期刊名称:KNOWLEDGE ENGINEERING REVIEW
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
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The Knowledge Engineering Review is committed to the development of the field of artificial intelligence and the clarification and dissemination of its methods and concepts. KER publishes analyses high quality surveys providing balanced but critical presentations of the primary concepts in an area; technical tutorialsdetailed introductions to an area; application and country surveys commentaries and debates; Book Reviews and a popular ‘From the journals section giving the contents of current journals in theoretical and applied artificial intelligence. |
Instructions to Authors
The Knowledge Engineering Review Editorial policy The Knowledge Engineering Review has been established to provide a general source of information and analysis in all areas relevant to research and development in knowledge based systems and applied artificial intelligence. The editors wish to encourage careful preparation of original papers analysing developments in the field. In particular we wish to see tutorial and survey articles, and commentary, criticism and debate. Primary research papers on specialised technical topics are unlikely to be appropriate but research papers on broad topics such as development methodology or general evaluations of tools and techniques, are of interest. Descriptions of specific projects or particular computer systems will be considered if their presentation draws out general issues in the design, implementation or impact of knowledge based systems. Submission of manuscripts Contributions for publication should be addressed to Dr Simon Parsons, Department of Computer Science, University of Liverpool, Chadwick Building, Liverpool L69 7ZF, United Kingdom or Professor Adele E Howe, North American Editor, Computer Science Department, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA; or may be submitted through a member of the Editorial Board (addresses inside front cover). Submission implies that the manuscript has not been published previously, nor currently submitted for publication elsewhere. Upon acceptance of a manuscript, the author will be asked to transfer copyright to the publisher. All contributions, whether articles, correspondence or reviews, must be sent in triplicate and typed on one side of the paper, with wide margins and double-line spacing throughout. Any minor corrections should be made neatly in the typescript, leaving the margins clear. Authors are encouraged to provide the final version of the contribution on disk (PC or Mac format, ‘Word?or ‘Wordperfect? in addition to the paper copies. Authors using LaTeX should use the KER LaTeX style file which can be obtained using anonymous FTP from the internet address ftp://ftp.cambridge.org/pub/texarchive/journals/latex/ker-cls. In case of difficulties obtaining these files, there is a help-line available via e-mail; please contact texline@cup.cam.ac.uk. While use of KER LaTeX style file is preferred, ordinary LaTeX or plain TeX files can also be accepted. Contributions should follow the general style of papers in recent issues of The Knowledge Engineering Review. The author is invited to nominate up to five possible referees, who will not necessarily be used. Articles must be accompanied by a brief, informative rather than indicative, abstract. Headings should be set out clearly but not underlined. Primary headings should be in lower case, at margin, with Arabic numeral; subheadings should be numbered 2.a., 2.b., etc., and tertiary headings, 2.a.1., 2.a.2. No cross-references should be given by page number, but ‘above?and ‘below?should be used with the section specified, e.g. Section 2.a.2. The SI system of units should be used. The author should mark in the margin of the manuscript where figures and tables may be inserted. References to points in larger works should, where possible, quote the page reference, e.g. Ager, 1981, p. 102. Tables should be typed with double-line spacing on sheets separate from the running text. Each table must have a caption that will make the data in the table intelligible without reference to the text. Illustrations should be drafted for reproduction as full page (148 mm) width. Originals should normally be drawn at twice final area and must be sent in a flat package; larger drawings may delay publication. Lettering should be of a size so that when reduces the smallest lower-case letters will not be less than about 1 mm. Avoid gross disparities in lettering size on a drawing. Duplicates of illustrations should be sent, and may be prints or, preferably, photocopies reduced to final size. Illustrations in the text, both line drawings and photographs for halftone reproductions, will be referred to as figures (Fig. 2, 2a, etc.). Folding plates will not be accepted. Figures composed of photographs should be glossy prints presented at publication scale. Figure captions must be typed with double-line spacing on sheets separate from the running text. The preferred graphics package is Freehand 5 but files from many others can be accepted. Please indicate clearly the file format (e.g. TIFF, EPS, DCS, Freehand etc), computer operating system and graphics software used for originating the artwork files. The typefaces used in electronic artwork supplied should be restricted to Monotype, Adobe and Bitstream font libraries. Illustrations should be supplied as EPS files and never as Postscript files, or as the native format files from the graphics package used. They should be accompanied by laser proofs with the name and version number of the graphics package used, and also the names of the fonts used. References The accuracy of references is the responsibility of authors. References must be double-spaced and spelt out in full, e.g: Gale, W A, ed 1986. Artificial Intelligence and Statistics, Reading, Massachusetts: Addison-Wesley. Pearl, J 1984. Heuristics. Intelligent search strategies for problem solving, Reading, Massachusetts: Addison-Wesley. Tie-Cheng Wang and Bledsoe, W W, 1987. “Hierarchical deduction?Journal of Automated Reasoning 3 (1) pp 1-34. Pau, L F, 1986. “Survey of expert systems for fault detection, test generation and maintenance?Expert Systems, 3 (2) pp 100-111. Unpublished work should normally be referred to in the text parentheses as, for example, ‘private communication?or ‘unpub. Ph.D. thesis, Univ. London, 1988? and not included in the reference list unless in the press. Proof Reading Typographical or factual errors only may be changed at the proof stage. The publisher reserves the right to charge authors for correction of non-typographical errors. No page charge is made. Offprints No paper offprints are provided, but the corresponding author will be sent the pdf of the published article. Print offprints may be purchased at extra cost at proof stage ?Cambridge University Press 2004 (Revised 26/03/09)
Instructions to Authors
桌 k0269-8889.pdf
Editorial Board
Editorial Board Co-Editor-in-Chief Professor Peter McBurney Department of Computer Science Ashton Building University of Liverpool Ashton Street Liverpool L69 3BX UK Professor Simon Parsons Dept of Computer and Information Science Brooklyn College City University of New York 2900 Bedford Avenue Brooklyn NY 11210, USA S.D.Parsons@csc.liv.ac.uk Editorial Board Dr Patrick Br¨¦zillon LIP6, University Paris 6 8, rue du Capitaine Scott 75015 Paris, France
Patrick.Brezillon@lip6.fr Dr Anthony Hunter Department of Computer Science University College London Gower Street London WC1E 6BT
a.hunter@cs.ucl.ac.uk Editorial Board Dr Stephen Cranefield University of Otago, New Zealand scranefield@infoscience.otago.ac.nz Back to Journal Homepage Editor-in-Chief
Dr Simon Parsons Dept of Computer and Information Science Brooklyn College City University of New York 2900 Bedford Avenue Brooklyn NY 11210 USA Email S.D.Parsons@csc.liv.ac.uk North American Editor
Professor Adele E. Howe Computer Science Department Colorado State University Fort Collins, CO 80523 USA Email howe@cs.colostate.edu Editorial Board
Dr D Navin Chandra Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Dr Enrico Coiera University of New South Wales, Australia
Dr Nick Jennings Queen Mary & Westfield College, UK
Professor Kiyoshi Niwa University of Tokyo, Japan
Professor Mario Tokoro Keio University, Japan
Dr Jan Treur Free University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
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