CFP: Special Issue on Evolvable Hardware Challenges

Call for Papers: Special Issue on Evolvable Hardware ChallengesJournal: Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines (pub. by Springer)Guest Editor: Pauline C. Haddow, Norwegian Univ. of Science and TechnologyEditor-in-Chief: Lee Spector, Hampshire Colle…

Call for Papers: Special Issue on Evolvable Hardware Challenges
Journal: Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines (pub. by Springer)
Guest Editor: Pauline C. Haddow, Norwegian Univ. of Science and Technology
Editor-in-Chief: Lee Spector, Hampshire College
Evolvable Hardware, the application of evolutionary techniques as hardware design techniques, is still in its infancy despite a 15 year lifespan. After the initial excitement in the late 1990s there have been many successes but perhaps not at the rate or to the extent of the original expectations. There are many challenges inherent in Evolvable Hardware that are currently being addressed or need to be addressed so as to unlock the true potential of the field. Such work, together with research on real world applications, will lead to a clearer definition of the field and thus pave a future path for Evolvable Hardware. The aim of this special issue is to provide the reader with contributions that we feel provide strong contributions towards this goal.
Two articles by leading researchers have already been commissioned:
– The Evolution of Standard Cell Libraries for Future Technology Nodes
James Walker, James Hilder & Andy Tyrrell
– An Evolved Anti-Jamming Antenna Beamforming Network
Jason Lohn, Derek Linden & Jonathan Becker
== Open submissions
We encourage submission of high quality papers, both theoretical and practical, describing newer approaches that address key challenges facing Evolvable Hardware today. Application papers that illustrate that Evolvable Hardware can achieve results that are challenging for today’s more traditional hardware design techniques are also sought. In addition, we are interested in contributions that address the computational design challenge in tomorrow’s technologies through the application of bio-inspired techniques. Subjects will include (but are not limited to):
– Evolvable hardware design
– Adaptive hardware
– Evolutionary robotics
– Formal models of bio-inspired hardware
– Generative and developmental approaches
– Real-world applications of evolvable hardware
– Bio-inspired computation on future technology
We encourage all prospective authors to contact the guest editor, at the address below, as early as possible to indicate your intention to submit a paper to this special issue.
Guest Editor:
Pauline C. Haddow pauline@idi.ntnu.no
Dept. of Computer and Information Science
The Norwegian University of Science and Technology
Authors are encouraged to submit high-quality, original work that has neither appeared in, nor is under consideration by, other journals.
Manuscripts should be submitted to: http://GENP.edmgr.com. Choose “Evolvable Hardware” as the article type when submitting.
Springer offers authors, editors and reviewers of Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines a web-enabled online manuscript submission and review system. Our online system offers authors the ability to track the review process of their manuscript with straightforward log-in and submission procedures, and it supports a wide range of submission file formats.
== Important Dates:
Paper submission deadline: Sept, 1, 2010
Notification of acceptance: Oct 8, 2010
Final manuscript: Oct 29, 2010

FOGA XI CFP

The 11th Foundations of Genetic Algorithms conference will be held on January 5-9, 2011 in Schwarzenberg, Austria. Submissions (10-12 pages) on the theoretical foundations of any type of evolutionary computation can be emailed to foga@fhv.at. The dea…

The 11th Foundations of Genetic Algorithms conference will be held on January 5-9, 2011 in Schwarzenberg, Austria. Submissions (10-12 pages) on the theoretical foundations of any type of evolutionary computation can be emailed to foga@fhv.at. The deadline for submissions is July 5, 2010. For more details see http://www.sigevo.org/foga-2011.

Deadline extended for Tenth Anniversary Special Issue on Progress in Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines

The deadline has been extended for submissions to the Tenth Anniversary Special Issue on Progress in Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines; see the call for papers for details.

The deadline has been extended for submissions to the Tenth Anniversary Special Issue on Progress in Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines; see the call for papers for details.

NIGEL 2006 Part VI: Bacardit

After coming back from GECCO I just uploaded the last of the NIGEL 2006 talks at LCS & GBML Central. This last talk was by Jaume Bacardit and GBML for protein structure prediction.

