GECCO 2010 Submission Deadline (Extended)

If you are planning to submit a paper for the 2010 Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference, the deadline is January 13, 2010 (and now extended to January 27th). You can find more information at the GECCO 2010 calendar site. Related posts:GECCO 2009 paper submission deadline extended till January 28 GECCO 2007 deadline extended GECCO-2006 submissions […]

Related posts:

  1. GECCO 2009 paper submission deadline extended till January 28
  2. GECCO 2007 deadline extended
  3. GECCO-2006 submissions deadline extended to February 1st

If you are planning to submit a paper for the 2010 Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference, the deadline is January 13, 2010 (and now extended to January 27th). You can find more information at the GECCO 2010 calendar site.

Related posts:

  1. GECCO 2009 paper submission deadline extended till January 28
  2. GECCO 2007 deadline extended
  3. GECCO-2006 submissions deadline extended to February 1st

GECCO Humies Award (GOLD) 2009

GP was well featured at this year’s GECCO Humies Awards. The most spectacular application which was subsequently awarded first prize (GOLD) was based on two papers by Weimer/Nguyen/Le Goues/Forrestpublished in proceedings of the 31st International Conf…

GP was well featured at this year’s GECCO Humies Awards. The most spectacular application which was subsequently awarded first prize (GOLD) was based on two papers by Weimer/Nguyen/Le Goues/Forrest
published in proceedings of the 31st International Conference on Software Engineering (ICSE) in May 2009 and Forrest/Weimer/Nguyen/Le Goes in this year’s GECCO proceedings. Both papers won awards from the respective conferences, and winning the Humies award was the “icing on the cake”.

The authors apply a specialized/improved form of Genetic Programming to locate and repair software bugs. Repairing software bugs is a time consuming and commercially very costly activity. To date, automating the process has been very difficult. The GP method proposed by our Gold Medal winners takes down the average repair time for software bugs from more than 3 hours per bug to 3 minutes.

The authors rightly claim that “showing how to use GP in the context of modern software systems and integrating GP into modern software practice will help evolutionary computation to become more widely accepted by computer scientists.”

Congratulations to the authors for a prize well deserved!