IEEE Conference on Computational Intelligence and Games
Call for competition papers, vision papers and poster papers
Deadline: May 15
Conference website:
http://eldar.mathstat.uoguelph.ca/dashlock/cig2013/
Submission website:
https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=cig2013
The IEEE Conference on Computational Intelligence and Games (CIG) is
the premier conference for research on computational and artificial
intelligence as applied to games. The regular paper submission
deadline for CIG 2013 has now passed, and reviewing is underway.
However, it is still possible to submit papers to CIG 2013 in one of
our three auxiliary tracks: competition papers, vision papers and
poster papers. Papers in these tracks will be reviewed by selected
programme committee members, and accepted papers will be published in
IEEE Xplore and presented at the conference.
Competition papers (up to 8 pages) are papers that describe one or
more entries to the competitions that are running at this year's CIG.
Competition papers need to include evaluation of the contribution,
including (if possible) results on the same benchmark as that used by
the competition, and comparison to other competition entries. Because
the problem domain is well-known, these papers can be reviewed faster
than regular papers. The same quality standards will apply to
competition papers as to regular papers.
Vision papers (up to 8 pages) are papers describing a vision for the
future of the field of computational intelligence and games or some
part of it. These papers need to be based on existing literature, be
well-written and well argued. In cases where a paper describes a
particular technique or domain, the paper should include a survey of
that field; all papers should include extensive bibliographies. Papers
should not revolve around any particular set of experiments, and need
not contain any new empirical results, but are encouraged to outline
ambitious future work. The quality standards applied to vision papers
are at least as high as for other conference papers.
Poster papers (2 pages) describe work-in-progress, intermediate
results on large projects or small projects that are interesting on
their own but which can easily be reported in short form. Papers need
to include (and identify) a contribution beyond what has been
published elsewhere, and need to include an appropriate bibliography
including acknowledgement of related work from the author.
--
Julian Togelius
Associate Professor
IT University of Copenhagen
Rued Langgaards Vej 7, 2300 Copenhagen, Denmark
mail:
jul...@togelius.com, web:
http://julian.togelius.com
mobile: +46-705-192088, office:
+45-7218-5277