APOLOGIES FOR CROSS-POSTING.
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CALL FOR PAPER
FROM REACTIVE TO ANTICIPATORY COGNITIVE EMBODIED SYSTEMS
AAAI 2005 Fall Symposium
November 3-6, 2005, Hyatt Crystal City in Arlington, Virginia
http://www.mindraces.org/events/fss05/
Submission deadline: May 2, 2005
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In order to deal with novel and dynamic environments, cognitive systems need
sophisticated capabilities based on many kinds of anticipation.
Expectations and prediction-based control mechanisms underlie effective
routinized
behavior. Every step we take relies on the expectation that the floor will not
give way
beneath us; the pervasiveness of such expectations is highlighted by the
surprise we
experience when we suddenly lose our footing and by our ability to control and
adjust it
by using a prediction-control loop. Moreover, the ability of building higher
order
expectations about future events has been a major evolutionary and cognitive
breakthrough for humans. Our representations are detached from the present here
and
now, and we can conceive forthcoming events - and even situations that will
never be real.
We are able to reason not only about what we experience, but about expected,
desired and
feared futures - our behavior can thus be really "driven by the future".
The aim of this symposium is to bring together scientists from several fields
from AI and
Robotics to Cognitive Science and Neuroscience interested in these topics to
present,
discuss and make further progresses toward the understanding of anticipatory
cognitive
systems situated in a real dynamic environment.
Some significant questions to be addressed are:
- Which is the specific role of anticipatory mechanisms with respect to reactive
ones, both
in an evolutionary and architectural perspective? Which are the evolutionary
stages leading
from reactive to anticipatory systems, and from simpler to more complex
anticipatory
mechanisms?
- How do we exploit anticipatory capabilities for shifting attention, for
selecting the
appropriate features to perceive the environment and interacting with it, for
selecting and
regulating our behavior on the basis of representations of the future,
expectations and
goals?
- Which is the relation between anticipatory processes and symbol formation?
- How emotions and bodily responses are related to anticipatory representations?
How are
anticipatory emotions such as fear and hope built and exploited?
- How do different anticipatory mechanisms integrate and interact? Which kinds
of
representations they exploit? Which are their powers and limitations?
SUBMISSIONS
People interested in giving a presentation are encouraged to submit a technical
paper
(from 2000 to 6000 words, in PDF). Other participants should submit either a
position
paper, a statement of interest or an illustration of work in progress they like
to discuss.
Submission should be sent to <mailto:
fss05@...>
fss05@...
By targeting predefined questions and commenting challenging scenarios, the
discussion
will aim to the envisioning of complex architectures that integrate several
anticipatory
mechanisms across different cognitive levels.
Instructions for authors can be found at the AAAI web-site
http://aaai.org/Symposia/Fall/
fall-symposia.html
DEADLINES
May 2, 2005: Submission deadline
May 23, 2005: Notifications of acceptance/rejection
November 3-6, 2005: Symposium
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
Christian Balkenius, Lund University, Sweden
Martin V. Butz, University of Würzburg, Germany
Cristiano Castelfranchi (Chair), Institute of Cognitive Science and Technology
of the CNR,
Italy
Andrew Ortony, Northwestern University, Usa
Deb Roy, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Usa