call for abstracts
Following Herbert Simon’s work, ideas of heuristics have also been pervasive in fields as diverse as computer science, psychology, and game theory and are recently of interest in questions of evidence in philosophy of biology and biomedical sciences.
Heuristics have been understood in many ways, but they are united by offering problem solving or discovery methods when traditionally ‘optimal’ search is impossible or otherwise undesirable.
These ideas have influenced thinking in many disciplines, and this conference aims to bring together researchers from multiple disciplines, working on diverse questions of heuristics and causality. We offer some suggested topics of interest but encourage submission of abstracts on all related topics:
What are heuristics, and what does it mean to search for causes in some less than optimal way?
Should we seek one best view of heuristics, or is there potentially a toolbox of heuristic formalisms that may apply to different areas?
How should we think about heuristics for non-formal evidence of and reasoning about causality?
Are there heuristics that are particularly fruitful for model-building (perhaps for a specific domain)?
How does – or should – heuristic search change how we use the resulting evidence or models?
Computational methods for causal inference and the tradeoff between provably correct methods (with strong assumptions) and heuristic methods (that work in reality but have no guarantees)
Judgment and decision-making heuristics and how causes fit in
Abstracts should be no more than 300 words, submitted via Microsoft CMT: https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/HaCitS2023
Important dates
Submission deadline February 8, 2023
Notification March 15, 2023
Conference May 18-20, 2023