| |||||||||||
BioDM 2012 : ICDM-2012 Workshop on Biological Data Mining and its Applications in Healthcare | |||||||||||
Link: http://www1.i2r.a-star.edu.sg/~xlli/BioDM.html | |||||||||||
| |||||||||||
Call For Papers | |||||||||||
CFP ICDM-2012 Workshop on Biological Data Mining and its Applications in Healthcare
December 10, 2012, Brussels, Belgium Workshop Co-Chairs: Xiao-Li Li, See-Kiong Ng, Jason T.L. Wang http://www1.i2r.a-star.edu.sg/~xlli/BioDM.html 1. Introduction Biologists are stepping up their efforts in understanding the biological processes that underlie disease pathways in the clinical contexts. This has resulted in a flood of biological and clinical data from genomic sequences, DNA microarrays, and protein interactions, to biomedical images, disease pathways, and electronic health records. We are in a scenario where our capability to generate biomedical data has greatly surpassed our abilities to mine and analyze the data. To exploit these biomedical data for discovering new knowledge that can be translated into clinical applications, there are fundamental data analysis difficulties that have to be overcome. Practical issues such as handling noisy and incomplete data (e.g. protein interactions have high false positive and false negative rates), processing compute-intensive tasks (e.g. large scale graph mining), and integrating heterogeneous data sources (e.g. linking genomic data, proteomics data with clinical databases) are new challenges faced by biologists in the post-genome era. We can expect data mining to play an increasingly crucial role in furthering biological research, since data mining is designed to handle challenging data analysis problems. In fact, it is our hope that data mining will be the next technical innovation employed by biologists to enable them to make insightful observations and groundbreaking discoveries from their wide array of heterogeneous data from molecular biology to pharmaceutical and clinical domains. There are therefore unprecedented opportunities for data mining researchers from the computer science domain to contribute to this meaningful scientific pursuit together with the biologists and clinical scientists. The mission of this workshop is to disseminate the research results and best practices of data mining approaches to the cross-disciplinary researchers and practitioners from both the data mining disciplines and the life sciences domains. We therefore encourage submission of papers using data mining techniques to address the challenging issues in various biological data analysis. In particular, we especially welcome the submissions reporting data mining techniques in healthcare related applications that integrate the use of biological data in a clinical context for translational research. 2. The topics of interest The topics of the workshop include but are not limited to: • Biological and medical data collection, cleansing, and integration • Biological and medical data visualization • Bioimage analysis • Data pre-processing to handle noisy, missing biological and medical data • Knowledge representation and annotation of biological and medical data • Machine learning algorithms for biological and healthcare applications • Disease bioinformatics • Computational methods for drug discovery • Biological markers detection • Pharmacogenomics data mining • Analysis of complex disorders • Integration of biological and clinical data for translational research • Bioinformatics databases and resources • Text mining algorithms for biological and healthcare applications • Biological network analysis (protein interaction network, metabolic network, transcription factor network, signalling network, etc.) • Pattern analysis in computational genetics, genomics and proteomics • Semantic web and knowledge acquisition in biology and healthcare • Electronic health records and biomedical repositories 3. Important Dates Aug 10, 2012: Due date for paper submission Oct 1, 2012: Notification of paper acceptance to authors October 15, 2012: Camera-ready versions of accepted papers December 10, 2012: Workshop date 4. Submissions Paper submissions are limited to a maximum of 8 pages in the IEEE 2-column format (Please refer to http://icdm2012.ua.ac.be/). All papers will be reviewed by the Program Committee based on technical quality, relevance to data mining, originality, significance, and clarity. A double blind reviewing process will be adopted. Authors should therefore avoid using identifying information in the text of the paper. All papers should be submitted through the ICDM Workshop Submission Site. All accepted workshop papers will be published in a separate ICDM workshop proceedings published by the IEEE Computer Society Press. In addition, authors with accepted papers to the workshop will have the opportunity to be invited to publish their extended versions in the following two venues: a) as book chapters in an edited book which will be published by World Scientific and b) as journal papers in International Journal of Knowledge Discovery in Bioinformatics (IJKDB). 5. PC members Zhang Aidong, State University of New York at Buffalo (UB), USA Tatsuya Akutsu, Kyoto University, Japan Zeyar Aung, Masdar Institute of Science and Technology, UAE Vladimir Bajic, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, Saudi Arabia Jake Chen, Indiana University School of Informatics, Indianapolis, USA Jin Chen, Michigan State University, USA Honnian Chua, Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore Juan Cui, University of Georgia, USA Yang Dai, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA Aryya Gangopadhyay, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, USA Xin Gao, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, Saudi Arabia Xiaoxu Han, Eastern Michigan University, USA David Hansen, Australian e-Health Research Centre, Australia Jun (Luke) Huan, University of Kansas, USA Jimmy Huang, York University, Canada Daisuke Kihara, Purdue University, USA Chee Keong Kwoh, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Hiroshi Mamitsuka, Kyoto University, Japan George Perry, University of Texas at San Antonio, USA Mark A. Ragan, The University of Queensland, Australia Raul Rabadan, Columbia University, USA Jianhua Ruan, University of Texas at San Antonio, USA Saeed Salem, North Dakota State University Ambuj K Singh, University of California at Santa Barbara, USA Narayanaswamy Srinivasan, Indian Institute of Science, India Zeeshan Syed, University of Michigan, USA Vincent S. Tseng, National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan Alfonso Valencia, Spanish National Cancer Research Centre, Spain Hong Yan, City University of Hong Kong, China Philip S. Yu, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA Erliang Zeng, University of Notre Dame, USA Xiaoling Zhang, Boston University, Boston, MA Marketa Zvelebil, Breaktrhough Breast Cancer Research - ICR, UK |
|