EAIS 2011 - EAIS 2011 2011 IEEE Workshop on Evolving and Adaptive Intelligent Systems
Topics/Call fo Papers
EAIS 2011
2011 IEEE Workshop on Evolving and Adaptive Intelligent Systems
The true intelligent systems should be dynamically evolving and be able to adapt and learn. The concept of evolving intelligent systems was established recently as a synergy between conventional systems, neural networks and fuzzy systems as structures for information representation and real time methods for machine learning. This emerging area targets non-stationary processes by developing novel on-line learning methods and computationally efficient algorithms for real-time applications. One of the important research challenges today is to develop methodologies, concepts, algorithms and techniques towards the design of intelligent systems with a higher level of flexibility and autonomy, so that the systems can evolve their structure and knowledge of the environment and ultimately - evolve their intelligence. That is, the system must be able to evolve, to self-develop, to self-organize, to self-evaluate and to self-improve. Wireless sensor networks, assisted ambient intelligence, embedded soft computing diagnostics and prognostics algorithms, intelligent agents, smart evolving sensors; autonomous robotic systems etc. are some of the natural implementation areas of evolving and adaptive intelligent systems. EAIS'11 continues the tradition set by the previous forums (EFS'06, GEFS'08, ESDIS'09, EIS'10) and is supported and organised by the Adaptive and Evolving Fuzzy Systems (AEFS) Task Force, FSTC, CIS, IEEE.
Topics
New Adaptive and Evolving Learning Methods
Stability, Robustness, Unlearning Effects
Structure Flexibility and Robustness in Evolving Systems
Evolving in Dynamic Environments
Drift and Shift in Data Streams
Self-monitoring Evolving Systems
Evolving Decision Systems
Evolving Perceptions
Self-organising Systems
Neural Networks with Evolving Structure
Non-stationary Time Series Prediction with Evolving Systems
Automatic Novelty Detection in Evolving Systems
On-Line Identification of Fuzzy Systems
Evolving Neuro-fuzzy Systems
Evolving Fuzzy Clustering Methods
Evolving Fuzzy Rule-based Classifiers
Evolving Regression-based Classifiers
Evolving Intelligent Systems for Time Series Prediction
Evolving Intelligent System State Monitoring and Prognostics
Methods
Evolving Intelligent Controllers
Evolving Fuzzy Decision Support Systems
Evolving Consumer Behaviour Models
Real-world application
Robotics
Control Systems
Industrial Applications
Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery
Intelligent Transport
Bio-Informatics
Defence
Symposium Co-Chairs
Plamen Angelov, Lancaster University, UK
Dimitar Filev, Ford, USA
Nikola Kasabov, Aukland University of Technology, New Zealand
Program Committee
Adel Alimi
Plamen Angelov (Chair)
Jose Rubio Avila
Abdelhamid Bouchachia
Richard Duro
Panagiotis Chountas
Damien Coyle
Dimitar Filev (co-Chair)
Mario Gongora
Fernando Gomide
Antonio Medina Hernandez
Jose Iglesias
Janusz Kacprzyk
Petr Kadlec
Ilhem Kallel
Nik Kasabov (co-Chair)
Vitaliy Kolodyazhniy
Andre Lemos
Zsofia Lendek
Edwin Lughofer
Witold Pedrycz
Fernando Pouzols
Ignacio Rojas
Joao Sousa
Gancho Vachkov
Ronald Yager
Xiaojun Zeng
Special Activities
A Tutorial and a Panel will be announced later.
