news

register now!


The 9th international conference on Quantum Interaction (QI-15) will be held at the Conference Center Lihn (www.lihn.ch) at Filzbach, Switzerland, from July 14—17, 2015. QI-15 follows from previous successful meetings at Stanford University, Oxford University, the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence at Saarbrücken, the AAAI Symposium at Washington DC; Robert Gordon University Aberdeen, the Paris School of Economics, the University of Leicester, and the Conference Center Lihn. More information about the topics of these conferences can be found here.

Over the years, the Quantum Interaction conferences have provided a debating ground for applications of formal concepts of quantum theory to a variety of areas outside of the natural remit of physics. Quantum Interaction has developed into an emerging interdisciplinary area of science combining research topics in mathematics, physics, psychology, economics, cognitive and computer science. These include:

  • novel aspects of decision making in a variety of social science fields,
  • a better understanding of order effects in surveys and questionnaires,
  • studies of non-separable concept combinations in natural language,
  • information retrieval and semantic networks in computer science,
  • proposals to test temporal nonlocality in perception and cognition,
  • study of non-commutative structures in learning behavior.

We invite submissions of research papers in these areas and concerning any other topic relevant to the theme of the conference. For details check the registration / submission page.

Confirmed keynote speaker at QI 2015 are:
Prof. Dr. Ioannis Antoniou, Mathematics Department, Aristotle University, Thessaloniki, Greece
Prof. Dr. Alexej Grinbaum, Saclay Research Center, Gif-sur-Yvette, France

All accepted contributions will be published in a conference proceedings volume in the series Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) by Springer International Publishing.


This website is hosted by the Society for Mind-Matter Research