Volume 171,
Number 1,
January 2007
Volume 171,
Numbers 2-3,
February 2007
Volume 171,
Number 4,
March 2007
- Luis Alberto Pineda:
Conservation principles and action schemes in the synthesis of geometric concepts.
197-238
- Daowen Qiu:
A note on Trillas' CHC models.
239-254
Volume 171,
Numbers 5-6,
April 2007
Volume 171,
Number 7,
May 2007
Foundations of Multi-Agent Learning
- Rakesh V. Vohra, Michael P. Wellman:
Foundations of multi-agent learning: Introduction to the special issue.
363-364
- Yoav Shoham, Rob Powers, Trond Grenager:
If multi-agent learning is the answer, what is the question?
365-377
- Drew Fudenberg, David K. Levine:
An economist's perspective on multi-agent learning.
378-381
- Tuomas Sandholm:
Perspectives on multiagent learning.
382-391
- Geoffrey J. Gordon:
Agendas for multi-agent learning.
392-401
- Peter Stone:
Multiagent learning is not the answer. It is the question.
402-405
- Karl Tuyls, Simon Parsons:
What evolutionary game theory tells us about multiagent learning.
406-416
- Shie Mannor, Jeff S. Shamma:
Multi-agent learning for engineers.
417-422
- Ido Erev, Alvin E. Roth:
Multi-agent learning and the descriptive value of simple models.
423-428
- H. Peyton Young:
The possible and the impossible in multi-agent learning.
429-433
- Yu-Han Chang:
No regrets about no-regret.
434-439
- Martin Zinkevich, Amy R. Greenwald, Michael L. Littman:
A hierarchy of prescriptive goals for multiagent learning.
440-447
- Dov Monderer, Moshe Tennenholtz:
Learning equilibrium as a generalization of learning to optimize.
448-452
Volume 171,
Numbers 8-9,
June 2007
- Hideaki Itoh, Kiyohiko Nakamura:
Partially observable Markov decision processes with imprecise parameters.
453-490
- Meir Kalech, Gal A. Kaminka:
On the design of coordination diagnosis algorithms for teams of situated agents.
491-513
- Ke Xu, Frédéric Boussemart, Fred Hemery, Christophe Lecoutre:
Random constraint satisfaction: Easy generation of hard (satisfiable) instances.
514-534
- Talal Rahwan, Nicholas R. Jennings:
An algorithm for distributing coalitional value calculations among cooperating agents.
535-567
- Louis-Philippe Morency, Candace L. Sidner, Christopher Lee, Trevor Darrell:
Head gestures for perceptual interfaces: The role of context in improving recognition.
568-585
- Asaad Hakeem, Mubarak Shah:
Learning, detection and representation of multi-agent events in videos.
586-605
- Maria Luisa Bonet, Jordi Levy, Felip Manyà:
Resolution for Max-SAT.
606-618
Volume 171,
Numbers 10-15,
July-October 2007
Argumentation in Artificial Intelligence
- Trevor J. M. Bench-Capon, Paul E. Dunne:
Argumentation in artificial intelligence.
619-641
- Phan Minh Dung, Paolo Mancarella, Francesca Toni:
Computing ideal sceptical argumentation.
642-674
- Pietro Baroni, Massimiliano Giacomin:
On principle-based evaluation of extension-based argumentation semantics.
675-700
- Paul E. Dunne:
Computational properties of argument systems satisfying graph-theoretic constraints.
701-729
- Sylvie Coste-Marquis, Caroline Devred, Sébastien Konieczny, Marie-Christine Lagasquie-Schiex, Pierre Marquis:
On the merging of Dung's argumentation systems.
730-753
- Søren Holbech Nielsen, Simon Parsons:
An application of formal argumentation: Fusing Bayesian networks in multi-agent systems.
754-775
- Alexander Artikis, Marek J. Sergot, Jeremy Pitt:
An executable specification of a formal argumentation protocol.
776-804
- Sarvapali D. Ramchurn, Carles Sierra, Lluis Godo, Nicholas R. Jennings:
Negotiating using rewards.
805-837
- Nir Oren, Timothy J. Norman, Alun D. Preece:
Subjective logic and arguing with evidence.
838-854
- Katie Atkinson, Trevor J. M. Bench-Capon:
Practical reasoning as presumptive argumentation using action based alternating transition systems.
855-874
- Thomas F. Gordon, Henry Prakken, Douglas Walton:
The Carneades model of argument and burden of proof.
875-896
- Iyad Rahwan, Fouad Zablith, Chris Reed:
Laying the foundations for a World Wide Argument Web.
897-921
- Martin Mozina, Jure Zabkar, Ivan Bratko:
Argument based machine learning.
922-937
Volume 171,
Numbers 16-17,
November 2007
Volume 171,
Number 18,
December 2007
Special Review Issue
- Don Perlis, Mary-Anne Williams:
Editorial Note.
1093
- Noam Chomsky:
SymposiumonMargaret Boden, Mind as Machine: A History of Cognitive Science , Oxford (2006) two volumes.
1094-1103
- Paul Thagard:
Theory and experiment in cognitive science.
1104-1106
- Jerry Feldman:
Her story of cognitive science.
1107-1109
- Daniel Dennett:
Instead of a review.
1110-1113
- Timothy J. Ross:
Alexander Gegov, Complexity Management in Fuzzy Systems, 2007, 368 pp. Hardcover: Studies in Fuzziness and Soft Computing, Volume 211, ISBN-13 978-3-540-38883-8.
1114-1115
- Reza Langari:
Jan Jantzen, Foundations of Fuzzy Control , John Wiley and Sons (2007).
1116-1117
- Roger B. Dannenberg:
David Temperley, Music and Probability , MIT Press (2007).
1118-1121
- Tom Armstrong:
J. Gerard Wolff, Unifying Computing and Cognition.
1122-1123
- Yusuf Pisan:
Nick Montfort, Twisty Little Passages: An Approach to Interactive Fiction , MIT Press (2005) ISBN 0-262-13436-5.
1124-1126
- Natika Newton:
Nicholas Humphrey, Seeing Red: A Study in Consciousness , Harvard University Press (2006) ISBN 0-674-02179-7 151 pp.
1127-1135
The Turing Tapes:
Comments and Controversies in AI
- Hubert L. Dreyfus:
Why Heideggerian AI failed and how fixing it would require making it more Heideggerian.
1137-1160
- Ben Goertzel:
Human-level artificial general intelligence and the possibility of a technological singularity: A reaction to Ray Kurzweil's The Singularity Is Near, and McDermott's critique of Kurzweil.
1161-1173
- John McCarthy:
From here to human-level AI.
1174-1182
- Drew McDermott:
Level-headed.
1183-1186
Copyright © Sat Nov 21 00:59:21 2009
by Michael Ley (ley@uni-trier.de)