Two more NIGEL 2006 talks are available at LCS & GBML Central. This week Xavier Llorà presents how linkage learning can be achieve in Pittsburgh LCS, whereas Jorge Casillas reviews his work using XCS and Fuzzy LCS.
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The LCS and GBML community stop
Two more NIGEL 2006 talks are available at LCS & GBML Central. This week Xavier Llorà presents how linkage learning can be achieve in Pittsburgh LCS, whereas Jorge Casillas reviews his work using XCS and Fuzzy LCS.
Related posts:NIGEL 2006 Part III: Butz vs. BarryNIGEL 2006 Part II: Dasgupta vs. BookerNIGEL 2006 Part V: […]
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Two more NIGEL 2006 talks are available at LCS & GBML Central. This week Xavier Llorà presents how linkage learning can be achieve in Pittsburgh LCS, whereas Jorge Casillas reviews his work using XCS and Fuzzy LCS.
Related posts:
This week two more NIGEL 2006 talks. Enjoy this third release, Llorà vs. Casillas.
Video
[vimeo clip_id=4727857 width=”432″ height=”320″]
Slides
[slideshare id=1384570&doc=nigel-2006-llora-xeccs-090504152642-phpapp01]
Video
[vimeo clip_id=4727943 width=”432″ height=”320″]
Slides
[slideshare id=1550779&doc=nigel-2006-casillas-090608160722-phpapp02]
NIGEL 2006 talks is available at LCS & GBML Central. This week Martin Butz review reviews the state of the union of XCS, where as Alwyn Barry introduces the theoretical framework for LCS that he and Jan Drugowitsch worked on.
Related posts:NIGEL 2006 Part IV: Llorà vs. CasillasNIGEL 2006 Part II: Dasgupta vs. BookerNIGEL […]
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NIGEL 2006 talks is available at LCS & GBML Central. This week Martin Butz review reviews the state of the union of XCS, where as Alwyn Barry introduces the theoretical framework for LCS that he and Jan Drugowitsch worked on.
Related posts:
This week two more NIGEL 2006 talks. Enjoy this third release, Butz vs. Barry.
Video
[vimeo clip_id=4593358 width=”432″ height=”320″]
Slides
[slideshare id=1384628&doc=nigel-2006-butz-090504153553-phpapp02]
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[vimeo clip_id=4727803 width=”432″ height=”320″]
Slides
[slideshare id=1384652&doc=nigel-2006-barry-090504154054-phpapp01]
LCS & GBML Central exploit has been fixed. The site is restored and back to fully functional. Please do not hesitate to ping me if you see something missing.
Related posts:LCSweb + GBML blog = LCS & GBML CentralLCS & GBML Central under inspectionNew books section on the LCS and GBML web
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LCS & GBML Central exploit has been fixed. The site is restored and back to fully functional. Please do not hesitate to ping me if you see something missing.
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The second weekly release of NIGEL 2006 talks is available at LCS & GBML Central. This week Dipankar Dasgupta reviews the negative selection algorithm, where as Lashon Booker travels in time to the past and future of learning classifier systems.
Related posts:NIGEL 2006 Part IV: Llorà vs. CasillasNIGEL 2006 Part III: Butz vs. BarryNIGEL […]
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The second weekly release of NIGEL 2006 talks is available at LCS & GBML Central. This week Dipankar Dasgupta reviews the negative selection algorithm, where as Lashon Booker travels in time to the past and future of learning classifier systems.
Related posts:
This week two more NIGEL 2006 talks. Enjoy this second release, Dasgupta vs. Booker.
Video
[vimeo clip_id=4592273 width=”432″ height=”320″]
Slides
[slideshare id=1384601&doc=nigel-2006-dasgupta-090504153353-phpapp01]
Video
[vimeo clip_id=4592087 width=”432″ height=”320″]
Slides
[slideshare id=1384637&doc=nigel-2006-booker-090504153739-phpapp02]
Last week Pier Luca Lanzi was visiting IlliGAL. Yesterday, before he left for Chicago, we went for one last brunch. He mentioned that he liked a lot the videos we shot during NIGEL 2006. Thinking about it we agreed would be useful to recover the videos and upload them into some of the usual video […]
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Last week Pier Luca Lanzi was visiting IlliGAL. Yesterday, before he left for Chicago, we went for one last brunch. He mentioned that he liked a lot the videos we shot during NIGEL 2006. Thinking about it we agreed would be useful to recover the videos and upload them into some of the usual video sharing site suspects. Currently they are hosted, for long term storage purposes, at NCSA’s web archive. I spent sometime retrieving them from the archive (they are pretty fat and encoded in wmv) and I stated transcoding it in m4a. My plan? Make them available via Vimeo and LCS & GBML Central. Also, I will be uploading the presentation slides to SlideShare and also make them available via LCS & GBML Central.
Update: The first two videos (Wilson and Goldberg) are already available at LCS & GBML Central.