Related posts:NIGEL 2006 Part V: Bernardó vs. LanziNIGEL 2006 Part IV: Llorà vs. CasillasNIGEL 2006 Part III: Butz vs. Barry

Related posts:

  1. NIGEL 2006 Part V: Bernardó vs. Lanzi
  2. NIGEL 2006 Part IV: Llorà vs. Casillas
  3. NIGEL 2006 Part III: Butz vs. Barry

After coming back from GECCO I just uploaded the last of the NIGEL 2006 talks at LCS & GBML Central. This last talk was by Jaume Bacardit and GBML for protein structure prediction.

Related posts:

  1. NIGEL 2006 Part V: Bernardó vs. Lanzi
  2. NIGEL 2006 Part IV: Llorà vs. Casillas
  3. NIGEL 2006 Part III: Butz vs. Barry

NIGEL 2006 Part V: Bernardó vs. Lanzi

After the vacation break, two more NIGEL 2006 talks are available at LCS & GBML Central. This week Ester Bernardó presents how LCS can perform in the presence of class imbalance, whereas Lanzi continues his quest on computed predictions.

Related posts:NIGEL 2006 Part IV: Llorà vs. CasillasTranscoding NIGEL 2006 videosNIGEL 2006 Part III: Butz […]

Related posts:

  1. NIGEL 2006 Part IV: Llorà vs. Casillas
  2. Transcoding NIGEL 2006 videos
  3. NIGEL 2006 Part III: Butz vs. Barry

After the vacation break, two more NIGEL 2006 talks are available at LCS & GBML Central. This week Ester Bernardó presents how LCS can perform in the presence of class imbalance, whereas Lanzi continues his quest on computed predictions.

Related posts:

  1. NIGEL 2006 Part IV: Llorà vs. Casillas
  2. Transcoding NIGEL 2006 videos
  3. NIGEL 2006 Part III: Butz vs. Barry

NIGEL 2006 Part IV: Llorà vs. Casillas

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: […]

Related posts:

  1. NIGEL 2006 Part III: Butz vs. Barry
  2. NIGEL 2006 Part II: Dasgupta vs. Booker
  3. NIGEL 2006 Part V: Bernardó vs. Lanzi

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:

  1. NIGEL 2006 Part III: Butz vs. Barry
  2. NIGEL 2006 Part II: Dasgupta vs. Booker
  3. NIGEL 2006 Part V: Bernardó vs. Lanzi

NIGEL 2006 Part III: Butz vs. Barry

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 […]

Related posts:

  1. NIGEL 2006 Part IV: Llorà vs. Casillas
  2. NIGEL 2006 Part II: Dasgupta vs. Booker
  3. NIGEL 2006 Part V: Bernardó vs. Lanzi

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:

  1. NIGEL 2006 Part IV: Llorà vs. Casillas
  2. NIGEL 2006 Part II: Dasgupta vs. Booker
  3. NIGEL 2006 Part V: Bernardó vs. Lanzi

CFP: Tenth Anniversary Special Issue on Progress in Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines

Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines


Tenth Anniversary Special Issue on Progress in Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines

(Revised May 19, 2009; please note revised title and deadlines. 2nd revision July 15, 2009. 3rd revision September 25, 2009; please note revised schedule)

Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines is ten years old in 2010. To mark this, a prestigious special issue of the journal will be published. A number of articles by leading figures have already been commissioned:

  • “Theoretical Results in Genetic Programming: The next ten years?” by Riccardo Poli, William B. Langdon, Nic McPhee and Leonardo Vanneschi
  • “Human Competitive Results Using Genetic Programming” by John Koza
  • “Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines: Ten Years of Reviews” by William B. Langdon and Steven Gustafson

Open submissions

We encourage the submission of high quality papers that review or analyze progress in the field, present the state-of-the-art in the evolution of software and hardware, describe promising new approaches or application areas, or foundational topics in genetic programming and evolvable machines.

Subjects include, but are not limited to:

– Theoretical understanding of Genetic Programming

– Important Application Areas of Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines

– New approaches and paradigms

– Fundamental Issues

– Wide ranging reviews and/or analysis of Research in Genetic and Evolvable Machines

Important Dates

– Paper submission deadline: November 23, 2009

– Notification of acceptance: January 15, 2009

– Final manuscript: February 15, 2010

Authors are encouraged to submit high-quality, original work that has neither appeared in, nor is under consideration by, other journals.All open submissions will be peer reviewed subject to the standards of the journal. Manuscripts based on previously published conference papers must be extended substantially.

