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INAP: Review 1998 and Plans for 1999
INAP: Review 1998 and Plans for 1999
update 98-10-21
This report looks back at INAP98 and collects feedback that is
right now going into the plans for INAP99, and
invites you
to contribute.
The 11th International Conference on Applications of Prolog INAP,
under the professional and friendly eyes of local chair
Osamu Yoshie closed September 16
after a tight
program
of three days, 11 sessions
and workshops, 41 presented papers, 8 exhibiting companies and
organizations, John Fox' invited talk and an unknown number of
individual discussions all squeezed into a one-track conference.

End of the last session - some survivors
Conference Chair Shuichi Fukuda last year decided to turn
INAP into a full international conference and use the
undiluted "Applications of Prolog" title.
The drastic increase in submitted papers and attendance showed
the correctness of this uncompromising attitude and illustrated
the power of Prolog as common denominator and exciting tool
to explore ideas.
Contributions covered a rich spectrum of development
stages from early research idea level
to industrial field use, and ran across a wide range of
important application areas in engineering and non-engineering.
Tribute to the program committee, workshop and session organizers:
the 11 sessions properly reflected the complexity of
our industrial and societal systems and how effectively this
complexity can sometimes be tackled with Prolog technology.
Instrumental for the success of INAP'98 were the organizers and
their sessions:
- Stephane Bressan (information mediation)
- Takashi Chikayama (parallel programming system KLIC)
- Ulrich Geske (optimization and simulation with constraints)
- Ferenc Katai (constraint programming)
- Michio Kimura (medical systems)
- Hajime Yoshino (legal expert systems)
- Osamu Yoshie (industrial information systems)
and the talk by John Fox on "Logical Agents - Lessons from Medicine"
which was very well received and sparked intensive discussions.

Invited Speaker John Fox
During all sessions, sometimes inquisitive
questions and comments from the floor often addressed
not implementation level but deeper issues, for example the
nature of conflict of interests of negotiation partners, or
the feasibility of fuzzy reasoning within a formal legal framework.
In a way this indicates the achieved level of maturity of the
implementation techniques used; the conference participants
discussed "the real issues".
Several participants mentioned deficiencies of INAP98 and
suggested improvements for future events:
- - a plenary discussion on the last day to integrate
the many cut off discussions after paper presentations
- - longer breaks for small group discussions,
individual longer demonstrations, and the exhibition
- - exhibitors should have a small time slot during the
conference to briefly outline their activities
- - informal "happy hour" session at the end of each day
Plans for INAP'99:
As planned today (Oct 1998) INAP'99 will be held in
September/October 1999, hosted by Osamu Yoshie at
The Science University of Tokyo in downtown Tokyo.
We anticipate an increasingly broad range of fields covered, including
design, management, documentation, problem solving in engineering,
business, and society.
The discussions at INAP'98 suggest that many ideas presented for specific
applications really converge on a higher level, and that Prolog
technology is in a unique position to exploit existing computers,
data bases and networks for decisions that create better results
and less waste in engineering, business, medicine and jurisdiction.
For INAP'99, the program committee could better convey the use of Prolog
for everyday management and problem solving through independent software
agents or cooperating software assistants.
Specifically, INAP99 is seeking contributions on:
- negotiation:
- - problem solving under mutual constraints
- mediation:
- - use of existing information for a different purpose
- broker services:
- - dealing with privacy protection and conflicting interests
- help desks:
- - coping with different levels of expertise and incomplete information
- management:
- - working with goals and constrained resources
- risk:
- - screening, assessment and management of uncertainty
- rules:
- - turning manuals, laws, business practice into executables
- consulting:
- - expert advice on implications of decisions
- knowledge transfer:
- - learning, teaching, document authoring and access aids
All of these are widely relevant and tightly interact.
For example risk is a key issue for civil engineering,
aviation, medical, legal and financial decision making.
All of these have problem solving aspects that been
successfully modeled and deployed in Prolog
across industrial, commercial and societal systems.
Building on the success of past INAPs, INAP99 can present a
powerful vision for
cost effective problem solving in everyday transactions:
Suggestions for speakers, topics, sessions, workshops are
very welcome. INAP will try to accommodate anything that is
useful, understandable, legal, and related to Prolog.
Notes:
The 226-page proceedings of INAP98 are available from the
organizer for Yen5000.-.
Extra mention goes to The Science University of Tokyo for hosting
the event, to Osamu Yoshie (yoshie@ap.kagu.sut.ac.jp)

Local Chair Osamu Yoshie
for being a great chair, to his students

They ran logistics and equipment
for running the equipment and logistics, and to Toshi Yagihashi
(ren.associates@ma3.justnet.ne.jp)

INAP Organizer Toshi Yagihashi
for coffee, gourmet parties and
organizing INAP relentlessly for more than 10 years -
still counting.
--
Photos all by Hajime Yoshino. This report is written by
Oskar Bartenstein
oskar@ifcomputer.co.jp
www.ifcomputer.com/inap, for details see
www.ifcomputer.com/inap/inap98/Program/.
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