Symposium Important Dates
Title and authors list: as soon as possible
Paper submission Deadline: 31 October, 2010
Notifications send to the authors: 30 November, 2010
Camera-ready copies due: 15 January 2011
Conference: 15 - 17 April, 2011
2011 IEEE Workshop on Evolving and Adaptive Intelligent Systems
The true intelligent systems should be dynamically evolving and be able to adapt and learn. The concept of evolving intelligent systems was established recently as a synergy between conventional systems, neural networks and fuzzy systems as structures for information representation and real time methods for machine learning. This emerging area targets non-stationary processes by developing novel on-line learning methods and computationally efficient algorithms for real-time applications. One of the important research challenges today is to develop methodologies, concepts, algorithms and techniques towards the design of intelligent systems with a higher level of flexibility and autonomy, so that the systems can evolve their structure and knowledge of the environment and ultimately - evolve their intelligence. That is, the system must be able to evolve, to self-develop, to self-organize, to self-evaluate and to self-improve. Wireless sensor networks, assisted ambient intelligence, embedded soft computing diagnostics and prognostics algorithms, intelligent agents, smart evolving sensors; autonomous robotic systems etc. are some of the natural implementation areas of evolving and adaptive intelligent systems. EAIS'11 continues the tradition set by the previous forums (EFS'06, GEFS'08, ESDIS'09, EIS'10) and is supported and organised by the Adaptive and Evolving Fuzzy Systems (AEFS) Task Force, FSTC, CIS, IEEE.
Topics
New Adaptive and Evolving Learning Methods
Stability, Robustness, Unlearning Effects
Structure Flexibility and Robustness in Evolving Systems
Evolving in Dynamic Environments
Drift and Shift in Data Streams
Self-monitoring Evolving Systems
Evolving Decision Systems
Evolving Perceptions
Self-organising Systems
Neural Networks with Evolving Structure
Non-stationary Time Series Prediction with Evolving Systems
Automatic Novelty Detection in Evolving Systems
On-Line Identification of Fuzzy Systems
Evolving Neuro-fuzzy Systems
Evolving Fuzzy Clustering Methods
Evolving Fuzzy Rule-based Classifiers
Evolving Regression-based Classifiers
Evolving Intelligent Systems for Time Series Prediction
Evolving Intelligent System State Monitoring and Prognostics
Methods
Evolving Intelligent Controllers
Evolving Fuzzy Decision Support Systems
Evolving Consumer Behaviour Models
Real-world application
Robotics
Control Systems
Industrial Applications
Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery
Intelligent Transport
Bio-Informatics
Defence
Symposium Co-Chairs
Plamen Angelov, Lancaster University, UK
Dimitar Filev, Ford, USA
Nikola Kasabov, Aukland University of Technology, New Zealand
Program Committee
Adel Alimi
Plamen Angelov (Chair)
Jose Rubio Avila
Abdelhamid Bouchachia
Richard Duro
Panagiotis Chountas
Damien Coyle
Dimitar Filev (co-Chair)
Mario Gongora
Fernando Gomide
Antonio Medina Hernandez
Jose Iglesias
Janusz Kacprzyk
Petr Kadlec
Ilhem Kallel
Nik Kasabov (co-Chair)
Vitaliy Kolodyazhniy
Andre Lemos
Zsofia Lendek
Edwin Lughofer
Witold Pedrycz
Fernando Pouzols
Ignacio Rojas
Joao Sousa
Gancho Vachkov
Ronald Yager
Xiaojun Zeng
Special Activities
A Tutorial and a Panel will be announced later.
Symposium Important Dates
Title and authors list: as soon as possible
Paper submission Deadline: 31 October, 2010
Notifications send to the authors: 30 November, 2010
Camera-ready copies due: 15 January 2011
Conference: 15 - 17 April, 2011
Other CFPs
- CompSens 2011 2011 IEEE Workshop on Merging Fields of Computational Intelligence and Sensor Technology
- CIVTS 2011 2011 IEEE Symposium on Computational Intelligence in Vehicles and Transportation Systems
- CIVI 2011 2011 IEEE Workshop on Computational Intelligence for Visual Intelligence
- CISDA 2011 2011 IEEE Symposium on Computational Intelligence for Security and Defence Applications
- CISched 2011 2011 IEEE Symposium on Computational Intelligence in Scheduling
Last modified: 2010-08-02 13:33:55