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On May 16th and 17th, a group formed by more than twenty researchers got together in Urbana-Champaign (Illlinois) to participate in the gathering on evolutionary learning organized by the National Center for Supercomputer Applications and the Illinois Genetic Algorithms Laboratory (NIGEL 2006). The goals were to discus current state-of-the-art research in learning classifier systems and other genetics-based machine learning, and to identify future research trends and applications where evolutionary learning might provide a competitive advantage. The first day attendees gave presentations about challenges and current research topics (see the materials below). The second day, a series of three topic-oriented brainstorming sessions were conducted covering: (1) future of LCS and other GBML, (2) areas of application, and (3) techniques.
The list of participants included Loretta Auvil, Jaume Bacardit, Alwyn Barry, Lashon Booker, Ester Bernado, Will Browne, Martin Butz, Jorge Casillas, Helen Dam, Dipankar Dasgupta, Deon Garrett, David Goldberg, Noriko Imafuji, Pier Luca Lanzi, Xavier Llora, Kumara Sastry, Kamran Shafi, Kenneth Turvey, Michael Welge, Ashley Williams, Stewart Wilson, and Paul Winward.
Some pictures of the event can be found here or at the NIGEL web site.
Xavier Llorà: “Welcome and presentation”[Slides][Video] |
Stewart W. Wilson: “Can We Do Captchas?” [Slides][Video] |
David E. Goldberg: “Searle, Intentionality, and the Future of Classifier Systems” [Slides][Video] |
Dipankar Dasgupta: “Artificial Immune Systems in Anomaly Detection” [Slides][Video] |
Lashon Booker: “A Retrospective Look at Classifier System Research” [Slides][Video] |
Martin Butz: “XCS: Current Capabilities and Future Challenges” [Slides][Video] |
Alwyn Barry: “Towards a Formal Framework for Accuracy-based LCS” [Slides][Video] |
Xavier Llorà: “Linkage Learning for Pittsburgh Learning Classifier Systems: Making Problems Tractable” [Slides][Video] |
Jorge Casillas: “Scalability in GBML, Accuracy-Based Michigan Fuzzy LCS, and New Trends” [Slides][Video] |
Ester Bernadó: “Learning Classifier Systems for Unbalanced Datasets” [Slides][Video] |
Pier-Luca Lanzi: “Computed Prediction: so far, so good. Now what?” [Slides][Video] |
Jaume Bacardit: “Pittsburgh Learning Classifier Systems for Protein Structure Prediction: Scalability and Explanatory Power” [Slides][Video] |
On May 16th and 17th, a group formed by more than twenty researchers got together in Urbana-Champaign (Illlinois) to participate in the gathering on evolutionary learning organized by the National Center for Supercomputer Applications and the Illinois Genetic Algorithms Laboratory (NIGEL 2006). The goals were to discus current state-of-the-art research in learning classifier systems and other genetics-based machine learning, and to identify future research trends and applications where evolutionary learning might provide a competitive advantage. The first day attendees gave presentations about challenges and current research topics (see the materials below). The second day, a series of three topic-oriented brainstorming sessions were conducted covering: (1) future of LCS and other GBML, (2) areas of application, and (3) techniques.
The list of participants included Loretta Auvil, Jaume Bacardit, Alwyn Barry, Lashon Booker, Ester Bernado, Will Browne, Martin Butz, Jorge Casillas, Helen Dam, Dipankar Dasgupta, Deon Garrett, David Goldberg, Noriko Imafuji, Pier Luca Lanzi, Xavier Llora, Kumara Sastry, Kamran Shafi, Kenneth Turvey, Michael Welge, Ashley Williams, Stewart Wilson, and Paul Winward.
Some pictures of the event can be found here or at the NIGEL web site.
Xavier Llorà: “Welcome and presentation”[Slides] |
Stewart W. Wilson: “Can We Do Captchas?” [Slides] |
David E. Goldberg: “Searle, Intentionality, and the Future of Classifier Systems” [Slides] |
Dipankar Dasgupta: “Artificial Immune Systems in Anomaly Detection” [Slides] |
Lashon Booker: “A Retrospective Look at Classifier System Research” [Slides] |
Martin Butz: “XCS: Current Capabilities and Future Challenges” [Slides] |
Alwyn Barry: “Towards a Formal Framework for Accuracy-based LCS” [Slides] |
Xavier Llorà: “Linkage Learning for Pittsburgh Learning Classifier Systems: Making Problems Tractable” [Slides] |
Jorge Casillas: “Scalability in GBML, Accuracy-Based Michigan Fuzzy LCS, and New Trends” [Slides] |
Ester Bernadó: “Learning Classifier Systems for Unbalanced Datasets” [Slides] |
Pier-Luca Lanzi: “Computed Prediction: so far, so good. Now what?” [Slides] |
Jaume Bacardit: “Pittsburgh Learning Classifier Systems for Protein Structure Prediction: Scalability and Explanatory Power” [Slides] |