Call For Papers Special Session: Evolutionary Machine Learning for SEAL 2014

Call For Papers
Special Session: Evolutionary Machine Learning

The 10th International Conference on Simulated Evolution And Learning (SEAL 2014)
15-18 December 2014, Dunedin, New Zealand
http://seal2014.otago.ac.nz/

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Machine learning and evolutionary computation are two major fields of computational intelligence. They share many fundamental similarities and are frequently explored together to tackle complex, large-scale, and dynamic learning problems under various sources of uncertainties.

This special session will cover a broad range of topics related to evolutionary machine learning, including novel learning algorithms and their innovative applications. We will focus on both theoretical and practical research in this field. The aim is to show how the global search performed by evolutionary methods can complement the local search of non-evolutionary methods and how the combination of the two can improve learning effectiveness and performance within a wide range of clustering, classification, regression, prediction, and control tasks.

Topics of interest include, but not limited to:

– Learning Classifier Systems

– Genetic Programming (GP) and its application to machine learning tasks

 – Evolutionary ensembles

 – Neuroevolution and its application to machine learning tasks

 – Genetic fuzzy systems

 – Hyper-parameter tuning with evolutionary methods

 – Theoretical analysis of evolutionary learning algorithms

 – Interesting practical applications

 – Advanced computing platforms for evolutionary machine learning

 – Other Genetics-Based Machine Learning: hybrid learning systems combining evolutionary techniques with machine learning methods

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Important Dates:
28 July 2014, deadline for submission of full papers (<=12 pages)
29 August 2014, Notification of acceptance
16 September 2014, Deadline for camera-ready copies of accepted papers
15-18 December 2014, Conference sessions (including tutorials and workshops)
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Paper Submission:
You should follow the SEAL 2014 Submission Web Site
(http://seal2014.otago.ac.nz/submissions.aspx). In the Main Research Topic, please choose
“Evolutionary Machine Learning ”
Special session papers are treated the same as regular conference papers. All papers will be fully refereed by a minimum of two specialized referees. Before final acceptance, all referees comments must be considered. All accepted papers that are presented at the conference will be included in the conference proceedings, to be published in Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) by Springer. Selected papers will be invited for further revision and extension for possible publication in a special issue of a SCI journal after further review Soft Computing (Springer, Impact Factor 1.124).
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Special Session Organizers:
Dr Aaron Chen
School of Engineering and Computer Science, Victoria University of Wellington,
PO Box 600, Wellington, New Zealand.
Email: aaron.chen@ecs.vuw.ac.nz
Homepage: http://ecs.victoria.ac.nz/Main/AaronChen

Dr Will Browne
School of Engineering and Computer Science, Victoria University of Wellington,
PO Box 600, Wellington, New Zealand.
Email: will.browne@vuw.ac.nz
Homepage: http://ecs.victoria.ac.nz/Main/WillBrowne

IWLCS 2010 – Discussion session on LCS / XCS(F)

I just got an email from Martin Butz about a discussion session being planned for IWLCS 2010 and his request to pass it along. Hope all is well and you are going to attend GECCO this year. Regardless if you

I just got an email from Martin Butz about a discussion session being planned for IWLCS 2010 and his request to pass it along.

Hope all is well and you are going to attend GECCO this year.

Regardless if you attend or not:

Jaume asked me to lead a discussion session on

“LCS representations, operators, and scalability – what is next?”

… or similar during IWLCS… Basically everything besides datamining, because there will be another session on that topic.

So, I am sure you all have some issues in mind that you think should be tackled / addressed / discussed at the workshop and in the near future.

Thus, I would be very happy to receive a few suggestions from your side – anything is welcome – I will then compile the points raised in a few slides to try and get the discussion going at the workshop.

Thank you for any feedback you can provide.

Looking forward to seeing you soon!

