Innovations in Applied Artificial Intelligence: 18th International Conference on Industrial and Engineering Applications of Artificial Intelligence and Expert Systems, IEA/AIE 2005, Bari, Italy, June 22-24, 2005, ProceedingsFloriana Esposito “Intelligent systems are those which produce intelligent o?springs.” AI researchers have been focusing on developing and employing strong methods that are capable of solving complex real-life problems. The 18th International Conference on Industrial & Engineering Applications of Arti?cial Intelligence & Expert Systems (IEA/AIE 2005) held in Bari, Italy presented such work performed by many scientists worldwide. The Program Committee selected long papers from contributions presenting more complete work and posters from those reporting ongoing research. The Committee enforced the rule that only original and unpublished work could be considered for inclusion in these proceedings. The Program Committee selected 116 contributions from the 271 subm- ted papers which cover the following topics: arti?cial systems, search engines, intelligent interfaces, knowledge discovery, knowledge-based technologies, na- ral language processing, machine learning applications, reasoning technologies, uncertainty management, applied data mining, and technologies for knowledge management. The contributions oriented to the technological aspects of AI and the quality of the papers are witness to a research activity clearly aimed at consolidating the theoretical results that have already been achieved. The c- ference program also included two invited lectures, by Katharina Morik and Roberto Pieraccini. Manypeoplecontributedindi?erentwaystothesuccessoftheconferenceand to this volume. The authors who continue to show their enthusiastic interest in applied intelligence research are a very important part of our success. We highly appreciate the contribution of the members of the Program Committee, as well as others who reviewed all the submitted papers with e?ciency and dedication. |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 82
Page 10
... technology to attain reasonable accuracy, the interface can be engineered in such a way as to provide an excellent user experience, certainly superior to that offered by conventional touch-tone Interactive Voice Response (IVR). Simple ...
... technology to attain reasonable accuracy, the interface can be engineered in such a way as to provide an excellent user experience, certainly superior to that offered by conventional touch-tone Interactive Voice Response (IVR). Simple ...
Page 11
... technology developed at large research centers, like IBM and AT&T Labs, prompted the industry to move cautiously from the directed-dialog paradigm towards more sophisticated interactions. IBM successfully deployed the first commercial ...
... technology developed at large research centers, like IBM and AT&T Labs, prompted the industry to move cautiously from the directed-dialog paradigm towards more sophisticated interactions. IBM successfully deployed the first commercial ...
Page 12
... technology will reach a reasonable level of market penetration, possibly during the next few years, conversational ... technologies. Products and services offered to consumers have become more and more complex during the past few decades ...
... technology will reach a reasonable level of market penetration, possibly during the next few years, conversational ... technologies. Products and services offered to consumers have become more and more complex during the past few decades ...
Page 13
... technology was not ready, or with poorly engineered highly ambitious systems. That created the perception in the marketplace that speech recognition technology is not ready, it is costly to deploy and maintain, and it's difficult to ...
... technology was not ready, or with poorly engineered highly ambitious systems. That created the perception in the marketplace that speech recognition technology is not ready, it is costly to deploy and maintain, and it's difficult to ...
Page 14
... technology. What enabled the change from technology to user centered design was the realization that users do not necessarily need a full replication of human–like speech and language skills; good user experience is instrumental to ...
... technology. What enabled the change from technology to user centered design was the realization that users do not necessarily need a full replication of human–like speech and language skills; good user experience is instrumental to ...
