Monday, February 20, 2012

Call for papers: Applications of ECoS

Special issue of Evolving Systems on
Applications of Evolving Connectionist Systems
Guest Editor
Michael J. Watts
University of Adelaide, Australia
mjwatts@ieee.org
Scope
The topic of this special issue is “Applications of Kasabov’s Evolving Connectionist Systems”.

In modern society, the volume and rate of data production are huge and set to increase. To process and utilise this avalanche of data, methods are needed that can rapidly and accurately model it as it becomes available. These models must be able to learn throughout their lifetimes, without forgetting what they have previously learned, and be able to explain themselves.

Kasabov’s Evolving Connectionist Systems (ECoS) are able to fulfil each of these requirements. They are a class of constructive neural networks that learn via structural growth and adaptation. They have a fast, one-pass learning algorithm, where all that can be learnt from the data is learned in the first training pass. Because of their open structure, they exhibit continuous, life-long learning whereby the structure expands as necessary to accommodate new data. Finally, they have a strong resistance to catastrophic forgetting following additional training on new data.

Examples of ECoS networks include the Evolving Fuzzy Neural Network (EFuNN), which was the first ECoS network published and is characterised by embedded fuzzy logic elements. There is also the Simple Evolving Connectionist System (SECoS), which is essentially an EFuNN with the fuzzy elements removed, and the Dynamic Evolving Fuzzy Inference System (DENFIS) for discovering Takagi-Sugeno style fuzzy rules. Many ECoS networks use fuzzy rule extraction algorithms that allow for the explanation of what the networks have learned, in a comprehensible manner.

ECoS networks are well suited to applications that are dealing with new data continuously and that have dynamic, time-critical aspects. Previous applications of ECoS include:
  • Stock market prediction and macroeconomic modelling
  • Speech recognition, especially multi-speaker speech recognition
  • Bioinformatics and medical modelling
  • Image and video parsing
  • Robot control
  • Information system security
The special issue is concerned with all aspects of the application of ECoS networks to real-life problems and data sets. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
  • Applications of ECoS to real-world problems
  • Data mining of complex data sets using ECoS
  • Comparisons of ECoS with other algorithms over real-world data sets
  • Modifications of ECoS algorithms to fit them to real-world problems
Proposed Schedule
  • Submission due date: 16 April, 2012
  • Preliminary notification of acceptance: 4 June, 2012
  • Revised manuscripts due: 9 July, 2012
  • Final acceptance notification: 6 August, 2012
  • Final version due: 3 September, 2012
  • Intended publication date: January, 2013
Submission
 The special issue invites original contributions within the specified scope. Manuscripts must not be under review elsewhere, nor can they have been previously published. Extended conference papers must contain at least 30% new material. Please format all manuscripts according to the Instructions for Authors:
Please submit all papers via the online submission system:




Friday, February 17, 2012

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Call for papers: CIDU 2012

The deadline for submitting papers to the 2012 Conference on Intelligent Data Understanding (CIDU) 2012 is 18 May 2012. This conference will be held in Boulder, Colorado, 24-26 October, 2012.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Reminder: paper submission deadline ICONIP 2012

A reminder that the paper submission deadline for the International Conference on Neural Information Processing (ICONIP) 2012 is May 15, 2012. This conference will be held in Doha, Qatar, November 26-29, 2012.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Monday, February 13, 2012

Reminder: paper submission deadline for PPSN 2012

A reminder that the deadline for submitting papers to the 12th International Conference on Parallel Problem Solving from Nature (PPSN) 2012 is the 12th of March, 2012. This conference will  be held in Taormina, Italy, 1-5 September 2012.

Friday, February 10, 2012

Paper deadline extension: ICIC 2012

The deadline for papers submitted to the International Conference on Intelligent Computing (ICIC) 2012 has been extended to March 31, 2012. This conference will be held in Huangshan, China, July 25-29, 2012.

Conference paper submission deadline for UKCI 2012

The paper submission deadline for the 12th UK Annual Workshop on Computational Intelligence (UKCI) 2012 is May 1, 2012. This workshop will be held in Edinburgh, Scotland, UK, 5-7 September, 2012.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Call for papers: AI'12

The deadline for submitting papers to the 25th Australasian Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AI) 2012 is 29 June, 2012. This conference will be held in Sydney, Australia, 4-7 December, 2012.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Reminder: Paper submission deadline for ECAI 2012

A reminder that the deadline for papers submitted to the 20th European Conference on Artificial Intelligence (ECAI) 2012 is 6 March 2012. This conference will be held in Montpellier, France, 27-21 August, 2012.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Friday, February 3, 2012

The problem with academic journals 4

Or, why I'm not boycotting Elsevier.

