Chris is attending a workshop at Schloss Dagstuhl this week to contribute to a sketching out of where argumentation research is heading over the next few years. It promises to be an interesting meeting, which aims to produce a series of papers by the end of the year.
Nir Oren Visiting
Nir Oren from the Department of Computer Science at King’s College London visited us today to talk about argumentation frameworks and evidence amongst other things. His talk was entitled “argumentation and reasoning with evidence, approaches and applications”. As usual, details of his talk can be found on the past seminars page.
Iyad Rahwan visiting
Iyad Rahwan from the British University in Dubai is visiting us today to talk about ABN and other things. We have been working with Iyad for some time on the Argument Interchange Format, ArgDF and various other things.
He will be speaking On the Benefits of Exploiting Underlying Goals in
Argument-based Negotiation at 1500 in the Lecture Theatre (not Wolfson today).
ABSTRACT: Interest-based negotiation (IBN) is a form of negotiation in
which agents exchange information about their underlying goals, with a
view to improving the likelihood and quality of a deal. While this
intuition has been stated informally in much previous literature,
there is no formal analysis of the types of deals that can be reached
through IBN and how they differ from those reachable using (classical)
alternating offer bargaining. This talk bridges this gap by providing
a formal framework for analysing the outcomes of IBN dialogues, and
begins by analysing a specific IBN protocol.
Schemes and Dialogue
Doug Walton and Chris Reed are talking today at OSSA about the link between argumentation schemes and dialogue. For although schemes are inherently dialogical (think about the role that critical questions play, for example), they have not previously been treated in such a way as to integrate them into models of dialogue. The paper provides a first step in this direction. A commentary on the paper is given by Taeda Tomic from Uppsala University.
Harnessing the Araucaria Corpus
In collaboration with a team at Leuven university, the Araucaria corpus is starting to be used to explore the problems of automatic argument analysis, in the context of their ACILA project. A short paper describing some initial results has just been accepted to ICAIL-2007 in Stanford.
The current bibliographic data is:
Moens, M.-F., Boiy, E., Palau, R.M., & Reed, C. (2007, to appear) “Automatic Detection of Arguments in Legal Texts” in Proceedings of the International Conference on AI & Law (ICAIL-2007), Stanford, CA, ACM Press.
ARG:dundee at AAAI
Some of the work related to the ArgDF project with Iyad Rahwan has also been accepted for AAAI-07 in Vancouver. This paper is a complement to the one accepted to Artificial Intelligence a couple of weeks ago.
The current bibliographic data is:
Rahwan, I., Zablith, F. & Reed, C. (2007, to appear) “Towards Large Scale Argumentation Support on the Semantic Web” in Proceedings of AAAI-07, Vancouver, AAAI Press / MIT Press.
Rieks op den Akker visiting
Rieks op den Akker from Twente is visiting ARG today to talk about his experiences with the AMI and AMI(DA) projects:
Modeling conversations in meetings
In the talk I will present the EC projects AMI(DA) that aim at developing meeting support technology for face to face as well as remote meetings. I will concentrate on presenting the AMI meeting corpus, an exetensively annotated corpus of meeting conversations and discuss several reseach on the interactions we see in these meetings showing joint verbal as well as non-verbal behaviors for grounding. I also present an argumentation diagramming method developed at the University of Twente.
ARG:dundee in AIJ
I’m delighted to say that a paper describing our work with Iyad Rahwan on ArgDF has been accepted to the special issue of Artificial Intelligence on Argumentation edited by Paul Dunne and Trevor Bench-Capon.
The current bibliographic data is:
Rahwan, I., Zablith, F. & Reed, C. (2007, to appear) “Laying the Foundations for a World Wide Argument Web”, Artificial Intelligence.
Schemes in Compendium
Analyses of argumentation schemes developed in the group here have been adapted for use in Compendium, a popular discussion mapping tool. This is a nice example of the sort of re-use that XML (and Araucaria‘s AML) allows, and that the AIF is designed to simplify. There are more details at the Compendium site.
Argumentation and the “Pragmatic Web”
Chris has been invited to sit on the Programme Committee of the 2nd International Conference on the Pragmatic Web which aims to combine existing semantic web technology with collaborative working, social networking, debate and (of course) argumentation. Deadline for submissions is 07 May 2007.