Last call for papers KR 2016: 15th International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning

                                CALL FOR PAPERS 

                                *** KR 2016 ***

                       15th International Conference on 
             Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning

                           Cape Town, South Africa
                               25-29 April 2016
                                              
                            http://kr.org/KR2016/ 

Co-located with DL 2016 (http://www.dl.kr.org) and NMR 2016 (http://www.kr.org/NMR/)


KR 2016 IMPORTANT DATES 
----------------------- 
 *  Submission of title and abstract: 21 November 2015
 *  Paper submission deadline: 28 November 2015
 *  Notification of acceptance: 21 January 2016
 *  Camera-ready papers due: 19 February 2016
 *  Conference: 25-29 April 2016
------------------------ 

Knowledge Representation and Reasoning (KRR) is an exciting, well-established 
field of research. In KRR a fundamental assumption is that an agent's 
knowledge is explicitly represented in a declarative form, suitable for 
processing by dedicated reasoning engines. This assumption, that much of
what an agent deals with is knowledge-based, is common in many modern 
intelligent systems. Consequently, KRR has contributed to the theory and 
practice of various areas in AI, such as automated planning and natural 
language understanding, among others, as well as to fields beyond AI, 
including databases, software engineering, the semantic web, computational 
biology, and the development of software agents.

The KR conference series is the leading forum for timely in-depth presentation 
of progress in the theory and principles underlying the representation and 
computational management of knowledge.  We solicit papers presenting novel
results on the principles of KRR that clearly contribute to the formal 
foundations of relevant problems or show the applicability of results to 
implemented or implementable systems.

We welcome papers from other areas that show clear use of, or contributions 
to, the principles or practice of KRR.  We also encourage "reports from the 
field" of applications, experiments, developments, and tests. Such papers 
should be explicitly identified as reports from the field by the authors, to 
ensure appropriate reviewing, and must include a section on evaluation.


TOPICS 
------ 
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to: 
 *  Argumentation 
 *  Belief change: revision and update, belief merging, etc. 
 *  Commonsense reasoning 
 *  Contextual reasoning 
 *  Description logics 
 *  Diagnosis, abduction, explanation 
 *  Inconsistency- and exception- tolerant reasoning, paraconsistent logics 
 *  KR and autonomous agents: multi-agent systems, cognitive robotics, agent models 
 *  KR and data management, data analytics 
 *  KR and decision making, game theory, social choice 
 *  KR and machine learning, inductive logic programming, knowledge discovery and acquisition 
 *  KR and natural language processing 
 *  KR and the Web, Semantic Web 
 *  Logic programming, answer set programming, constraint logic programming 
 *  Nonmonotonic logics, default logics, conditional logics 
 *  Ontology formalisms and models 
 *  Philosophical foundations of KR 
 *  Preferences: modeling and representation, preference-based reasoning 
 *  Reasoning about action and change: action languages, situation calculus, causality 
 *  Reasoning about knowledge and belief, dynamic epistemic logic, epistemic and doxastic logics 
 *  Reasoning systems and solvers, knowledge compilation 
 *  Spatial reasoning and temporal reasoning, qualitative reasoning 
 *  Uncertainty, representations of vagueness, many-valued and fuzzy logics 

SUBMISSION INFORMATION 
----------------------
Submissions must be original, and should not have been previously published, 
accepted for publication, or currently be under review. Authors may not submit 
their paper elsewhere during the KR 2016 reviewing period. These considerations 
apply only to journals and conferences, and not to workshops and forums with a 
limited audience and without archival proceedings. In case of doubt, please 
contact the Program Chairs.

Papers must be submitted in AAAI style and PDF format. The maximum length of a 
submission is 9 pages including abstract, figures, and appendices (if any) but 
excluding references. Reviewing will be non-blind.

AAAI author instructions: 
http://www.aaai.org/Publications/Author/author.php

AAAI author kit: 
http://www.aaai.org/Publications/Templates/AuthorKit.zip

Please submit to:
http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=kr2016

The conference proceedings will be published by AAAI Press. 

For complete details, see the 'Submission information' page at http://www.kr.org/KR2016 

PRIZES
------
The best paper of the conference will receive the 2016 Ray Reiter Best Paper
Prize, and the best student paper, whose main author is a student, will
receive the 2016 Marco Cadoli Student Paper Prize. In addition, a few selected
papers from KR 2016 will have the opportunity for fast-track publication in
the AI Journal, and the best 1-2 papers in the area of logic programming or
answer set programming will have the opportunity for fast-track publication
in TPLP.

CONFERENCE CHAIRS 
----------------- 
 *  General: Chitta Baral (Arizona State University, USA) 
 *  Program: James Delgrande (Simon Fraser University, Canada), Frank Wolter (University of Liverpool, UK) 
 *  Local Organization: Thomas Meyer (University of Cape Town and CAIR, South Africa) 
 *  Doctoral Consortium: Meghyn Bienvenu (CNRS, France), Joohyung Lee (Arizona State University, USA) 
 *  Sponsorship and Publicity: Ivan Varzinczak (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) 

--
Ivan José Varzinczak
Department of Computer Science - Institute of Mathematics
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Homepage: http://member.acm.org/~ijv

Received on Monday, 16 November 2015 16:56:54 UTC