At the recent (Dec 2007) NIPS conference in Vancouver, six different papers were presented by PhD students and faculty from the Center. The students included Ian Porteous, Eric Linstead, and Arthur Asuncion, and researchers and faculty from the Center included Alex Ihler, Max Welling, Pierre Baldi, Dave Newman, and Padhraic Smyth. The NIPS conference is one of the major annual conferences in machine learning (over 1000 attendees) and is also highly competitive — only about 25% of submitted papers are accepted.
News
Distinguished Speaker Series for 07-08 Announced
StandardThe Center for Machine Learning and Intelligent Systems, in partnership with the Institute for Genomics and Bioinformatics, is very pleased to announce its Distinguished Speaker series for the academic year 2007-2008. This year’s series will bring a set of internationally-known researchers to UC Irvine, speaking on a broad set of topics ranging from automated reasoning, distributed learning algorithms, human and machine learning, statistical prediction, and analysis of text, network, and Web data. For further information, see the 2007-2008 speaker schedule.
Graduate Students Win International Data Mining Competition
StandardChloe Azencott and S. Josh Swamidass, two graduate students in Professor Pierre Baldiメs lab, finished in 1st and 2nd place respectively in the data mining competition “Agnostic Learning vs. Prior Knowledge” part of the International Joint Conference on Neural Networks (IJCNN) 2007 Conference, a major international conference in the field of neural networks.
Institute for Genomics and Bioinformatics Awarded $5.6 Million Training Grant
StandardThe UC Irvine Institute for Genomics and Bioinformatics (IGB) has been awarded $5.6 million over five years from the National Institutes of Health to continue training students to apply advanced computer and information technologies in the biological and medical sciences. The funding will be used to expand the interdisciplinary Biomedical Informatics Training (BIT) program, one of eighteen such programs in the country.
Paper on Text Mining Selected Among Best Papers at Digital Libraries Conference
StandardDavid Newman presented a plenary paper on statistical topic models for indexing large digital libraries in June at this year’s ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries. Titled “Subject Metadata Enrichment using Statistical Topic Models, the paper was selected as one of the 5 best research papers at the conference, from over 200 submitted papers. This was joint work with co-authors Chaitanya Chemudugunta and Padhraic Smyth from UC Irvine and Kat Hagedorn from the University of Michigan. The paper appeared in the Proceedings of the ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries (JCDL 2007), June 2007.”
Baldi Named AAAI Fellow
StandardPierre Baldi, Chancellor’s Professor and Director of the Institute for Genomics and Bioinformatics, has been named a fellow of the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI). Baldi is recognized for his significant contribution to statistical machine learning and the development of widely used algorithms to solve problems in the life sciences.
Jain Receives Best Paper Award at Multimedia Modeling Conference
StandardRamesh Jain, Donald Bren Professor in Information and Computer Sciences, has been awarded the Best Paper Award at the International Conference on Multimedia Modeling, held in Singapore January 10-12. The paper, entitled Ontology-based Annotation of Paintings using Transductive Inference Framework, proposed a framework for ontology-based annotation of paintings with application-level concepts of art period.
UCI Machine Learning Researchers Presented Seven Papers at the 2006 NIPS Conference
StandardStudents and faculty in the Baldi, Smyth, and Welling research groups presented a total of 7 papers at the Neural Information Processing Systems (NIPS) Conference in Vancouver in December. NIPS is one of the premier international conferences in machine learning – over 800 papers were submitted to the conference and only 200 were accepted.
Padhraic Smyth Advises Netflix on its Prediction Competition With a $1 Million Prize
StandardPadhraic Smyth, director of the Center for Machine Learning and professor of information and computer science, will participate as a judge for the Netflix competition, which boasts a hefty $1 million prize. This competition seeks to improve the task of predicting user ratings of Neflix movies. Smyth will assist in the evaluation of qualifying submissions.
Baldi Named Chancellor’s Professor
StandardPierre Baldi, director of the Institute for Genomics and Bioinformatics and professor of information and computer science and biological chemistry, has been awarded the title of Chancellor’s Professor, effective Wednesday, Nov. 1. The title is conferred for a five-year renewable term and recognizes scholars who have demonstrated unusual academic merit and whose continued promise for scholarly achievement makes them of exceptional value to the university. Baldi’s research areas include bioinformatics, computational biology, probabilistic modeling, and machine learning.