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Calmet, Jacques / Belaid Benhamou et al (Hrsg.). Artificial Intelligence, Automated Reasoning, and Symbolic Computation - Joint International Conferences, AISC 2002 and Calculemus 2002 Marseille, France, July 1-5, 2002 Proceedings. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2002.
eng

Artificial Intelligence, Automated Reasoning, and Symbolic Computation

Joint International Conferences, AISC 2002 and Calculemus 2002 Marseille, France, July 1-5, 2002 Proceedings
  • Springer Berlin Heidelberg
  • 2002
  • Taschenbuch
  • 364 Seiten
  • ISBN 9783540438656
Herausgeber: Jacques Calmet / Belaid Benhamou / Volker Sorge / Laurent Henocque / Olga Caprotti

AISC 2002, the 6th international conference on Arti?cial Intelligence and S- bolic Computation, and Calculemus 2002, the 10th symposium on the Integ- tion of Symbolic Computation and Mechanized Reasoning, were held jointly in Marseille, France on July 1¿5, 2002. This event was organized by the three universities in Marseille together with the LSIS (Laboratoire des Sciences de l¿Information et des Syst` emes). AISC 2002 was the latest in a series of specialized conferences founded by John Campbell and Jacques Calmet with the initial title ¿Arti?cial Intelligence and Symbolic Mathematical Computation¿ (AISMC) and later denoted ¿Art- cial Intelligence and Symbolic Computation¿ (AISC). The scope is well de?ned

Mehr Weniger
by its successive titles. AISMC-1 (1992), AISMC-2 (1994), AISMC-3 (1996), AISC¿98, and AISC 2000 took place in Karlsruhe, Cambridge, Steyr, Plattsburgh (NY), and Madrid respectively. The proceedings were published by Springer-Verlag as LNCS 737, LNCS 958, LNCS 1138, LNAI 1476, and LNAI 1930 respectively. Calculemus 2002 was the 10th symposium in a series which started with three meetings in 1996, two meetings in 1997, and then turned into a yearly event in 1998. Since then, it has become a tradition to hold the meeting jointly with an event in either symbolic computation or automated deduction. Both events share common interests in looking at Symbolic Computation, each from a di?erent point of view: Arti?cial Intelligence in the more general case of AISC and Automated Deduction in the more speci?c case of Calculemus.

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