AIPS 2000 featured the second AI planning systems competition. 15 teams competed and the results were presented at the AIPS 2000 conference.
· CelCorp the Cel Corporation supplied prizes for those planning systems that demonstrated exceptional performance. (See the presentation below a list of the prize winner).
· Franz Inc. provided the competition with a free version of their Allegro CL 5.0.1 common lisp development system. This system was used by some of the compeditors.
· Schindler Lifts Ltd. provided prizes for performance on the Miconic-10 elevator control domain. They also made the domain publicly available so that it could be used in the competition.
Participants |
System |
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Albert Ludwigs University Germany |
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Aristotle University Greece |
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The Hong Kong University of Science & Technology Hong Kong |
R |
University of Freiburg. Germany |
Mips |
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Schindler Lifts Ltd. Switzerland University of Freiburg Germany |
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Universidad Simon Bolivar Venezuela |
HSP2 |
|
|
University of Edinburgh UK |
PropPlan |
University of Durham UK |
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AT&T Research Cornell University USA |
BlackBox |
|
Romeo Sanchez |
Arizona State University USA |
AltAlt |
ONERA - Center of Toulouse France |
TokenPlan |
|
Dresden University of Technology |
Participants |
System |
|
University of Maryland USA |
||
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The Hong Kong University of Science & Technology Hong Kong |
R |
University of Sourthern California Information Sciences Institute USA |
PbR |
|
Linkoping University Sweden |
TALplanner |
|
Romeo Sanchez |
Arizona State University USA |
CHIPS |
ONERA - Center of Toulouse France |
TokenPlan |
|
Aristotle University Greece |
||
Dresden University of Technology |
Here is a document containing a description of the planning systems (contributed by the participants).
Here is a PowerPoint presentation describing some of the results of the competition.
Here is a version of the presentation in postscript. It is in colour postscript and seems to display ok with ghostview on a colour monitor, but I didn’t try printing it: black and white makes the graphs useless.
Here is the detailed data files that arose from the competition. Two formats are available, a gzipped tar file, and a zip file. Warning, these data files unpack to about 60MB. They contain the full set of domain specifications and problems used in the competition, and the full set of plans and timings generated by the competitors in solving these problems (there was a 30min CPU time limit on each problem---missing datapoints exceeded this limit). Unpack them and examine the README files in the various sub-directories. Most of the timings were generated on a 500Mhz Pentium III machine running Linux, the machine had 1GB or RAM. The only exception is the Schindler Miconic elevator control domain, this domain was run on-site at the conference on a set of 450Mhz Pentium III machines each having 256MB.
Useful
Links
The version of PDDL used in this years competition.
The now out of date call for participation.