The deadline for workshops, demos, and tutorials is ending on February 15, so if you want to apply to show your AGI work to attendees, please apply on that page!
A reminder also to our accepted authors to register: AGI-10 requires at least one registered author per paper.
AGI-10’s early bird registrations will close at the end of January (Jan 31), so register now to save! Acceptance of papers is based on the assumption that at least one author will attend the conference.
The deadline to submit your live AGI demonstrations has been extended to February 15, to keep this date consistent with those for tutorials and workshops. Please email all submissions to achler -at- gmail.com, as specified on our Demonstrations page.
Bring a display-ready live computer simulation or physical demonstration to show and advertise your practical advancement to AGI! The demonstration does not have to tie in with a conference or workshop paper; it only must be AGI.
AGI-10 would also like to remind that papers accepted for AGI workshops will be considered for the Journal of Artificial General Intelligence.
Decisions have been made on AGI-10 papers and notifications have been sent to authors. For any queries, please contact AGI. The camera-ready version is due on January 3, so please make corrections to papers as required. Thank you to all submitters; we were happy to receive the number of papers we did. Thank you also to our dedicated reviewers, who helped make many difficult decisions.
There is still time to submit workshops, tutorials, and demonstrations even without an AGI paper. Papers accepted for the workshop will be considered for the Journal of Artificial General Intelligence. Demonstrations are due by January 15; tutorials and workshop submissions are due February 15.
AGI-10 also wishes a happy holiday season to all.
The great Ray Solomonoff, pioneer of Machine Learning, founder of Algorithmic Probability Theory, father of the Universal Probability Distribution, creator of the Universal Theory of Inductive Inference, passed away on Monday 7 December 2009 at age 83, from complications in the wake of a broken aneurysm in his head. He is survived by his loving wife of 40 years, Grace.
Ray Solomonoff was the first to describe the fundamental concept of Algorithmic Information or Kolmogorov Complexity. In the new millennium his work became the foundation of the first mathematical theory of Optimal Universal Artificial Intelligence.
Ray intended to deliver an invited lecture at the upcoming AGI 2010, the Conference on Artificial General Intelligence (March 5-8 2010) in Lugano (where he already spent time in 2001 as a visiting professor at the Swiss AI Lab IDSIA). The AGI conference series would not even exist without his essential theoretical contributions. With great sadness AGI 2010 will be held “In Memoriam Ray Solomonoff.”
Ray will live on in the many minds shaped by his revolutionary ideas.