Vol. 36 No. 10: AAAI-22 Technical Tracks 10
Thirty-Sixth AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence
Thirty-Fourth Conference on Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence
The Twelveth Symposium on Educational Advances in Artificial Intelligence
Sponsored by the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence
February 22–March 1, 2022, held virtually.
Published by AAAI Press, Palo Alto, California USA
Copyright © 2022, Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence
1900 Embarcadero Road, Suite 101, Palo Alto, California 94303
All Rights Reserved
ISSN 2374-3468 (Online)
ISSN 2159-5399 (Print)
ISBN-10: 1-57735-876-7 (11 issue set)
ISBN-13: 978-1-57735-876-3 (11 issue set)
The Thirty-Sixth AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence was held virtually from February 22-March 1, 2022. The conference program cochairs were Vasant Honavar (Pennsylvania State University, USA) and Matthijs Spaan (Delft University of Technology, Netherlands).
The AAAI-22 program consisted of a diverse technical track, student abstracts, poster sessions, invited speakers, tutorials, workshops, and exhibit and competition programs. Additionally, the program included a special track on AI for Social Impact, recognizing that high-quality research on social impact domains often leads to papers that differ from traditional AAAI submissions along multiple dimensions. The conference was colocated with the Thirty-Fourth Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence Conference (cochaired by Mark Boddy, Adventium Labs, USA, and Meinolf Sellmann, Shopify, USA). The IAAI conference traditionally consists of case studies of deployed applications with measurable benefits whose value depends on the use of AI technology, as well as emerging applications, which discuss efforts to apply AI tools, techniques, or methods to real world problems. The IAAI papers are included in these proceedings. Also included are the papers from the Twelfth AAAI Symposium on Educational Advances in Artificial Intelligence (cochaired by Michael Guerzhoy, University of Toronto, Canada, and Marion Neumann, Washington University in St. Louis, USA). The EAAI conference invites a broad range of papers on teaching AI and teaching with AI framed as research papers or as experience reports.
The proceedings have been published in 11 consecutive issues. This issue (volume 36 no. 10) consists of 1374 pages and one track:
AAAI Technical Track on Speech & Natural Language Processing