Monday, April 21, 2014
Conference paper deadline: IEEE CISDA 2014
The deadline for submitting papers to the Seventh IEEE Symposium on Computational Intelligence for Security and Defense Applications (CISDA) 2014 is June 15, 2014. This conference will be held in Hanoi, Vietnam, 14-17 December, 2014.
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call for papers,
conferences
Friday, April 18, 2014
Conference paper deadline: SCIS and ISIS 2014
The deadline for the jointly-held conferences Soft Computing and Intelligent Systems (SCIS) and International Symposium on Advanced Intelligent Systems (ISIS) 2014 is 30 June, 2014. This conference will be held in Kitakyushu, Japan, December 3-6, 2014.
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call for papers,
conferences
Thursday, April 17, 2014
Conference paper deadline: UKCI 2014
The deadline for submitting papers to the UK Workshop on Computational Intelligence (UKCI) 2014 is 19 May 2014. This conference will be held in Bradford, UK, 8-10 September, 2014.
Labels:
call for papers,
conferences
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
Call for Papers: Special Issue on Real-Time Strategy Games IEEE TCIAIG
Special issue editors: Michael Buro, Santiago Ontañón and Mike Preuss
In recent years game AI for real-time strategy (RTS) games has become an active research area. Producing AI players (bots) which are able to consistently beat even average human players (without cheating) in these games has risen as a real challenge. Thus, in RTS games, player satisfaction cannot simply be achieved by “downgrading” the AI, as is possible in man other game genres. In consequence, stronger AI players make the game more interesting.
Recent RTS AI (e.g. StarCraft) tournaments have stimulated the creation of new bots with new concepts and architectures and led to a greatly increased number of publications addressing some of the many open AI problems in RTS games. For example, RTS game aspects such as resource management, scouting, real-time strategic and tactical planning, and others, call for the application of innovative CI/AI methods. This special issue welcomes high-quality work in the area of real-time strategy games. Topics include but are not limited to:
Deadline for submissions: July 1, 2014 Final copy due: February 1, 2015
Notification of Acceptance: November 1, 2014 Publication: June 2015
In recent years game AI for real-time strategy (RTS) games has become an active research area. Producing AI players (bots) which are able to consistently beat even average human players (without cheating) in these games has risen as a real challenge. Thus, in RTS games, player satisfaction cannot simply be achieved by “downgrading” the AI, as is possible in man other game genres. In consequence, stronger AI players make the game more interesting.
Recent RTS AI (e.g. StarCraft) tournaments have stimulated the creation of new bots with new concepts and architectures and led to a greatly increased number of publications addressing some of the many open AI problems in RTS games. For example, RTS game aspects such as resource management, scouting, real-time strategic and tactical planning, and others, call for the application of innovative CI/AI methods. This special issue welcomes high-quality work in the area of real-time strategy games. Topics include but are not limited to:
- Adversarial real-time planning in RTS games
- Bot reactiveness: learning and adaptation in RTS bots
- Build order optimization and its relation to strategies and the metagame
- Scouting and uncertainty management in RTS games
- Path-finding and group movement
- Combat simulation and AI for micro-management
- Opponent modeling, especially strategy prediction
- Complexity measurements for RTS games
- Communication and cooperation with and within RTS bots
- New forms of interaction with the player
- AI adaptations for more satisfying play experience
- Difficulty adaptation, ability-based matching, ladders, and tournaments
- Automated level/unit/map design for RTS games
- Multiplayer online battle arena (MOBA) games: the next generation of real-time strategy?
Deadline for submissions: July 1, 2014 Final copy due: February 1, 2015
Notification of Acceptance: November 1, 2014 Publication: June 2015
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IEEE TCIAIG,
journals,
special session
Tuesday, April 15, 2014
Reminder: paper submission deadline for KES 2014
A reminder that the deadline for submitting papers to the 18th International Conference on Knowledge-Based and Intelligent Information & Engineering Systems (KES) 2014 is 15 March, 2014. This conference will be held in Gdynia, Poland, 15-17 September, 2014.
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call for papers,
conferences,
reminder
Monday, April 14, 2014
IEEE Computational Intelligence Magazine Volume 9 Issue 2 May 2014
1. What Is Your Main IEEE Society? [Editor's Remarks]
Author(s): Ishibuchi, H.
2. President's Greeting [President's Message]
Author(s): Yao, X.
3. CIS Society Officers
4. Newly Elected CIS Administrative Committee Members (2014-2016) [Society Briefs]
Author(s): Yao, X.
5. IEEE Fellows - Class of 2014 [Society Briefs]
Author(s): Bezdek, J.
6. A Report on the CIS Second Video Competition [Society Briefs]
Author(s): Matthews, S. ; Abdool, A. ; Eliades, D. ; Coyle, D. ; Posada, J. ; Martin, E. ; Sperduti, A. ; Alippi, C. ; Estevez, P.
7. CIS Publication Spotlight
Author(s): Liu, D. ; Lin, C. ; Greenwood, G. ; Lucas, S. ; Zhang, Z.
8. Special Issue on Computational Intelligence for Community-Centric Systems [Guest Editorial]
Author(s): Kubota, N. ; Liu, H.