Springer offers authors, editors and reviewers of Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines a web-enabled online manuscript submission and review system. Our online system offers authors the ability to track the review process of their manuscript.

Manuscripts should be submitted to: http://GENP.edmgr.com. This online system offers easy and straightforward log-in and submission procedures, and supports a wide range of submission file formats.

All enquiries on this special issue by prospective authors should be sent to the guest editors at the addresses below.

Guest editors

Julian Miller

Department of Electronics

University of York,

Heslington, York,

YO10 5DD, UK

jfm7@ohm.york.ac.uk

Riccardo Poli

School of Computer Science and Electronic Engineering,

University of Essex,

Wivenhoe Park, Colchester,

CO4 3SQ, UK

rpoli@essex.ac.uk

Editor-in-Chief: Lee Spector, Hampshire College

Founding Editor: Wolfgang Banzhaf, Memorial University of Newfoundland

Journal Website: www.springer.com/10710

Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines


Tenth Anniversary Special Issue on Progress in Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines

(Revised May 19, 2009; please note revised title and deadlines. 2nd revision July 15, 2009. 3rd revision September 25, 2009; please note revised schedule)

Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines is ten years old in 2010. To mark this, a prestigious special issue of the journal will be published. A number of articles by leading figures have already been commissioned:

  • “Theoretical Results in Genetic Programming: The next ten years?” by Riccardo Poli, William B. Langdon, Nic McPhee and Leonardo Vanneschi
  • “Human Competitive Results Using Genetic Programming” by John Koza
  • “Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines: Ten Years of Reviews” by William B. Langdon and Steven Gustafson

Open submissions

We encourage the submission of high quality papers that review or analyze progress in the field, present the state-of-the-art in the evolution of software and hardware, describe promising new approaches or application areas, or foundational topics in genetic programming and evolvable machines.

Subjects include, but are not limited to:

– Theoretical understanding of Genetic Programming

– Important Application Areas of Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines

– New approaches and paradigms

– Fundamental Issues

– Wide ranging reviews and/or analysis of Research in Genetic and Evolvable Machines

Important Dates

– Paper submission deadline: November 23, 2009

– Notification of acceptance: January 15, 2009

– Final manuscript: February 15, 2010

Authors are encouraged to submit high-quality, original work that has neither appeared in, nor is under consideration by, other journals.All open submissions will be peer reviewed subject to the standards of the journal. Manuscripts based on previously published conference papers must be extended substantially.

Springer offers authors, editors and reviewers of Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines a web-enabled online manuscript submission and review system. Our online system offers authors the ability to track the review process of their manuscript.

Manuscripts should be submitted to: http://GENP.edmgr.com. This online system offers easy and straightforward log-in and submission procedures, and supports a wide range of submission file formats.

All enquiries on this special issue by prospective authors should be sent to the guest editors at the addresses below.

Guest editors

Julian Miller

Department of Electronics

University of York,

Heslington, York,

YO10 5DD, UK

jfm7@ohm.york.ac.uk

Riccardo Poli

School of Computer Science and Electronic Engineering,

University of Essex,

Wivenhoe Park, Colchester,

CO4 3SQ, UK

rpoli@essex.ac.uk

Editor-in-Chief: Lee Spector, Hampshire College

Founding Editor: Wolfgang
Banzhaf, Memorial University of Newfoundland

Journal Website: www.springer.com/10710

LCS & GBML Central back to production

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

Related posts:

  1. LCSweb + GBML blog = LCS & GBML Central
  2. LCS & GBML Central under inspection
  3. New books section on the LCS and GBML web

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:

  1. LCSweb + GBML blog = LCS & GBML Central
  2. LCS & GBML Central under inspection
  3. New books section on the LCS and GBML web

NIGEL 2006 Part II: Dasgupta vs. Booker

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 […]

Related posts:

  1. NIGEL 2006 Part IV: Llorà vs. Casillas
  2. NIGEL 2006 Part III: Butz vs. Barry
  3. NIGEL 2006 Part V: Bernardó vs. Lanzi

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:

  1. NIGEL 2006 Part IV: Llorà vs. Casillas
  2. NIGEL 2006 Part III: Butz vs. Barry
  3. NIGEL 2006 Part V: Bernardó vs. Lanzi