Adventures in Argumentation

 

 
 

An ECSQARU'2001 Workshop
Toulouse, September 2001
 


Technical program

Aim of the Workshop

There is now a substantial literature on argumentation in artificial intelligence. Many interesting proposals have been made, and there is increasing interest in applying argumentation in various domains.

However, there are also many problems surrounding proposals for argumentation, both at the theoretical level and at the applications level. Problems include computational complexity, viable implementations, semantics for arguments, richer ontologies for describing different kinds of argument, incorporation of domain or world knowledge in argumentation systems, handling time in argumentation, handling uncertainty in argumentation, presentation of arguments to non-technical users, finding applications where users can use the results of argumentation, the need for toolkits, and so on. We need to better understand these problems, and many others besides, and some of them seem to call for bold new proposals.

This workshop is intended to be a small informal workshop for researchers in the area of argumentation to present ongoing research and ideas. Furthermore, we would like to encourage papers that are speculative or even provocative positions, with a view to having a lively and interesting workshop.
 
 

Organizing Committee

Leila Amgoud (Universite d'Angers, France), Laurence Cholvy (ONERA, Toulouse, France), Anthony Hunter (University College London, UK) Jerome Mengin (IRIT, Toulouse, France), Simon Parsons (University of Liverpool, UK), Claire Saurel (ONERA, Toulouse, France), Guillermo Simari (Universidad Nacional del Sur, Bahia Blanca, Argentina).
 
 

Date and Location

A one-day workshop to be held just before or during the ECSQARU'01 Conference in Toulouse. Further details will be posted shortly.
 
 

Call for Papers

If you'd like to also give a paper, then please get in touch with Simon Parsons or Tony Hunter.
 
 

Workshop administration

Contact Simon Parsons (s.d.parsons@dcs.liv.ac.uk) or Tony Hunter (a.hunter@cs.ucl.ac.uk).