9. Context-Aware Personal Information Retrieval From Multiple Social Networks
Author(s): Han, X. ; Wei, W. ; Miao, C. ; Mei, J. ; Song, H.
10. Landmark-Based Methods for Temporal Alignment of Human Motions
Author(s): de Dios, P. ; Chung, P. ; Meng, Q.
11. Muscle Fatigue Tracking with Evoked EMG via Recurrent Neural Network: Toward Personalized Neuroprosthetics
Author(s): Li, Z. ; Hayashibe, M. ; Fattal, C. ; Guiraud, D.
12. Jumping NLP Curves: A Review of Natural Language Processing Research [Review Article]
Author(s): Cambria, E. ; White, B.
13. A Memetic Algorithm for Resource Allocation Problem Based on Node-Weighted Graphs [Application Notes]
Author(s): Wu, J. ; Chang, Z. ; Yuan, L. ; Hou, Y. ; Gong, M.
14. Conference Calendar
Author(s): Haddow, P.
15. Call for Papers for Journal Special Issues
16. CEC 2015
Author(s): Ishibuchi, H.
2. President's Greeting [President's Message]
Author(s): Yao, X.
3. CIS Society Officers
4. Newly Elected CIS Administrative Committee Members (2014-2016) [Society Briefs]
Author(s): Yao, X.
5. IEEE Fellows - Class of 2014 [Society Briefs]
Author(s): Bezdek, J.
6. A Report on the CIS Second Video Competition [Society Briefs]
Author(s): Matthews, S. ; Abdool, A. ; Eliades, D. ; Coyle, D. ; Posada, J. ; Martin, E. ; Sperduti, A. ; Alippi, C. ; Estevez, P.
7. CIS Publication Spotlight
Author(s): Liu, D. ; Lin, C. ; Greenwood, G. ; Lucas, S. ; Zhang, Z.
8. Special Issue on Computational Intelligence for Community-Centric Systems [Guest Editorial]
Author(s): Kubota, N. ; Liu, H.
9. Context-Aware Personal Information Retrieval From Multiple Social Networks
Author(s): Han, X. ; Wei, W. ; Miao, C. ; Mei, J. ; Song, H.
10. Landmark-Based Methods for Temporal Alignment of Human Motions
Author(s): de Dios, P. ; Chung, P. ; Meng, Q.
11. Muscle Fatigue Tracking with Evoked EMG via Recurrent Neural Network: Toward Personalized Neuroprosthetics
Author(s): Li, Z. ; Hayashibe, M. ; Fattal, C. ; Guiraud, D.
12. Jumping NLP Curves: A Review of Natural Language Processing Research [Review Article]
Author(s): Cambria, E. ; White, B.
13. A Memetic Algorithm for Resource Allocation Problem Based on Node-Weighted Graphs [Application Notes]
Author(s): Wu, J. ; Chang, Z. ; Yuan, L. ; Hou, Y. ; Gong, M.
14. Conference Calendar
Author(s): Haddow, P.
15. Call for Papers for Journal Special Issues
16. CEC 2015
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
Neural Networks new articles 31 March - 6 April
1. Model, analysis, and evaluation of the effects of analog VLSI arithmetic on linear subspace-based image recognition
Author(s): Gonzalo Carvajal, Miguel Figueroa
Author(s): Gonzalo Carvajal, Miguel Figueroa
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journals,
neural networks
Monday, April 7, 2014
Call for Special Session Proposals for IEEE SSCI 2014
The IEEE Symposium Series on Computational Intelligence (IEEE SSCI 2014) invites Special Session proposals for our December 9 - 12, 2014 conference in Orlando, Florida, USA. Special session proposals can be for any of the symposium under the IEEE SSCI 2014 umbrella. Special Session proposals should include the following:
The deadline for special session proposals is April 15, 2014.
- A brief description, rationale or motivation of the proposed session
- The title of the proposed special session, and the specific symposium under which the special session should be listed
- List of topics and the scope
- A list of authors who have already been invited to participate (if any)
- Short bio information of the SS organizers
The deadline for special session proposals is April 15, 2014.
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conferences,
IEEE SSCI,
special session
Thursday, April 3, 2014
IEEE TNLS Call for Papers: Special issue on "Neurodynamic Systems for Optimization and Applications"
Recurrent neural networks, as dynamical systems, are usually used as models for solving computationally intensive problems. Because of their inherent nature of parallel and distributed information processing, recurrent neural networks are promising computational models for real-time applications. Constrained optimization problems arise in a wide variety of scientific and engineering applications, including signal and image processing, system identification, robot control, process control, pattern recognition, etc. Since the Hopfield neural network was introduced for solving optimization problems, significant progress has been made in theory, algorithms and applications. A number of neurodynamic models have been proposed for solving different problems ranging from discrete optimization to continuous optimization, linear programming to nonlinear optimization, convex optimization to non-convex optimization, smooth optimization to non-smooth optimization, numerical software to analog hardware implementations, etc. Some of them have been successfully applied to robot control, process control, signal and image processing, pattern recognition and classification, economic prediction and so on. In addition, as a kind of neuromorphic systems, they are potentially useful for simulating the brain functions, which is an important topic in neuroscience.
