posted by user: kerstin || 3409 views || tracked by 5 users: [display]

KnowGen 2010 : Workshop on Knowledge Generation for Case-Based Reasoning

FacebookTwitterLinkedInGoogle

Link: https://www.iis.uni-hildesheim.de/Knowgen2010/
 
When Jul 20, 2010 - Jul 20, 2010
Where Alessandria, Italy
Submission Deadline Apr 23, 2010
Notification Due May 10, 2010
Final Version Due May 10, 2010
Categories    artificial intelligence   case-based reasoning   knowledge acquisition   uncertainty
 

Call For Papers

Overview

Case-based Reasoning systems rely on their underlying knowledge that is organized in knowledge containers and required for each phase of the case-based problem-solving process. The knowledge acquisition is a core task during the development of Case-Based Reasoning systems. Once a Case-Based Reasoning system is running, the knowledge within the knowledge containers has to be maintained in order to keep the system up-to-date. The generation and usage of knowledge affects all areas of Case-Based Reasoning: the generation of vocabulary knowledge, the specification of similarity measures or the adaptation of retrieved solutions.

The workshop focuses on methods for supporting the automated generation/acquisition of knowledge for Case-Based Reasoning systems. We are looking for approaches that contribute to any one of the knowledge containers or the phases of the case-based problem-solving process. An important and special case is knowledge about similarity, because cases are selected based on their similarity to a current problem description. Since similarity measures usually contain significant domain knowledge, knowledge generation plays a major role in the development of similarity measures.

Naturally, the knowledge generated is uncertain. Representing and processing this uncertainty (which corresponds to a kind of meta-knowledge, i.e., knowledge about the knowledge) in an adequate way is an important issue that should also be addressed in the workshop. Especially in knowledge areas with complex, approximate, imprecise cases and heterogeneous domains, the domain knowledge is usually uncertain and incomplete. We are interested in examining how reliable the acquired knowledge is, or what confidence we have in it as well as the types of uncertainty that need to be determined and dealt with using appropriate methods and techniques.

The organizers welcome contributions on the topic of:

* Assigning confidence
* Automatic case generation adaptation knowledge generation
* Maintenance knowledge
* Probabilistic reasoning and Bayesian methods,
* Fuzzy sets, possibility theory, evidence theory,
* Rough sets and information theory,
* Machine learning and data mining algorithms
* Case and knowledge representation, acquisition, and modeling,
* Maintenance and management of CBR systems,
* Case indexing and retrieval,
* Similarity assessment and adaptation
* Flexible similarity measures,
* Similarity measures for complex, imprecise and heterogeneous case domains,
* Maintenance of corporate memories,
* Instance-based and case-based learning,
* Confidence,
* CBR applications.

Submissions

We encourage submissions of papers that report on advances in these core areas. In addition to full papers we also encourage submissions presenting more preliminary results and discussing open problems, for example, dealing with insights or important open problems for future research derived from the construction and use of applications. Correspondingly, two types of contributions will be solicited, namely short communications (short talks) and full papers (long talks).

We also encourage authors to submit papers complementing possible submissions to the main ICCBR conference, for example, papers presenting preliminary extensions or explicitly focusing on unsolved problems. In this case, we only ask to inform us about the existence of a related conference submission and its title.

We invite paper submissions including descriptions of works in progress, research contributions, and position statements. Submissions should attempt to address issues relating to knowledge discovery and similarity in case-based reasoning. Workshop papers should be submitted in Springer LNCS format, which is the format required for the final camera ready copy, with a maximum of 10 pages.

Submissions should be made through the workshop conference management system: EasyChair: https://www.easychair.org/login.cgi?conf=iccbr2010.
For further information do not hesitate to contact the workshop organizers.

Related Resources

ICCBR 2025   33rd International Conference on Case-based Reasoning
IEEE-Ei/Scopus-ITCC 2025   2025 5th International Conference on Information Technology and Cloud Computing (ITCC 2025)-EI Compendex
KES 2025   29th International Conference on Knowledge-Based and Intelligent Information & Engineering Systems
SPIE-Ei/Scopus-DMNLP 2025   2025 2nd International Conference on Data Mining and Natural Language Processing (DMNLP 2025)-EI Compendex&Scopus
CABI Tourism: Indigenous Tourism 2025   CABI Tourism Case Studies: The Diverse Tapestry of Indigenous Tourism: A Multifaceted Landscape
IEEE-Ei/Scopus-CNIOT 2025   2025 IEEE 6th International Conference on Computing, Networks and Internet of Things (CNIOT 2025) -EI Compendex
NGISE 2025   1st International Conference on Next Generation Information System Engineering
AMLDS 2025   IEEE--2025 International Conference on Advanced Machine Learning and Data Science
IJDMS 2024   International Journal of Database Management Systems
IJCNN 2025   International Joint Conference on Neural Networks