researchers saw AI as a panacea for intelligent autonomous systems, the AI technology used today in space applications is often regarded differently. The editors of this special issue solicit papers that describe new and
novel use of AI technology for space applications.
Papers may cover a variety of topics, listed here in no particular order:
- · semantics, ontologies, and knowledge representation,
- · pattern recognition and scientific discovery,
- · Intelligent System-Health Management (ISHM),
- · teleoperation and telerobotics,
- · planning, scheduling, constraint-satisfaction,
- · adjustable autonomy,
- · agent-based and multi-agent systems,
- · machine learning,
- · procedure-execution monitoring and aiding,
- · natural language processing and dialogue systems,
- · decision-support, and
- · history of AI applications in astronautics and space exploration.
AI-driven simulations, virtual reality, virtual worlds and games for engineering, operations, management, training, and so on, software engineering, development, and verification and validation approaches for high-reliability autonomy, innovative approaches to security issues in autonomous software systems, software life-cycle issues with respect to very long-duration (10+ year) missions, decision and workflow support systems for planetary exploration and
extra-vehicular activities, AI-driven robotics and approaches for human-robot teamwork, Smart sensor systems for situational awareness, and ubiquitous computing environments.
Submission Guidelines
Papers should situate the work within the field of AI, cite related work, and indicate the innovative aspects of the work and its direct contribution to the special challenges of space missions. We will not accept any paper which, at the time of submission, is under review for
or has already been published or accepted for publication in a journal or another conference. All papers will undergo peer and editorial review. Submissions should present original reports of substantive new work and should be 3,500 to 7,500 words (counting a standard figure or
table as 200 words) and should follow the magazine’s style and presentation guidelines (see www.computer.org/portal/pages/
Questions?
Contact Guest Editors Mike Shaft, mike.shafto@nasa.gov; Maarten Sierhuis, maarten.sierhuis@nasa.gov; and Robert Hoffman, rhoffman@ihmc.us
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