The objective of this special issue is to bring together recent advances in the field of neurodynamic systems for solving optimization problems. We invite original and unpublished research contributions in all relevant areas. We will encourage submissions of papers with new models and applications which would further promote research activities in this area.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
Dec. 31, 2014 – Notification to authors
Feb. 15, 2015 – Deadline for submission of revised manuscripts
Mar.1, 2015 – Final decision
May/June 2015 – Special issue publication in the IEEE TNNLS.
2. Submit the manuscript by Aug 15, 2014 at the IEEE-TNNLS webpage http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/tnnls and follow the submission procedure. Please indicate clearly on the first page of the manuscript and the Author’s Cover Letter that the manuscript has been submitted to the Special Issue on Neurodynamic Systems for Optimization and Applications. Send also an e-mail to chenglong@compsys.ia.ac.cn with subject “TNNLS special issue submission” to notify the editors of your submission.
Huazhong University of Science and Technology, China
zgzeng@hust.edu.cn
http://auto.hust.edu.cn/zhigangzeng/
Andrzej Cichocki
Brain Science Institute, RIKEN, Japan
cia@braiin.riken.jp
http://www.bsp.brain.riken.jp/~cia/
Long Cheng
Institute of Automation, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
long.cheng@ia.ac.cn
http://compsys.ia.ac.cn/~chenglong
Yousheng Xia
Fuzhou University, China
ysxia@fzu.edu.cn
http://cmcs.fzu.edu.cn/action-model-name-teacher-itemid-34
Xiaolin Hu
Tsinghua University, China
xlhu@tsinghua.edu.cn
www.xlhu.cn
The objective of this special issue is to bring together recent advances in the field of neurodynamic systems for solving optimization problems. We invite original and unpublished research contributions in all relevant areas. We will encourage submissions of papers with new models and applications which would further promote research activities in this area.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Neurodynamic models for constrained optimization
- Neurodynamic models for multi-objective optimization
- Neurodynamic models for large-scale optimization problems
- Neurodynamic models for deep learning
- Neurodynamic models for optimal control
- Neurodynamic models for tensor decomposition
- Analysis of neurodynamic optimization systems
- Neurodynamic optimization in the brain
- Neurodynamic optimization for process control
- Neurodynamic optimization for robot control
- Neurodynamic optimization for biomedical engineering problems
- Neurodynamic optimization for signal processing
- Neurodynamic optimization for image processing
- Neurodynamic optimization for support vector machine learning
- Neurodynamic optimization for pattern recognition
- Neurodynamic optimization for other applications
IMPORTANT DATES
Aug. 15, 2014 – Deadline for manuscript submissionDec. 31, 2014 – Notification to authors
Feb. 15, 2015 – Deadline for submission of revised manuscripts
Mar.1, 2015 – Final decision
May/June 2015 – Special issue publication in the IEEE TNNLS.
SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS
1. Read the information for authors at http://cis.ieee.org/tnnls2. Submit the manuscript by Aug 15, 2014 at the IEEE-TNNLS webpage http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/tnnls and follow the submission procedure. Please indicate clearly on the first page of the manuscript and the Author’s Cover Letter that the manuscript has been submitted to the Special Issue on Neurodynamic Systems for Optimization and Applications. Send also an e-mail to chenglong@compsys.ia.ac.cn with subject “TNNLS special issue submission” to notify the editors of your submission.
GUEST EDITORS
Zhigang ZengHuazhong University of Science and Technology, China
zgzeng@hust.edu.cn
http://auto.hust.edu.cn/zhigangzeng/
Andrzej Cichocki
Brain Science Institute, RIKEN, Japan
cia@braiin.riken.jp
http://www.bsp.brain.riken.jp/~cia/
Long Cheng
Institute of Automation, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
long.cheng@ia.ac.cn
http://compsys.ia.ac.cn/~chenglong
Yousheng Xia
Fuzhou University, China
ysxia@fzu.edu.cn
http://cmcs.fzu.edu.cn/action-model-name-teacher-itemid-34
