AAAI Conference and Symposium Proceedings
The AAAI Library contains a number of high-quality proceedings in the field of artificial intelligence. Included in the AAAI Member’s Library are proceedings of the AAAI National Conference on Artificial Intelligence, the Innovative Application of Artificial Intelligence Conference, the Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining Conference, the AI Planning Systems Conference, the Intelligent Systems for Molecular Biology conference, and the Florida Artificial Intelligence Research Society Conference, among others.
The AAAI Archives include proceedings that were previously published by AAAI but are not currently considered active AAAI publications.
AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence
The AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence — AAAI’s primary conference — promotes theoretical and applied AI research as well as intellectual interchange among researchers and practitioners. The technical program features substantial, original research and practices. Conference panel discussions and invited presentations identify significant social, philosophical, and economic issues influencing AI’s development throughout the world.
AAAI Conference on Human Computation and Crowdsourcing (HCOMP)
HCOMP is aimed at promoting the scientific exchange of advances in human computation and crowdsourcing among researchers, engineers, and practitioners across a spectrum of disciplines. The conference was created by researchers from diverse fields to serve as a key focal point and scholarly venue for the review and presentation of the highest quality work on principles, studies, and applications of human computation. The meeting seeks and embraces work on human computation and crowdsourcing in multiple fields, including human-centered qualitative studies and HCI design, social computing, artificial intelligence, economics, computational social science, digital humanities, policy, and ethics. The conference promotes the exchange of advances in human computation and crowdsourcing not only among researchers, but also engineers and practitioners, to encourage dialogue across disciplines and communities of practice.
AAAI/ACM Conference on AI, Ethics, and Society (AIES)
AIES is convened each year by program co-chairs from Computer Science, Law and Policy, the Social Sciences, Ethics and Philosophy. The goal is to encourage talented scholars in these and related fields to submit their best work related to morality, law, policy, psychology, the other social sciences, and AI.
Artificial Intelligence and Interactive Digital Entertainment Conference (AIIDE)
Sponsored by the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence, AIIDE is part of an annual series of conferences showcasing interdisciplinary research on modeling, developing, and evaluating intelligent systems in entertainment.
Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence (IAAI)
Sponsored by the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence
The Annual Conference on Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence offers case studies of deployed applications with measurable benefits whose value depends on the use of AI technology. In addition, many conferences supplement these case studies with papers and invited talks that address emerging areas of AI technology or applications. IAAI was an independent conference during its early years. Recently, it has been organized as an independent program within the National Conference, with schedules coordinated to allow attendees to move freely between IAAI and National Conference sessions. Most years IAAI and the National Conference papers are published in a joint proceedings.
International Conference on Automated Planning and Scheduling Systems (ICAPS)
The ICAPS conference series is the premier forum for exchanging news and research results on theory and applications of intelligent and automated planning and scheduling technology
International Conference on Web and Social Media (ICWSM)
The International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media (ICWSM) has become one of the premier venues for computational social science, and previous years of ICWSM have featured papers, posters, and demos that draw upon network science, machine learning, computational linguistics, sociology, communication, and political science. The uniqueness of the venue and the quality of submissions have contributed to a rapidly growing conference, and a competitive acceptance rate of approximately 20% for full-length research papers published in the proceedings by the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI). Submitted papers covered a wide range of topics, including, but not limited to, studies of digital humanities (culture, history, arts) using social media; social innovation and effecting change through social media; and measuring predictability of real-world phenomena based on social media.
AAAI Symposium Series (Spring)
AAAI Symposium Series (Summer)
The AAAI Summer Symposium Series is the newest in the annual set of meetings run in parallel at a common site.
| 2023 |
AAAI Symposium Series (Fall)
AAAI Symposium on Educational Advances in Artificial Intelligence (EAAI)
Symposium on Combinatorial Search (SoCS)
Heuristic search and other forms of combinatorial search optimization are very active areas of research in artificial intelligence, robotics, planning, and other areas of computer science. The International Symposium on Combinatorial Search (SoCS) is meant to bring researchers in such areas together to exchange ideas and crossfertilize the field. SoCS is a forum for researchers and submissions in all fields that use combinatorial search, including artificial intelligence, planning, robotics, constraint programming, metareasoning, operations research, navigation, and bioinformatics. The symposium also welcomes submissions presenting real-world applications of heuristic search.
Submit an Erratum or Errata
How to submit an erratum or errata to a previously published paper in the AAAI digital Library. The current version was updated in November 2022.
AAAI Archives
The AAAI Archives include proceedings that were produced by AAAI in the past but are not currently considered active AAAI publications.
