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This book constitutes the proceedings of the 19th Annual German
Conference on Artificial Intelligence, KI-95, held in Bielefeld in
September 1995.
The volume opens with full versions of four invited papers devoted
to the topic "From Intelligence Models to Intelligent Systems." The
main part of the book consists of 17 refereed full papers carefully
relected by the program committee; these papers are organized in
sections on knowledge organization and optimization, logic and
reasoning, nonmonotonicity, action and change, and spatial
reasoning.
The IBM project LILOG presented in this volume represents a
fundamental stepbeyond computer science as hitherto understood. It
was a successful project in every respect and has shed light on
conjectured basic interrelations between knowledge processing and
language definition. Knowledge processing is strongly coupled to
the natural language used, and for applied knowledge processing an
information base is neededwhich defines the semantic contents and
interrelations of the language. The LILOG project was an
implementation of an information basein the German language. A set
of tools was also developed to work with the system, including
structured man-machine interfaces using natural language, inference
algorithms, and a complete subsystem to acquire and store the
required knowledge. The LILOG project started in 1985 and a
functional system was demonstrated in 1991. The project involved
approximately 200 of the scientists working in Germany in the
fields of computational linguistics, natural language understanding
systems, and artificial intelligence. The project proves that a
cooperative project between universities and industry can produce
useful results both in pure research and in implemented methods and
tools.
The aim of this book is to reflect the substantial re- search done
in Artificial Intelligence on sorts and types. The main
contributions come from knowledge representation and theorem
proving and important impulses come from the "application areas,"
i.e. natural language (understanding) systems, computational
linguistics, and logic programming. The workshop brought together
researchers from logic, theoretical computer science, theorem
proving, knowledge representation, linguistics, logic programming
and qualitative reasoning.
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