Xiaolin Hu
Tsinghua University, China
xlhu@tsinghua.edu.cn
www.xlhu.cn
Labels:
call for papers,
IEEE TNNLS,
special issue
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
Neural Networks Volume 53, pages 1-172, May 2014
Neural Networks Letters
1. Further results on robustness analysis of global exponential stability of recurrent neural networks with time delays and random disturbancesAuthor(s): Weiwei Luo, Kai Zhong, Song Zhu, Yi Shen
Pages: 127-133
2. Fastest strategy to achieve given number of neuronal firing in theta model
Author(s): Jiaoyan Wang, Qingyun Wang, Guanrong Chen
Pages: 134-145
3. Matrix measure strategies for stability and synchronization of inertial BAM neural network with time delays
Author(s): Jinde Cao, Ying Wan
Pages: 165-172
Learning Systems
4. Cross-person activity recognition using reduced kernel extreme learning machineAuthor(s): Wan-Yu Deng, Qing-Hua Zheng, Zhong-Min Wang
Pages: 1-7
5. Robust head pose estimation via supervised manifold learning
Author(s): Chao Wang, Xubo Song
Pages: 15-25
6. Assist-as-needed robotic trainer based on reinforcement learning and its application to dart-throwing
Author(s): Chihiro Obayashi, Tomoya Tamei, Tomohiro Shibata
Pages: 52-60
7. Kernel learning at the first level of inference
Author(s): Gavin C. Cawley, Nicola L.C. Talbot
Pages: 69-80
8. Similarity preserving low-rank representation for enhanced data representation and effective subspace learning
Author(s): Zhao Zhang, Shuicheng Yan, Mingbo Zhao
Pages: 81-94
9. Learning using privileged information: SVM+ and weighted SVM
Author(s): Maksim Lapin, Matthias Hein, Bernt Schiele
Pages: 95-108
10. Safe semi-supervised learning based on weighted likelihood
Author(s): Masanori Kawakita, Jun’ichi Takeuchi
Pages: 146-164
Mathematical and Computational Analysis
11. Synchronization control of memristor-based recurrent neural networks with perturbationsAuthor(s): Weiping Wang, Lixiang Li, Haipeng Peng, Jinghua Xiao, Yixian Yang
Pages: 8-14
12. Effects of asymmetric coupling and self-coupling on metastable dynamical transient rotating waves in a ring of sigmoidal neurons
Author(s): Yo Horikawa
Pages: 26-39
13. Generalization performance of Gaussian kernels SVMC based on Markov sampling
Author(s): Jie Xu, Yuan Yan Tang, Bin Zou, Zongben Xu, Luoqing Li, Yang Lu
Pages: 40-51
14. Convergence behavior of delayed discrete cellular neural network without periodic coefficients
Author(s): Jinling Wang, Haijun Jiang, Cheng Hu, Tianlong Ma
Pages: 61-68
15. Multiple image mu-stability of neural networks with unbounded time-varying delays
Author(s): Lili Wang, Tianping Chen
Pages: 109-118
16. Extreme learning machine for ranking: Generalization analysis and applications
Author(s): Hong Chen, Jiangtao Peng, Yicong Zhou, Luoqing Li, Zhibin Pan
Pages: 119-126
Labels:
journals,
neural networks
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Neural Networks new articles 24-30 March
1. Toward limb position invariant myoelectric pattern recognition using time-dependent spectral features
Author(s): Rami N. Khushaba, Maen Takruri, Jaime Valls Miro, Sarath Kodagoda
2. A collective neurodynamic optimization approach to bound-constrained nonconvex optimization
Author(s): Zheng Yan, Jun Wang, Guocheng Li
3. Exponential synchronization of delayed memristor-based chaotic neural networks via periodically intermittent control
Author(s): Guodong Zhang, Yi Shen
4. Discrete-time online learning control for a class of unknown nonaffine nonlinear systems using reinforcement learning
Author(s): Xiong Yang, Derong Liu, Ding Wang, Qinglai Wei
5. A global coupling index of multivariate neural series with application to the evaluation of mild cognitive impairment
Author(s): Dong Wen, Qing Xue, Chengbiao Lu, Xinyong Guan, Yuping Wang, Xiaoli Li
6. Detecting cells using non-negative matrix factorization on calcium imaging data
Author(s): Ryuichi Maruyama, Kazuma Maeda, Hajime Moroda, Ichiro Kato, Masashi Inoue, Hiroyoshi Miyakawa, Toru Aonishi
Author(s): Rami N. Khushaba, Maen Takruri, Jaime Valls Miro, Sarath Kodagoda
2. A collective neurodynamic optimization approach to bound-constrained nonconvex optimization
Author(s): Zheng Yan, Jun Wang, Guocheng Li