Contents
1 | |
16 | |
19 | |
36 | |
Face Recognition by Kernel Independent Component Analysis | 55 |
Intelligent Vocal Cord Image Analysis for Categorizing Laryngeal | 69 |
Robust Character Segmentation System for Korean Printed Postal | 82 |
FeatureTableBased Automatic Question Generation for TreeBased | 95 |
Endoscopy Images Classification with Kernel Based Learning | 400 |
Minimum Spanning Trees in Hierarchical Multiclass Support Vector | 422 |
Intelligent Bayesian Classifiers in Network Intrusion Detection | 445 |
An Application in Public Health Care | 459 |
A DomainIndependent Approach to DiscourseLevel Knowledge | 470 |
A Meteorological Conceptual Modeling Approach Based on Spatial | 490 |
Mining Information Extraction Rules from Datasheets Without | 510 |
Genetic Algorithms | 524 |
DistanceBased Dynamic Interaction of Humanoid Robot with Multiple | 111 |
Robot Competition Using Gesture Based Interface | 131 |
Feasibility of Multiagent Simulation for the Trust and Tracing Game | 145 |
Reliable Multiagent Systems with Persistent PublishSubscribe | 165 |
Automated Teleoperation of WebBased Devices Using Semantic | 185 |
Plan Execution in Dynamic Environments | 208 |
Structural Advantages for Ant Colony Optimisation Inherent | 218 |
New Upper Bounds for the Permutation Flowshop Scheduling Problem | 232 |
Automatic Word Spacing in Korean for Small Memory Devices | 249 |
Haptic Fruition of 3D Virtual Scene by Blind People | 269 |
Towards Effective Adaptive Information Filtering Using Natural | 290 |
Discovering Learning Paths on a Domain Ontology Using Natural | 310 |
A Geometric Approach to Automatic Description of Iconic Scenes | 315 |
Reasoning | 321 |
Inferring DefiniteClause Grammars to Express Multivariate Time Series | 332 |
Obtaining a Bayesian Map for Data Fusion and Failure Detection | 342 |
Event Handling Mechanism for Retrieving Spatiotemporal Changes | 353 |
Freeway Traffic Qualitative Simulation | 360 |
PredictionBased Diagnosis and Loss Prevention Using ModelBased | 367 |
Classification of Ophthalmologic Images Using an Ensemble of Classifiers | 380 |
Application of a Genetic Algorithm to Nearest Neighbour Classification | 544 |
Hardware Architecture for Genetic Algorithms | 554 |
Predicting Construction Litigation Outcome Using Particle Swarm | 571 |
A SOM Based Approach for Visualization of GSM Network Performance | 588 |
Canonical Decision Model Construction by Extracting the Mapping | 609 |
Decision Support and Heuristic Search | 619 |
A SwarmBased | 638 |
Search on Transportation Network for LocationBased Service | 657 |
A New Crowded Comparison Operator in Constrained Multiobjective | 678 |
PoseInvariant Face Detection Using EdgeLike Blob Map and Fuzzy | 695 |
A Fuzzy LogicBased Approach for Detecting Shifting Patterns | 705 |
OWL Ontology Merging and Alignment Tool for the Semantic | 722 |
Complementing Search Engines with Text Mining | 743 |
Building Intelligent | 762 |
A Case Study | 783 |
A Nurse Scheduling System Based on Dynamic Constraint Satisfaction | 799 |
CaseBased Reasoning for Financial Prediction | 839 |
A Support Method for Qualitative SimulationBased Learning System | 851 |
Other editions - View all
Innovations in Applied Artificial Intelligence: 18th International ... Floriana Esposito Limited preview - 2005 |
Innovations in Applied Artificial Intelligence: 18th International ... Floriana Esposito No preview available - 2005 |
Common terms and phrases
Abstract active contours agent analysis application approach architecture Artificial Intelligence association rules automatically behavior Berlin Heidelberg 2005 blank nodes classifier cognitive components Computer concept constraints context data mining database dataset decision defined described detection distribution domain dynamic Engineering environment Esposito Eds evaluation example experiments extraction function fuzzy genetic algorithm goal graph haptic IEA/AIE IEEE implementation input interaction interface knowledge Machine Learning mereology method model checking module multi-agent systems neural networks neurons nodes objects obtained ontology operators optimal output paper parameters patterns performance pheromone pixel problem Proc proposed query recognition region representation represented reviewers robot scheduling Section selected semantic Semantic Web sensor sequences simulation solution spatial specific speech recognition Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg structure Support Vector Machines techniques Technology tion tracking traffic variables vector