Call for Contributions
PhiMaLe 2011
NIPS Workshop on
PHILOSOPHY AND MACHINE LEARNING
Sierra Nevada, Spain
16 or 17 December 2011
http://www.dsi.unive.it/PhiMaLe2011
The fields of machine learning and pattern recognition can arguably be
considered as a modern-day incarnation of an endeavor which has
challenged mankind since antiquity. In fact, fundamental questions
pertaining to categorization, abstraction, generalization, induction,
etc., have been on the agenda of mainstream philosophy, under different
names and guises, since its inception. Nowadays, with the advent of
modern digital computers and the availablity of enormous amount of raw
data, these questions have taken a computational flavor.
As it often happens with scientific research, in the early days of
machine learning there used to be a genuine interest around
philosophical and conceptual issues, but over time the interest shifted
almost entirely to technical and algorithmic aspects and became driven
mainly by practical applications. In recent years, however, there has
been a renewed interest around the foundational and/or philosophical
problems of machine learning and pattern recognition, from both the
computer scientist's and the philosopher's camps. This suggests that the
time is ripe to initiating a long-term dialogue between the philosophy
and the machine learning communities with a view to foster
cross-fertilization of ideas.
In particular, we do feel the present moment is appropriate for
reflection, reassessment and eventually some synthesis, with the aim of
providing the machine learning field a self-portrait of where it
currently stands and where it is going as a whole, and hopefully
suggesting new directions. The aim of this workshop is precisely to
consolidate research efforts in this area, and to provide an informal
discussion forum for researchers and practitioners interested in this
important yet diverse subject.
Topics of interest include (but are not limited to):
- Connections to epistemology and philosophy of science
- Essentialism vs anti-essentialism
- Foundations of probability and causality
- Abstraction and generalization
- Connections to decision and game theory
- Similarity and categorization
- The nature of information
The workshop is planned to be a one-day meeting. The program will
feature invited as well as contributed oral presentations. We feel that
the more informal the better and we would like to solicit open and
lively discussions and exchange of ideas from researchers with different
backgrounds and perspectives. Plenty of time will be allocated to
questions, discussions, and breaks.
Researchers who want to contribute a talk should submit a 4-page
extended abstract of their work (using the NIPS style guide) by e-mail
to Marcello Pelillo (
pel...@dsi.unive.it) by ***23 October 2011***
The organizers will review all submissions. Notification of acceptance will be sent out by 13 November 2011.
Organizers:
Marcello Pelillo, Ca' Foscari University, Venice, Italy
Joachim Buhmann, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Tiberio Caetano, NICTA, Canberra, Australia
Bernhard Schoelkopf, Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Germany
Larry Wasserman, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
--
Prof. Marcello Pelillo
DAIS - Università Ca' Foscari Venezia
Via Torino 155, 30172 Venezia Mestre, Italy
Tel: (39) 041 2348.440
Fax: (39) 041 2348.419
E-mail:
pel...@dsi.unive.it
URL:
http://www.dsi.unive.it/~pelillo