3. Exponential synchronization of delayed memristor-based chaotic neural networks via periodically intermittent control
Author(s): Guodong Zhang, Yi Shen
4. Discrete-time online learning control for a class of unknown nonaffine nonlinear systems using reinforcement learning
Author(s): Xiong Yang, Derong Liu, Ding Wang, Qinglai Wei
5. A global coupling index of multivariate neural series with application to the evaluation of mild cognitive impairment
Author(s): Dong Wen, Qing Xue, Chengbiao Lu, Xinyong Guan, Yuping Wang, Xiaoli Li
6. Detecting cells using non-negative matrix factorization on calcium imaging data
Author(s): Ryuichi Maruyama, Kazuma Maeda, Hajime Moroda, Ichiro Kato, Masashi Inoue, Hiroyoshi Miyakawa, Toru Aonishi
Labels:
journals,
neural networks
Monday, March 31, 2014
IEEE Transactions on Evolutionary Computation Volume 18, Number 2, April 2014
PAPERS
1. Artificial Biochemical Networks: Evolving Dynamical Systems to Control Dynamical SystemsAuthor(s): M. A. Lones, L. A. Fuente, A. P. Turner, L. S. D. Caves, S. Stepney, S. L. Smith, and A. M. Tyrrell
Pages: 145-166
2. Multi-Objective Optimization by Using Evolutionary Algorithms: The p-Optimality Criteria
Author(s): E. Carre ̃no Jara
Pages: 167-179
3. A Gaussian Process Surrogate Model Assisted Evolutionary Algorithm for Medium Scale Expensive Optimization Problems
Author(s): B. Liu, Q. Zhang, and G. G. E. Gielen
Pages: 180-192
4. Automatic Design of Scheduling Policies for Dynamic Multi-objective Job Shop Scheduling via Cooperative Coevolution Genetic Programming
Author(s): S. Nguyen, M. Zhang, M. Johnston, and K. Chen Tan
Pages: 193-208
5. An Improved Differential Evolution Algorithm for Practical Dynamic Scheduling in Steelmaking-Continuous Casting Production
Author(s): L. Tang, Y. Zhao, and J. Liu
Pages: 209-225
6. Frequency Fitness Assignment
Author(s): T. Weise, M. Wan, P. Wang, K. Tang, A. Devert, and X. Yao
Pages: 226-243
7. Localization of License Plate Number Using Dynamic Image Processing Techniques and Genetic Algorithms
Author(s): G. Abo Samra and F. Khalefah
Pages: 244-257
8. Comparison Study of Swarm Intelligence Techniques for the Annual Crop Planning Problem
Author(s): S. Chetty and A. O. Adewumi
Pages: 258-268
9. Fuzzy-Based Pareto Optimality for Many-Objective Evolutionary Algorithms
Author(s): Z. He, G. G. Yen, and J. Zhang
Pages: 269-287
10. A Distance-Based Ranking Model Estimation of Distribution Algorithm for the Flowshop Scheduling Problem
Author(s): J. Ceberio, E. Irurozki, A. Mendiburu, and J. A. Lozano
Pages: 286-300
LETTER
11. A Discrete Firefly Algorithm for the Multi-Objective Hybrid Flowshop Scheduling ProblemsAuthor(s): M. K. Marichelvam, T. Prabaharan, and X. S. Yang
Pages: 301
Friday, March 28, 2014
IEEE Transactions on Fuzzy Systems Volume 22, Number 2, April 2014
REGULAR PAPERS
1. Fuzzy Approximation-Based Adaptive Control of Nonlinear Delayed Systems With Unknown Dead ZoneAuthor(s): B.Chen,X.Liu,K.Liu,and C.Lin
Pages: 237-248
2. Output Feedback Predictive Control With One Free Control Move for Nonlinear Systems Represented by a Takagi–Sugeno Model
Author(s): B.Ding and X.Ping
Pages: 249-263
3. Individual Decision Making Can Drive Epidemics: A Fuzzy Cognitive Map Study
Author(s): S. Mei, Y. Zhu, X. Qiu, X. Zhou, Z. Zu, A. V. Boukhanovsky, and P. M. A. Sloot
Pages: 264-273
4. Adaptive Fault Diagnosis for T–S Fuzzy Systems With Sensor Faults and System Performance Analysis
Author(s): Q.Shen, B.Jiang, and P.Shi
Pages: 274-285
5. Adaptive Fuzzy Hierarchical Sliding-Mode Control for the Trajectory Tracking of Uncertain Underactuated Nonlinear Dynamic Systems
Author(s): C.-L.Hwang, C.-C.Chiang, and Y.-W.Yeh
Pages: 286-299
6. Atanassov’s Intuitionistic Fuzzy Programming Method for Heterogeneous Multiattribute Group Decision Making With Atanassov’s Intuitionistic Fuzzy Truth Degrees
Author(s): S.-P. Wan and D.-F. Li
Pages: 300-312
7. Novel Stability Criteria for T–S Fuzzy Systems
Author(s): X. Zhao, L. Zhang, P. Shi, and H. R. Karimi
Pages: 313-323
8. A Fuzzy Model With Online Incremental SVM and Margin-Selective Gradient Descent Learning for Classification Problems
Author(s): W.-Y. Cheng and C.-F. Juang
Pages: 324-337
9. Adaptive Fuzzy Observer-Based Active Fault-Tolerant Dynamic Surface Control for a Class of Nonlinear Systems With Actuator Faults