Advanced Planning Technology (ARPI)
The Advanced Planning Technology: Technological Achievements of the ARPA/Rome Laboratory Planning Initiative presents the range of technological results that have been achieved with the ARPA/Rome Laboratory Planning Initiative.
| 1996 |
Artificial Intelligence and Manufacturing (SIGMAN)
The aim of the AI and Manufacturing workshops is to bring together experts and practitioners in both artificial intelligence and manufacturing, and bridge the gaps between problem and solution perspectives. The specific focus of the workshops is to build greater mutual understanding of important research challenges and technological potential in this field, break down the cultural barriers that currently exist between these two disciplines, and foster future interaction and collaboration with these two communities toward the realization of intelligent manufacturing systems.
Artificial Intelligence and Molecular Biology (ISMB)
The ISMB conference series provided a general forum for disseminating the latest developments in bioinformatics. ISMB was a multidisciplinary conference that brought together scientists from computer science, mathematics, molecular biology and statistics. Its scope included the development and application of advanced computational methods for biological problems.
Artificial Intelligence Planning Systems (AIPS)
The International Conference on AI Planning and Scheduling evolved into the premier forum for researchers and practitioners in planning and scheduling. During the span of these conferences, artificial intelligence planning and scheduling emerged as technologies critical to production management, space systems, the Internet, and military applications. The conference was held every two years. It has now been superceded by the ICAPS conference.
Bar-Ilan Symposium on Foundations of Artificial Intelligence
Bar-Ilan Symposium focuses on the philosophical and computational aspects of natural languages and artificial intelligence.
| 1995 |
Florida AI Research Society (FLAIRS)
FLAIRS was founded in 1987 to promote and advance artificial intelligence research within the state of Florida, fostering interaction between researchers at colleges, universities, and industry. Since 1990, FLAIRS conferences have been broadened to include participants and papers from across North America and the world.
ISSN 2334-0762 (online) | ISSN 2334-0754 (print)
Human-Computer Interaction in Aeronautics Conference (HCI)
The HCI-Aero conferences on HCI applications in aerospace originated in Toulouse, France. They have been held biannually since 1986, and has alternated between Europe and North American since 1998. The 2002 conference, held in Cambridge, Massachusetts, was hosted by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Volpe National Transportation Systems Center. The conference was held in cooperation with ACM’s Special Interest Group on Computer-Human Interaction (ACM SIGCHI).
| 2002 |
International Conference on Computational Cultural Dynamics Conference (ICCCD)
Computer technology is leading to sweeping changes in how we can reason about groups in diverse cultures. These developments are inherently cross-disciplinary. They blend the behavioral and social sciences—fields such as political science, psychology, journalism, anthropology, and sociology—with technological fields such as computer science, computational linguistics, game theory, and operations research. There is a need to bring these cultures together to help forge a common understanding of principles, techniques, and application areas. That is the purpose of this conference.
International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML)
The International Conference on Machine Learning brought together researchers to exchange ideas and report progress in the computational study of learning.
| 2003 |
International Conference on Multiagent Systems (ICMAS)
The Conference on Multi-Agent Systems is a joint effort of the North American distributed artificial intelligence (DAI) community, the Japanese multi-agent and cooperative computing (MACC) community, and the European modeling autonomous agents in a multi-agent world (MAAMAW) community. This conference was initiated as a result of the growing recognition of the importance of multi-agent systems and architectures to fundamental issues in computer science and to the development of commercial network applications.
Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining (KDD)
Sponsored by the American Association for Artificial Intelligence
Advances in data gathering, storage, and distribution technologies have far outpaced our advances in techniques for helping humans analyze, understand, and digest this information. This has led to an all-too-common data glut situation creating a strong need and a valuable opportunity for extracting knowledge from databases. Both researchers and application developers have been responding to that need. Knowledge discovery in databases (KDD) and data mining are areas of common interest to researchers in machine learning, pattern recognition, statistics, intelligent databases, knowledge acquisition, data visualization, high performance computing, and expert systems. KDD applications have been developed for astronomy, biology, finance, insurance, marketing, medicine, and many other fields. The papers in these proceedings focus on such problems.
Midwest AI and Cognitive Science Society (MAICS)
The MAICS conference is a relatively small regional conference that traditionally accepts papers from all areas of artificial intelligence and cognitive science, including computational linguistics, logic and automated reasoning, knowledge representation, learning, and philosophy of mind. Graduate students and junior faculty are especially encouraged to submit papers. The broad range of possible topics together with the fact that usually only about 20 to 30 submitted papers are accepted, which are mixed with presentations by well-known scientists, make the MAICS conference a very special event that has served as a first time presentation opportunity for many graduate students and has even attracted international participants.
Multistrategy Learning (MSL)
The theme of the conference—multistrategy learning—concerns theoretical and empirical issues in the development of learning systems that employ multiple inferential and/or computational strategies.
| 1996 |