It has been an excellent week both from a scientific point of view and from a networking point of view (I have even added a few new facebook friends as a result of the symposium).
There really is some fantastic work going on around the world. The plenaries and tutorials showed just some of this. The work being done by people such as Ken Stanley, Michael Mateas, Yngvi Björnsson, David Stern (Microsoft Research), Stefano Lecchi (Milestone) and James Vaccaro is very impressive and the products they produce have the commercial sector (some of which work in this area anyway) really taking notice.
Of course, there is other excellent work being done, by a great many other people, and to list them all would mean listing most of the presentations given at the conference. So, although I have highlighted just a few presentations, it does not detract from all the other work being done in this area. Indeed, the newly established IEEE Transactions journal in this area is a testament to how bouyant the area is.
Another highlight at CIG'09 was the competitions. This year they really seem to have come of age. In previous years (at both CIG and other conference) the competitions were very popular, and well received, but it just has a slightly different feel this time around.
At this year's conference there were four competitions:
- Screen-Capture Ms Pac-Man. There is also a new competition where you evolve the ghosts as well as control Pac-Man being planned. This should be up and running soon.
- The 2K Bot Prize
- The Defcon AI Competition
- Mario AI Competition
- The Simulated Car Racing Competition
We hope that the presentations from the symposium will be available to view soon. They were all recorded but there are some copyright issues to resolve.
The symposium will be run again in 2010. The venue has just about been decided but it needs to be rubber stamped so I cannot say on a public forum where it will be.
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