Author(s): Q.Shen, B.Jiang, and V.Cocquempot
Pages: 338-349
10. Universal Fuzzy Integral Sliding-Mode Controllers Based on T–S Fuzzy Models
Author(s): Q. Gao, L. Liu, G. Feng, Y. Wang, and J. Qiu
Pages: 350-362
11. What and When Can We Gain From the Kernel Versions of C-Means Algorithm?
Author(s): N. R. Pal and K. Sarkar
Pages: 363-379
12. Dissipativity Analysis and Synthesis for Discrete-Time T–S Fuzzy Stochastic Systems With Time-Varying Delay
Author(s): L.Wu, X.Yang, and H.-K.Lam
Pages: 380-394
13. Making Use of Partial Knowledge About Hidden States in HMMs: An Approach Based on Belief Functions
Author(s): E.Ramasso and T.Denoeux
Pages: 395-405
14. Decentralized Fuzzy Observer-Based Output-Feedback Control for Nonlinear Large-Scale Systems: An LMI Approach
Author(s): G.B.Koo, J.B.Park, and Y.H.Joo
Pages: 406-419
15. L_p Consonant Approximations of Belief Functions
Author(s): F. Cuzzolin
Pages: 420-436
16. Adaptive Fuzzy Control for Multilateral Cooperative Teleoperation of Multiple Robotic Manipulators Under Random Network-Induced Delays
Author(s): Z. Li, Y. Xia, and F. Sun
Pages: 437-450
SHORT PAPERS
17. TSK Observers for Discrete Type-1 and Type-2 FuzzySystemsAuthor(s): M. S. Fadali and S. Jafarzadeh
Pages: 451-458
18. Robust H∞ Control of TS Fuzzy Time-Delay Systems via a New Sliding-Mode Control Scheme
Author(s): Q.Gao, G.Feng, Z.Xi, Y.Wang, and J.Qiu
Pages: 459-464
19. Toward Necessity of Parametric Conditions for Monotonic Fuzzy Systems
Author(s): J.-M. Won and F. Karray
Pages: 465-470
Thursday, March 27, 2014
Conference paper deadline: CEC 2015
The deadline for submitting papers to the IEEE Congress on Evolutionary Computation (IEEE CEC) 2015 is December 19, 2014. This conference will be held in Sendai, Japan, 25-28 May, 2015.
Labels:
call for papers,
conferences,
deadline
Wednesday, March 26, 2014
Conference paper deadline: PRICAI 2014
The deadline for submitting papers to the 13th Pacific Rim International Conference on Artificial Intelligence (PRICAI) 2014 is June 29, 2014. This conference will be held in the Gold Coast, Australia, 1-5 December, 2014.
Labels:
call for papers,
conferences,
deadline
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
Neural Networks new articles 17 March - 24 March
1. Stochastic nonlinear time series forecasting using time-delay reservoir computers: Performance and universality
Author(s): Lyudmila Grigoryeva, Julie Henriques, Laurent Larger, Juan-Pablo Ortega
2. New criterion of asymptotic stability for delay systems with time-varying structures and delays
Author(s): Bo Liu, Wenlian Lu, Tianping Chen
3. A systematic method for analyzing robust stability of interval neural networks with time-delays based on stability criteria
Author(s): Zhenyuan Guo, Jun Wang, Zheng Yan
Author(s): Lyudmila Grigoryeva, Julie Henriques, Laurent Larger, Juan-Pablo Ortega
2. New criterion of asymptotic stability for delay systems with time-varying structures and delays
Author(s): Bo Liu, Wenlian Lu, Tianping Chen
3. A systematic method for analyzing robust stability of interval neural networks with time-delays based on stability criteria
Author(s): Zhenyuan Guo, Jun Wang, Zheng Yan
Labels:
journals,
neural networks
Monday, March 24, 2014
Conference paper deadline: ICONIP 2014
The deadline for submitting papers to the 21st International Conference on Neural Information Processing (ICONIP) 2014 is May 2, 2014. This conference will be held in Kuching, Malaysia, 3-6 November, 2014.
Labels:
call for papers,
conferences,
deadline
Friday, March 21, 2014
Neural Networks new articles 10 March - 16 March
1. Learning invariant object recognition from temporal correlation in a hierarchical network
Author(s): Markus Lessmann, Rolf P. Würtz
2. Impulsive synchronization schemes of stochastic complex networks with switching topology: Average time approach
Author(s): Chaojie Li, Wenwu Yu, Tingwen Huang
Author(s): Markus Lessmann, Rolf P. Würtz
2. Impulsive synchronization schemes of stochastic complex networks with switching topology: Average time approach
Author(s): Chaojie Li, Wenwu Yu, Tingwen Huang
Labels:
journals,
neural networks
Thursday, March 20, 2014
Finding an academic job
Finding a job for any profession is difficult, but finding a job in
academia can be ridiculously hard. Since I finished my PhD ten years
ago, I've had two periods of unemployment, totalling more than six
months out of work. Since I was the sole income-earner for my family at
the time, those periods were particularly difficult and stressful to get
through, but I got through them, as much by luck as by design.
I've come across a collection of articles on finding academic jobs, that I wanted to share and comment on. I tend to agree with what most of them have to say, even though they're not specific to computational intelligence in particular or even computer science or engineering in general.
The first discusses whether you should even go for an academic job. For computer scientists it is probably easier to go into industry with a PhD than it is for other PhD graduates. The tech industry is always strong somewhere, and it is always growing, so there are always jobs to be had. In my own country of New Zealand, at any one time there are usually between two and three thousand vacancies in the IT sector, and that's out of a country of around four million.
The second article discusses ways to improve your chances of getting an academic job. The authors mention engaging with the community, publishing papers and emphasising transferable skills. I've actually had one supervisor tell me that there is nothing more important than publishing papers, while this article argues that too much publishing runs the risk of establishing nothing more than an unfocussed research record, and this article argues that teaching experience, including experience designing and administering courses, is very important for getting an academic job. Even though I was more interested in the research side of things during my Honours year, I still worked as a tutor for a database course, and during my post-grad years I tutored computational intelligence courses. Near the end of my studies, I worked full-time as a teaching fellow (I believe in the USA that would be Teaching Assistant, but I can't be sure) and did re-work and administer courses. I am quite certain that this experience helped me to get the job I have now.
