Professor Ted Sichelman of the University of San Diego, and Conference Chair of ICAIL 2015, scheduled to be held 8-12 June 2015 in San Diego, California, USA, sends the following information:
The International Association of Artificial Intelligence and Law (IAAIL) is offering a mentoring program for papers being submitted to its [2015] biennial ICAIL conference, the International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law.
The program is intended primarily for junior authors who have not previously published an Artificial Intelligence and Law paper at a conference or in a journal. If you would like help with your submission, you may ask for a mentor ― a person who will help you with your submission to the IAAIL audience through one-on-one advising, usually via e-mail. A mentor can also familiarize you with the standards and deadlines of ICAIL submissions. Mentors are volunteers familiar with successful submissions. To request a mentor, please send email by the Mentoring Program Request Deadline to the organizers: Guido Governatori, Guido.Governatori@nicta.com.au; Burkhard Schafer, b.schafer@ed.ac.uk; and John Zeleznikow, John.Zeleznikow@vu.edu.au. Please include:
- Your name and the names of your co-authors;
- The name of your school (or department) and institution;
- A plain-text description of your work (a title and abstract is a minimum requirement);
- Any specific questions or areas in which you would like help;
- But don’t include your draft paper.
Reasonable expectations for a mentor include the following. A mentor may be able to advise you about the most appropriate forum for your work, suggest improvements to your submission, suggest how to deal with language problems, or refer you to relevant research of which you might not have been aware. Typically, a mentor might spend 3-7 hours on a submission. We carefully match mentors to mentees, and wish to support you in developing your work into a high-quality submission with a good chance of being accepted and published.
Note the following:
- People requesting mentoring must have a complete draft ready for the mentor to review by the Mentoring Program Paper Deadline;
- If there is an experienced AI & Law-related researcher in your department, it is expected that you would approach her/him first;
- No notification of mentor/mentee assignments will be made until after the Mentoring Program Paper Deadline;
- Reviewers will not be informed of whether a paper has been mentored. That is, the fact that a paper was mentored is not considered during the paper selection process.
Important Dates
- Mentoring Program Request Deadline: Wednesday, October 15, 2014
Send notice to Guido.Governatori@nicta.com.au; b.schafer@ed.ac.uk; and John.Zeleznikow@vu.edu.au.- Mentoring Program Paper Deadline
Shortly after mentor assignmentMentoring Program Organizers
- Guido Governatori—NICTA and Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia
- Burkhard Schafer—Edinburgh University, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
- John Zeleznikow—Victoria University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Filed under: Conference Announcements Tagged: ICAIL, ICAIL 2015, ICAIL 2015 Mentoring Program, International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, Legal informatics conferences
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