AAAI Bridge Program: Making Embodied AI Reliable with Testing and Formal Verification

Call for Participation

Description of bridge

This bridge addresses one of the most urgent challenges in AI: how to make embodied AI systems—such as autonomous vehicles, UAVs, and robots—interpretable, testable, and formally verifiable. While modern AI models excel in perception and decision-making, they pose significant challenges for traditional verification techniques, raising critical risks in safety-sensitive domains. The goal of this bridge is to unite diverse communities—AI/ML, formal methods, software engineering, robotics, and cyber-physical systems—in developing a shared roadmap for reliable embodied AI. Participants will engage with cutting-edge approaches in neurosymbolic reasoning, LLM-guided specification mining, scenario-based testing, compositional verification, and robustness under uncertainty, and explore their potential to support certification and assurance of AI-enabled autonomy.

Topics

Format of bridge

This one-day event will combine tutorials, keynote talks, technical presentations, panel discussions, and interactive breakout sessions. The morning program will feature tutorials and invited keynotes from leaders in neurosymbolic AI, formal verification, and embodied autonomy, followed by selected paper presentations. The afternoon will include a panel on certification challenges and breakout discussions organized around open problems such as scenario-based testing, compositional verification, and robustness under uncertainty.

Attendance

We anticipate 50–80 participants, with priority given to researchers and practitioners in AI, robotics, formal methods, and CPS. Early-career researchers and graduate students are strongly encouraged to participate, with mentoring opportunities included.

Submission requirements

We invite 2–4 page extended abstracts or position papers describing research advances, tools, or case studies relevant to reliable embodied AI. Submissions should emphasize how the work enhances testability, interpretability, or verification of embodied AI. Accepted contributions will be presented as talks, posters, or lightning sessions.

Submission site information

Submissions should be made via https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=aaai26bridgereai

Bridge Chairs

Bridge Committee

Important Dates