Having decided to stay in academia, and done the ground-work to enter the academic profession, the next step is to find an academic job. When you've identified a job you are interested in, the first thing you must do it get your academic CV in order. There are several common mistakes you must avoid in this document, since one mistake is all it takes for a recruiter (who are not academics) to discard your entire application. The previous two articles have some very good pieces of advice for laying out your CV, and I have applied several of them to improve my own CV.
Things like career objective statements should also be left out of a CV. My current job means that I regularly receive unsolicited emails complete with CV from people wanting a teaching job in my department, and most of them have things like career objective statements that have nothing whatsoever to do with my department or any kind of teaching job. Nothing says "desperate blanket bombing" like failing to do even a minimum of research about the place you are sending your job application to.
The other major component of an application for an academic job is the cover letter. This should also be specific for the position you are applying for, it should cover all of the criteria mentioned in the job advertisement, and it should be short. If you make it too long and detailed, then you run the risk of boring the recruiter before they finish reading, which usually results in your application being thrown away.
If you have a compelling CV, and have written a very good cover letter that shows that you are very well suited to the job, then you might get an interview. This article talks about how to prepare for an interview. One of the points in it that I would emphasise is the need to do your research before the interview. One of the fundamental rules in the Art of War is "Know yourself, and know others, and you shall have one hundred victories in one hundred battles". This applies to interviews as well! Know who is going to be interviewing you: have they published with anyone you know? Is there any other connection? What relationship does their research have to yours? This article also has some tips on how to handle tricky interview questions. Some questions just can't be answered well, like the question I got once about how I demonstrated an awareness of diversity in the classroom (I'm from the whitest district in New Zealand and I married a Chinese, I think that shows a pretty good awareness of diversity). Obviously, some self-confidence is very important, and I've been lucky in that a couple of times some really good people have boosted my self-esteem just before interviews.
Usually, by the end of an interview, I know whether I've gotten the job or not, just by the way the interview went. If I have struggled with any of the questions, then I probably won't get it. If it's gone smoothly, then I know I've got a much better chance. There have been a couple of cases where the interview went well and I still didn't get the job, but those were years ago and for positions that were probably above my skill level at the time.
Job hunting is brutal, and academic positions invariably attract a lot of applications (especially New Zealand positions, as for some reason a lot of people want to move here). The last time I was out of work, I sent off two dozen applications, which resulted in three interviews, which led to two job offers. And that was with a PhD, four years teaching experience, almost five years post-doc experience, and more than forty publications. But, if you stick to it, you will find a job. It might not be the job you first had in mind when you started, but it will be just as good, and any job is good experience if you're clever about how you do it.
I've come across a collection of articles on finding academic jobs, that I wanted to share and comment on. I tend to agree with what most of them have to say, even though they're not specific to computational intelligence in particular or even computer science or engineering in general.
The first discusses whether you should even go for an academic job. For computer scientists it is probably easier to go into industry with a PhD than it is for other PhD graduates. The tech industry is always strong somewhere, and it is always growing, so there are always jobs to be had. In my own country of New Zealand, at any one time there are usually between two and three thousand vacancies in the IT sector, and that's out of a country of around four million.
The second article discusses ways to improve your chances of getting an academic job. The authors mention engaging with the community, publishing papers and emphasising transferable skills. I've actually had one supervisor tell me that there is nothing more important than publishing papers, while this article argues that too much publishing runs the risk of establishing nothing more than an unfocussed research record, and this article argues that teaching experience, including experience designing and administering courses, is very important for getting an academic job. Even though I was more interested in the research side of things during my Honours year, I still worked as a tutor for a database course, and during my post-grad years I tutored computational intelligence courses. Near the end of my studies, I worked full-time as a teaching fellow (I believe in the USA that would be Teaching Assistant, but I can't be sure) and did re-work and administer courses. I am quite certain that this experience helped me to get the job I have now.
Having decided to stay in academia, and done the ground-work to enter the academic profession, the next step is to find an academic job. When you've identified a job you are interested in, the first thing you must do it get your academic CV in order. There are several common mistakes you must avoid in this document, since one mistake is all it takes for a recruiter (who are not academics) to discard your entire application. The previous two articles have some very good pieces of advice for laying out your CV, and I have applied several of them to improve my own CV.
Things like career objective statements should also be left out of a CV. My current job means that I regularly receive unsolicited emails complete with CV from people wanting a teaching job in my department, and most of them have things like career objective statements that have nothing whatsoever to do with my department or any kind of teaching job. Nothing says "desperate blanket bombing" like failing to do even a minimum of research about the place you are sending your job application to.
The other major component of an application for an academic job is the cover letter. This should also be specific for the position you are applying for, it should cover all of the criteria mentioned in the job advertisement, and it should be short. If you make it too long and detailed, then you run the risk of boring the recruiter before they finish reading, which usually results in your application being thrown away.