Martin

P.S.: Please feel free to also forward this message or tell me, if you think this Email should be still sent to other people…
—-

PD Dr. Martin V. Butz <butz@psychologie.uni-wuerzburg.de>

Department of Psychology III (Cognitive Psychology)
Roentgenring 11
97070 Wuerzburg, Germany
http://www.coboslab.psychologie.uni-wuerzburg.de/people/martin_v_butz/
http://www.coboslab.psychologie.uni-wuerzburg.de
Phone: +49 (0)931 31 82808
Fax:    +49 (0)931 31 82815

LCS and Software Development

“On the Road to Competence” is a slide deck by Jurgen Appelo with interesting analogies between learning classifier systems and software development. Definitely worth taking a look at it. Related posts:NIGEL 2006 Part II: Dasgupta vs. Booker Large Scale Data Mining using Genetics-Based Machine Learning Software for fast rule matching using vector instructions

Related posts:

  1. NIGEL 2006 Part II: Dasgupta vs. Booker
  2. Large Scale Data Mining using Genetics-Based Machine Learning
  3. Software for fast rule matching using vector instructions

“On the Road to Competence” is a slide deck by Jurgen Appelo with interesting analogies between learning classifier systems and software development. Definitely worth taking a look at it.

Related posts:

  1. NIGEL 2006 Part II: Dasgupta vs. Booker
  2. Large Scale Data Mining using Genetics-Based Machine Learning
  3. Software for fast rule matching using vector instructions

GAssist and GALE Now Available in Python

Ryan Urbanowicz has released Python versions of GAssits and GALE!!! Yup, so excited to see a new incarnation of GALE doing the rounds. I cannot wait to get my hands on it. Ryan has also done an excellent job porting UCS, XCS, and MCS to Python and making those implementations available via “LCS & GBML central” for […]

Related posts:

  1. GALE is back!
  2. Fast mutation implementation for genetic algorithms in Python
  3. Transcoding NIGEL 2006 videos

Ryan Urbanowicz has released Python versions of GAssits and GALE!!! Yup, so excited to see a new incarnation of GALE doing the rounds. I cannot wait to get my hands on it. Ryan has also done an excellent job porting UCS, XCS, and MCS to Python and making those implementations available via “LCS & GBML central” for people to use. I think Ryan’s efforts deserve recognition. His code is helping others to have an easier entry to the LCS and GBML.

More information about Ryan’s implementations can found below

Side note: my original GALE implementation can also be downloaded here.

Related posts:

  1. GALE is back!
  2. Fast mutation implementation for genetic algorithms in Python
  3. Transcoding NIGEL 2006 videos

LCS & GBML Central Gets a New Home

Today I finished migrating the LCS & GBML Central site from its original URL (http://lcs-gbml.ncsa.uiuc.edu) to a more permanent and stable home located at http://gbml.org. The original site is already currently redirecting the trafic to the new site, and it will be doing so for a while to help people transition and update bookmarks and […]

Related posts:

  1. LCS & GBML Central back to production
  2. LCSweb + GBML blog = LCS & GBML Central
  3. New books section on the LCS and GBML web

Today I finished migrating the LCS & GBML Central site from its original URL (http://lcs-gbml.ncsa.uiuc.edu) to a more permanent and stable home located at http://gbml.org. The original site is already currently redirecting the trafic to the new site, and it will be doing so for a while to help people transition and update bookmarks and feed readers.

I have introduced a few changes to the functionality of the original site. Functional changes can be mostly summarized by (1) dropping the forums section and (2) closing comments on posts and pages. Both functionalities, rarely used  in their current form, have been replaced by a simpler public embedded Wave reachable at http://gbml.org/wave. The goal, provide people in the LCS & GBML community a simpler way to discuss, share, and hang out.

About the feeds being aggregated, I have revised the list and added the feeds now available of the table of contents from

I have also added a few other links to relevant research groups doing work on related areas. Please, leave a comment on this post if you know/have a related site that could be aggregated, or if there are missing links to research groups or useful resources.

Related posts:

  1. LCS & GBML Central back to production
  2. LCSweb + GBML blog = LCS & GBML Central
  3. New books section on the LCS and GBML web

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