These pages provide information about recent developments at or relevant to the ILLC. Please let us know if you have material that you would like to be added to the news pages, by using the online submission form. For minor updates to existing entries you can also email the news administrators directly. English submissions strongly preferred.
The calender view is not available on the mobile version of the website. You can view this information as a list.
You can also view this information as a list or iCalendar-feed, or import the embedded hCalendar metadata into your calendar-app.
| << April 2002 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sunday | Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | Saturday |
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
|
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
11
|
12
|
13
|
|
14
|
15
|
16
|
17
|
18
|
19
|
20
|
|
21
|
22
|
23
|
24
|
25
|
26
|
27
|
|
28
|
29
|
30
|
||||
23-25 September 2002, 6th International Colloquium on Grammatical Inference, Amsterdam
ICGI-2002 is the sixth in a series of successful biennial international conferences on the area of grammatical inference. Grammatical inference has been extensively addressed by researchers in information theory, automata theory, language acquisition, computational linguistics, machine learning, pattern recognition, computational learning theory and neural networks. This colloquium aims at bringing together researchers in these fields. Previous editions of this meeting were held in Essex, U.K.; Alicante, Spain; Montpellier, France; Ames, Iowa, USA; and Lisbon, Portugal.
Deadlines:
Submission of manuscripts: April 19, 2002
Notification of acceptance: May 27th, 2002
Final version of manuscript: June 28th, 2002
For more information, see https://www.illc.uva.nl/ICGI-2002/
25 July 2002, HyLo@LICS: 4th Workshop on Hybrid Logics, Copenhagen, Denmark
Hybrid logic is a branch of modal logic in which it is possible to directly refer to worlds/times/states or whatever the elements of the (Kripke) model are meant to represent. Although they date back to the late 1960s, and have been sporadically investigated ever since, it is only in the 1990s that work on them really got into its stride.
HyLo@LICS is likely to be relevant to a wide range of people, including those interested in description logic, feature logic, applied modal logics, temporal logic, and labelled deduction. In this workshop we hope to bring together researchers from all the different fields just mentioned (and hopefully some others) in an attempt to explore what they all have (and do not have) in common.
The full text of this announcement can be found at here, or on the Hybrid Logics homepage at http://staff.science.uva.nl/~carlos/hybrid/.
We invite the contribution of research papers to the workshop. Please send electronically an extended abstract of up to 10 A4 size pages, in PostScript format to: carlos at science.uva.nl, before the 26st of April, 2002.