If you have a compelling CV, and have written a very good cover letter that shows that you are very well suited to the job, then you might get an interview. This article talks about how to prepare for an interview. One of the points in it that I would emphasise is the need to do your research before the interview. One of the fundamental rules in the Art of War is "Know yourself, and know others, and you shall have one hundred victories in one hundred battles". This applies to interviews as well! Know who is going to be interviewing you: have they published with anyone you know? Is there any other connection? What relationship does their research have to yours? This article also has some tips on how to handle tricky interview questions. Some questions just can't be answered well, like the question I got once about how I demonstrated an awareness of diversity in the classroom (I'm from the whitest district in New Zealand and I married a Chinese, I think that shows a pretty good awareness of diversity). Obviously, some self-confidence is very important, and I've been lucky in that a couple of times some really good people have boosted my self-esteem just before interviews.
Usually, by the end of an interview, I know whether I've gotten the job or not, just by the way the interview went. If I have struggled with any of the questions, then I probably won't get it. If it's gone smoothly, then I know I've got a much better chance. There have been a couple of cases where the interview went well and I still didn't get the job, but those were years ago and for positions that were probably above my skill level at the time.
Job hunting is brutal, and academic positions invariably attract a lot of applications (especially New Zealand positions, as for some reason a lot of people want to move here). The last time I was out of work, I sent off two dozen applications, which resulted in three interviews, which led to two job offers. And that was with a PhD, four years teaching experience, almost five years post-doc experience, and more than forty publications. But, if you stick to it, you will find a job. It might not be the job you first had in mind when you started, but it will be just as good, and any job is good experience if you're clever about how you do it.
Labels:
career management
Wednesday, March 19, 2014
IEEE Transactions on Neural Networks and Learning Systems Volume 25, Number 4, April 2014
REGULAR PAPERS
1. Dynamic Uncertain Causality Graph for Knowledge Representation and Probabilistic Reasoning: Statistics Base, Matrix, and ApplicationAuthor(s): Q. Zhang, C. Dong, Y. Cui, and Z. Yang
Pages: 645-663
2. T2FELA: Type-2 Fuzzy Extreme Learning Algorithm for Fast Training of Interval Type-2 TSK Fuzzy Logic System
Author(s): Z. Deng, K.-S. Choi, L. Cao, and S. Wang
Pages: 664-676
3. Adaptive Quasi-Newton Algorithm for Source Extraction via CCA Approach
Author(s): W.-T. Zhang, S.-T. Lou, and D.-Z. Feng
Pages: 677-689
4. Lagrange Stability of Memristive Neural Networks With Discrete and Distributed Delays
Author(s): A. Wu and Z. Zeng
Pages: 690-703
5. Attractivity Analysis of Memristor-Based Cellular Neural Networks With Time-Varying Delays
Author(s): Z. Guo, J. Wang, and Z. Yan
Pages: 704-717
6. Novel Neural Control for a Class of Uncertain Pure-Feedback Systems
Author(s): Q. Shen, P. Shi, T. Zhang, and C.-C. Lim
Pages: 718-727
7. An Ordered-Patch-Based Image Classification Approach on the Image Grassmannian Manifold
Author(s): C. Xu, T. Wang, J. Gao, S. Cao, W. Tao, and F. Liu
Pages: 728-737
8. Artificial Neural Networks for Control of a Grid-Connected Rectifier/Inverter Under Disturbance, Dynamic and Power Converter Switching Conditions
Author(s): S. Li, M. Fairbank, C. Johnson, D. C. Wunsch, E. Alonso, and J. L. Proaño
Pages: 738-750
9. A Stochastic Mean Field Model for an Excitatory and Inhibitory Synaptic Drive Cortical Neuronal Network
Author(s): Q. Hui, W. M. Haddad, J. M. Bailey, and T. Hayakawa
Pages: 751-763
10. RandomBoost: Simplified Multiclass Boosting Through Randomization
Author(s): S. Paisitkriangkrai, C. Shen, Q. Shi, and A. van den Hengel
Pages: 764-779
11. A Unified Learning Framework for Single Image Super-Resolution
Author(s): J. Yu, X. Gao, D. Tao, X. Li, and K. Zhang
Pages: 780-792
12. L1-Norm Kernel Discriminant Analysis via Bayes Error Bound Optimization for Robust Feature Extraction
Author(s): W. Zheng, Z. Lin, and H. Wang
Pages: 793-805
BRIEF PAPERS
13. Online Motor Fault Detection and Diagnosis Using a Hybrid FMM-CART ModelAuthor(s): M. Seera and C. P. Lim
Pages: 806-811
14. Feature-Based Ordering Algorithm for Data Presentation of Fuzzy ARTMAP Ensembles
Author(s): T. H. Oong and N. A. M. Isa
Pages: 812-818
16. Self-Organization in Autonomous, Recurrent, Firing-Rate CrossNets With Quasi-Hebbian Plasticity
Author(s): T. J. Walls and K. K. Likharev
Pages: 819-823
17. A Recurrent Neural Network for Solving Bilevel Linear Programming Problem
Author(s): X. He, C. Li, T. Huang, C. Li, and J. Huang
Pages: 824-829
18. Local Stability Analysis of Discrete-Time, Continuous-State, Complex-Valued Recurrent Neural Networks With Inner State Feedback
Author(s): M. Mostafa, W. G. Teich, and J. Lindner
Pages: 830-842
19. Sparse Bayesian Extreme Learning Machine for Multi-classification
Author(s): J. Luo, C.-M. Vong, and P.-K. Wong
Pages: 843
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