"You never change something by fighting the existing reality. To change something build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete." - R. Buckminster Fuller

This is the fourth post in a series about the problems with the big academic journal publishers. In summary: the journals get their content for free; get their quality control (peer review / refereeing) for free; and get their editors for free, yet they charge many thousands of dollars for subscriptions. This bad situation has been compounded by publishers like Elsevier basically trying to buy a law that directly attacks open-access journals.

In response to this, and to other bad behaviour, calls for a boycott of Elsevier have culminated in this website being launched, where scientists can pledge to not submit, referee or edit for Elsevier journals. At the time of writing, around 3000 scientists have already done so.

I am not one of them, and I will not be one of them. I have several reasons for taking this position, some of them idealistic, and others pragmatic.

Firstly, I agree with the sentiment from Fuller above: it is better to create something new than to tear down the old. In this case, it means that it is better to support open access journals than to boycott traditional journals. In other words, let the old journals wither away into history because they have been made obsolete, not because one particular publisher has been throttled by a boycott.

Secondly, boycotting one publisher (Elsevier, in this case) won't achieve much. Other publishers, who are guilty of much the same behaviour as Elsevier, will simply pick up the slack, that is, they will see an increase in submissions that would have otherwise have gone to Elsevier journals. The boycott might hurt Elsevier, but it won't fix the problem with academic journals.

Thirdly, there is a lack of alternative venues for some fields. For my ecological research, the most appropriate journals are Ecological Informatics and Ecological Modelling, both of which are published by Elsevier. There is an open-access alternative to them, Computational Ecology and Software, but it is less than a year old and has yet to become anywhere near as established as the incumbents.

Fourthly, students and junior researchers do not have much of a choice where they submit their papers. If your supervisor says to submit your paper to an Elsevier journal, do you really have a choice about it?

Finally, any early-career researcher who signs on to this boycott is setting themselves up for some trouble down the line. As an early-career researcher myself, I ask myself, do I want to mark myself as someone who will not try to publish in the top journals in my field, just because they are published by Elsevier? I need to publish in the most appropriate and highly-ranked journals in my field, and for me, most of those are published by Elsevier. Put another way, I don't have a permanent job yet, so I need to publish in the most appropriate and highly-ranked journals for the sake of my career. I need to develop my career because I have a family to support. If that makes me a coward, at least I'll be a coward who can feed his family.

We will not solve the problems with academic journals by boycotting any one publisher. We will solve the problems with academic journals by supporting open access journals. That means submitting papers to them, refereeing papers for them, and volunteering on their editorial boards. I am supporting CES, by publishing papers with them, and by working on their editorial board. I might even start my own open-access journal one day. But we need more top researchers to get involved with open access journals. We need the big names to support them, so they get the citations they need to increase their impact factors, so the journals become more desirable venues in which to publish.

If there were a site where scientists could pledge to submit, referee and do editorial work for open-access journals, I would sign up there. I might even set it up myself - it's not like I need to sleep, is it?

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Reminder: paper submission deadline SEAL 2012

A reminder that the deadline for submitting papers to the 9th International Conference on Evolution and Learning (SEAL) 2012 is 1 May 2012. This conference will be held in Hanoi, Vietnam, 16-19 December, 2012.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Reminder: paper submission deadline for ICARIS 2012

A reminder that the deadline for submitting papers to the 11th International Conference on Artificial Immune Systems (ICARIS) 2012 is 1 March 2012. This conference will be held in Taormina, Italy, 28-21 July, 2012.

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Reminder: Paper submission deadline for PRICAI 2012

A reminder that the deadline for papers submitted to the 12th Pacific Rim International Conference on Artificial Intelligence (PRICAI) 2012 is March 1, 2012. This conference will be held in Kuching, Malaysia, September 3-7, 2012.

Monday, January 30, 2012

Publishing or perishing

The single most important metric by which an academic is judged is their peer-reviewed publication record. Promotion, grant applications, and finding new jobs all depends on having a strong publication record. This has long been described as "Publish or perish", because if you don't publish, you perish - either you don't advance in your job, you can't find a job, or you don't keep your job. Now, I've got a reasonably long publication record, but I'm always looking for ways of boosting my research output (see my previous posts on publishing in computational intelligence).

