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ALRA 2012 : ALRA : Active Learning in Real-world Applications (Workshop ECML-PKDD 2012) | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://www.nomao.com/labs/alra | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
ALRA : Active Learning in Real-world Applications
Workshop ECML-PKDD 2012 This workshop aims to offer a meeting opportunity for academics and industry-related researchers, belonging to the various communities of Computational Intelligence, Machine Learning, Experimental Design and Data Mining to discuss new areas of active learning, and to bridge the gap between data acquisition or experimentation and model building. How active sampling, incremental learning and data acquisition, can contribute towards the design and modeling of highly intelligent machine learning systems? Machine learning indicates methods and algorithms which allow a model to learn a behavior thanks to examples. Active learning gathers methods which select examples used to build a training dataset for the predictive model. All the strategies aim to use a set of examples as small as possible and to select the most informative examples. When designing active learning algorithms for real-world data, some specific issues are raised. The main ones are scalability and practicability. Methods must be able to handle high volumes of data, and the process for labeling new examples by an expert must be optimized. We encourage papers that describe applications of active learning in real-world. The industrial context, the main difficulties met and the original solution developed, shall be described. Contributions on the following challenge, that proposes such a practical application of active learning, will also be welcome. Associated challenge As a search engine of places, Nomao collects data coming from multiple sources on the web and needs to aggregate them properly. The deduplication process consists in detecting what data refer to the same place. To automate this process, using Machine Learning is well suited, and to optimize the creation of the training dataset, using Active Learning is appropriate. However, in that case, millions of data must be labeled, so labeling the training examples one by one, and running the model at each step, is unpracticable. Instead, sets of examples must be proposed for labeling, and this raises specific issues. Today, 33.059 examples have already been labeled, each example being characterized by 118 features. This training dataset is available on the Nomao Challenge page. A huge test dataset of unlabeled examples will also be provided. Then two active campaigns will be organized, each participant being allowed to ask for the labeling of a given number (e.g. 100) of the test examples by an expert. Then a final test campaign will be carried out to evaluate the different approaches proposed, each participant being asked to label a given set of examples, and their predictions being compared to the known true labels. Papers that address this issue will be welcome. Authors will thus contribute to the confrontation of proposed solutions and to discussions during the workshop. And author of the best results will receive a free registration for the workshop. Topics of interest include (but are not limited to) Active Learning Experimental Design Incremental Learning On-line learning Case Studies of Active Learning Key dates Workshop website online: Friday, April 6, 2012 First active campaign: Friday, May 4, 2012 Second active campaign: Friday, May 18, 2012 Final test campaign: Friday, June 1, 2012 Paper submission deadline: Friday, June 29, 2012 Paper acceptance notification: Friday, July 20, 2012 Paper camera-ready deadline: Friday, August 3, 2012 Workshop: Friday, September 28, 2012 Biographies of the organizers Laurent Candillier Nomao - Ebuzzing Group 1 avenue Jean Rieux 31500 Toulouse Tel.: +33 6 64 35 08 72 Email: laurent@nomao.com Bibliography: lcandillier.free.fr Max Chevalier IRIT - SIG 118, route de Narbonne 31062 Toulouse cedex 09 Tel.: +33 5 61 55 74 43 Email: max.chevalier@irit.fr Bibliography: www.irit.fr/~Max.Chevalier Vincent Lemaire Orange Labs 2 avenue Pierre Marzin 22300 Lannion Tel.: +33 2 96 05 31 07 Email: vincent.lemaire@orange.com Bibliography: perso.rd.francetelecom.fr/lemaire/ Program Committee Mahmoud Abou-Nasr (Ford Motor Company, USA) Cesare Alippi (Politecnico di Milano, Italia) Albert Bifet (University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand) Zalan Bodo (Babeg Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania) Lehel Csato (Babeg Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania) Gideon Dror (Academic college of Tel-Aviv Yaffo, Israel) Hugo Jair Escalante (National Institute of Astrophysics, Optics and Electronics, Mexico) Matthieu Geist (IMS Research Group, Supelec, Metz, France) Liang Lan (Temple University, Philadelphia, USA) Chris Lovell (University of Southampton, UK) George Runger (Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA) Burr Settles (Carnegie Mellon University, USA) Fabien Torre (INRIA, Lille 1 University, France) Ming-Hen Tsai (National Taiwan University) Ioannis Tsamardinos (University of Crete, Greece) Slobodan Vucetic (Temple University, Philadelphia, USA) Submissions Submitted papers must be written in English and formatted according to the Springer LNAI guidelines. Instructions for authors and paper stylesheet files can be downloaded at: http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html The maximum length of papers should not exceed 16 pages. The papers will have to be submitted via Easy Chair: http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=alraecml2012 Papers will normally be reviewed by three referees. The review process is single-blind (reviewer identities unknown to authors) and there will be no opportunity for author rebuttal. This decision was made to minimize reviewer workload and to concentrate it in time, which may ultimately result in better review quality and decisions. If necessary, a discussion will take place among the reviewers of a paper until a decision is reached. |
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