International Symposium on Temporal Representation and Reasoning (TIME)
International Symposium on Temporal Representation and Reasoning
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  • Steering Committee
  • Current and Past Editions
  • Journal Special Issues
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Journal Special Issues

Last Updated: 15 December 2023
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In addition to the proceedings published by IEEE Computer Society, a number of International Journal Special Issues with extended versions of the best papers presented at the symposium have been published.

  1. Journal of Computational Intelligence, Special Issue on Temporal Representation and Reasoning, Volume 12, Number 3, August 1996. [Contains revised and extended versions of some of the best papers of the TIME-94 workshop.]
  2. Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence, Special Issue on Temporal Representation and Reasoning, A. Montanari, L. Chittaro, S. Goodwin, H. Hamilton (Eds), Volume 22, Number 1-2, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1998.  [Contains revised and extended versions of some of the best papers of the TIME-96 Symposium.]
  3. Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence, Special Issue on Temporal Representation and Reasoning, C. Dixon and M. Finger and M. Fisher and M. Reynolds (Eds.), Volume 30, Number 1-4, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2000.  [Contains revised and extended versions of some of the best papers of the TIME-99 Symposium.]
  4. Data & Knowledge Engineering, Special Issue on Temporal Representation and Reasoning, Claudio Bettini and Angelo Montanari (Eds.), Volume 44, Number 2, Elsevier, 2003. [Contains revised and extended versions of some of the best papers of the TIME-01 Symposium.]
  5. Journal of Logic and Computation, Alessandro Artale, Clare Dixon, Michael Fisher, Enrico Franconi (Eds.), Volume 14, Number 1, Oxford University Press, 2004.  [Contains revised and extended versions of some of the best papers of the TIME-02 Symposium.]
  6. Journal of applied logic, Mark Reynolds, Abdul Sattar (Eds.), Volume 4, Number 2, June 2006. [Contains revised and extended versions of some of the best papers of the TIME-ICTL-03 Symposium.]
  7. Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence, Special Issue on Temporal representation and reasoning. Bouzid, M., Combi, C., Fisher, M., Ligozat, G. (Eds),   vol. 46, n. 3, p. 231-234, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2006. [Contains revised and extended versions of some of the best papers of the TIME-04 Symposium.]
  8. Information and Computation, Jan Chomicki, David Toman (Eds.), Volume 205, Issue 1, January 2007. [Contains revised and extended versions of some of the best papers of the TIME-05 Symposium.]
  9. Information and Computation. Carlo Combi, Mark Reynolds, Johann Eder (eds.), Selected papers from TIME 2021, the 28th International Symposium on Temporal Representation and Reasoning
  10. Information and Computation. Roberto Posenato, Alexander Artikis, Stefano Tonetta (eds.) Temporal Representation and Reasoning. [Contains revised and extended versions of the best four papers of the TIME 2022 Symposium]
  11. Information Systems. Roberto Posenato, Alexander Artikis, Stefano Tonetta (eds.) Temporal Representation and Reasoning in data-intensive systems. [Contains also revised and extended versions of the best papers of the TIME 2022 Symposium about data-intensive systems]

Proceedings

Last Updated: 05 April 2022
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The TIME proceedings have been published by IEEE from 1996 to 2016 (IEEE Link) and later published in LIPIcs.

Current and past editions

Last Updated: 16 April 2025
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Coming Edition

TIME 2025 https://time2025.time-symposium.org/ in London, UK on 27–29 August 2025

Past Editions

Edition Avenue List of accepted papers Proceedings
TIME 2024 Montpellier, France https://dblp.org/rec/conf/time/2024 LIPIcs
TIME 2023 Athens, Greece https://dblp.org/rec/conf/time/2023 LIPIcs
TIME 2022 on-line https://dblp.org/rec/conf/time/2022 LIPIcs
TIME 2021 Klagenfurt, Austria https://dblp.org/rec/conf/time/2021 LIPIcs
TIME 2020 Bolzano, Italy https://dblp.org/rec/conf/time/2020 LIPIcs
TIME 2019 Málaga, Spain https://dblp.org/rec/conf/time/2019 LIPIcs
TIME 2018 Warsaw, Poland https://dblp.org/rec/conf/time/2018 LIPIcs
TIME 2017 Mons, Belgium https://dblp.org/rec/conf/time/2017 LIPIcs
TIME 2016 Copenhagen, Denmark https://dblp.org/rec/conf/time/2016 IEEE CS
TIME 2015 Kassel, Germany https://dblp.org/rec/conf/time/2016 IEEE CS

 

Steering Committee

Last Updated: 19 May 2022
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  • Alexander Artikis, NCSR "Demokritos", Athens, Greece
  • Patricia Bouyer, CNRS and ENS Paris-Saclay, Cachan Cedex, France
  • Carlo Combi, University of Verona, Italy  (chair)
  • Johann Eder, Universitaet Klagenfurt, Austria
  • Thomas Guyet, IRISA, Rennes, France
  • Luke Hunsberger, Vassar College, USA
  • Martin Lange, University of Kassel, Germany  (chair)
  • Angelo Montanari, University of Udine, Italy
  • Shankara Narayanan Krishna (Krishna S.), IIT Bombay, India
  • Mark Reynolds, University of Western Australia, Australia

Presentation

Last Updated: 05 April 2022
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Symposium Scope

The ... silent, never-resting thing called time, rolling, rushing on, swift, silent, like an all-embracing ocean tide ... this is forever very literally a miracle; a thing to strike us dumb

-- Thomas Carlyle, 1840

TIME has been for more than twenty years the only yearly multidisciplinary international event dedicated to the topic of time in computer science.
The purpose of the symposium is to bring together active researchers in different research areas involving temporal representation and reasoning. The symposium also welcomes research papers on the related topics of spatial and spatio-temporal representation and reasoning. In the early years, most contributions came from the Artificial Intelligence community, but the number of contributions from other areas such as Temporal Logic and Verification and partly from Temporal Databases has been increasing in the last years.

Brief History

The TIME International Symposium Series began in 1994. The first six annual meetings were held as workshops in conjunction with the FLAIRS (Florida Artificial Intelligence Research Society) annual conference. As the workshop has grown, in 2000, the organizers decided to hold the annual meeting as an independent event. Over the years, participation of researchers from areas outside of mainstream AI (especially the database community) has grown. For this reason, beginning with TIME-2001, we have opened the meeting to active researchers in temporal, spatial, and spatio-temporal representation and reasoning from all areas. Additionally, since the annual meeting had matured and the format had evolved, since 2001 it changed its status from a workshop to a symposium. Also, beginning with TIME-2001, a track format has been adopted, with AI, DB, and Logic being the three main tracks.


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