Several years ago, biologist Phil Clapham published an excellent essay on the need for academics to publish their research. One of his rules, that I am applying to my own work, is to have at least one paper under review at all times. Now, this can be pretty hard work - there is always variation in the amount of time that papers spend in review, and reviewer comments can take a long time to address. But, it does lead to building up your publication record quite quickly.

One outcome of this rule, though, is that one should also be writing at least one paper at any given time, while also generating sufficient publishable results for at least one paper at any given time. That is, while at least one paper is in review, you need to be writing at least one paper, and also writing code / designing experiments / performing analyses to go into at least one other paper. So, publishing is like being on a treadmill: as soon as you submit one paper, you need to get to work on getting the next submitted, while lining up the material for the one after that.

While this does encourage the practice of breaking research projects into small, easily published (and easily understood) chunks, I suspect it may also encourage further proliferation of single publon papers. Whether or not this is a bad thing, I've leave to you to decide.

Another way to boost your publication count is to collaborate. A lot. Computational intelligence is a particularly useful field to come from for collaborating, as the algorithms we study can be applied to so many problems. But that's all a topic for another post.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Call for papers: Applications of ECoS

Special issue of Evolving Systems on
Applications of Evolving Connectionist Systems
Guest Editor
Michael J. Watts
University of Adelaide, Australia
mjwatts@ieee.org
Scope
The topic of this special issue is “Applications of Kasabov’s Evolving Connectionist Systems”.

In modern society, the volume and rate of data production are huge and set to increase. To process and utilise this avalanche of data, methods are needed that can rapidly and accurately model it as it becomes available. These models must be able to learn throughout their lifetimes, without forgetting what they have previously learned, and be able to explain themselves.

Kasabov’s Evolving Connectionist Systems (ECoS) are able to fulfil each of these requirements. They are a class of constructive neural networks that learn via structural growth and adaptation. They have a fast, one-pass learning algorithm, where all that can be learnt from the data is learned in the first training pass. Because of their open structure, they exhibit continuous, life-long learning whereby the structure expands as necessary to accommodate new data. Finally, they have a strong resistance to catastrophic forgetting following additional training on new data.

Examples of ECoS networks include the Evolving Fuzzy Neural Network (EFuNN), which was the first ECoS network published and is characterised by embedded fuzzy logic elements. There is also the Simple Evolving Connectionist System (SECoS), which is essentially an EFuNN with the fuzzy elements removed, and the Dynamic Evolving Fuzzy Inference System (DENFIS) for discovering Takagi-Sugeno style fuzzy rules. Many ECoS networks use fuzzy rule extraction algorithms that allow for the explanation of what the networks have learned, in a comprehensible manner.

ECoS networks are well suited to applications that are dealing with new data continuously and that have dynamic, time-critical aspects. Previous applications of ECoS include:
  • Stock market prediction and macroeconomic modelling
  • Speech recognition, especially multi-speaker speech recognition
  • Bioinformatics and medical modelling
  • Image and video parsing
  • Robot control
  • Information system security
The special issue is concerned with all aspects of the application of ECoS networks to real-life problems and data sets. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
  • Applications of ECoS to real-world problems
  • Data mining of complex data sets using ECoS
  • Comparisons of ECoS with other algorithms over real-world data sets
  • Modifications of ECoS algorithms to fit them to real-world problems
Proposed Schedule
  • Submission due date: 16 April, 2012
  • Preliminary notification of acceptance: 4 June, 2012
  • Revised manuscripts due: 9 July, 2012
  • Final acceptance notification: 6 August, 2012
  • Final version due: 3 September, 2012
  • Intended publication date: January, 2013
Submission
 The special issue invites original contributions within the specified scope. Manuscripts must not be under review elsewhere, nor can they have been previously published. Extended conference papers must contain at least 30% new material. Please format all manuscripts according to the Instructions for Authors:
Please submit all papers via the online submission system:




Conference paper deadline: IJCCI 2012

The deadline for submitting papers to the International Joint Conference on Computational Intelligence (IJCCI) 2012 is 19 April 2012. This conference will be held in Barcelona, Spain, 5-7 October, 2012.