The first articles on argumentation in computer science appeared circa 20 years ago. Since then we have seen great advances, establishing a solid theoretical basis, a broad canvas of applications, and, most recently, some realistic implementations. The field has gone from infancy to maturity, and the initial questions that researchers posed – "how do we do this?", "what is it good for?" and "how do we implement it – are mostly answered.
@InProceedings{dix_et_al:DagSemProc.08042.1, author = {Dix, J\"{u}rgen and Parsons, Simon and Prakken, Henry and Simari, Guillermo}, title = {{Research Challenges for Argumentation}}, booktitle = {Perspectives Workshop: Theory and Practice of Argumentation Systems}, pages = {1--13}, series = {Dagstuhl Seminar Proceedings (DagSemProc)}, ISSN = {1862-4405}, year = {2008}, volume = {8042}, editor = {J\"{u}rgen Dix and Simon Parsons and Henry Prakken and Guillermo Simari}, publisher = {Schloss Dagstuhl -- Leibniz-Zentrum f{\"u}r Informatik}, address = {Dagstuhl, Germany}, URL = {https://drops.dagstuhl.de/entities/document/10.4230/DagSemProc.08042.1}, URN = {urn:nbn:de:0030-drops-15770}, doi = {10.4230/DagSemProc.08042.1}, annote = {Keywords: Argumentation, reasoning, agent systems} }
Feedback for Dagstuhl Publishing