paper award
Overview of the 17th International Joint Conference on Knowledge Discovery, Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge Management
IC3K 2025 (17th International Joint Conference on Knowledge Discovery, Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge Management) received 163 paper submissions from 40 countries. To evaluate each submission, a double-blind paper review was performed by the Program Committee. After a stringent selection process, 31 papers were published and presented as full papers, i.e. completed work (12 pages/25' oral presentation), 81 papers were accepted as short papers (54 as oral presentation). The organizing committee included the IC3K Conference Chairs: Ricardo da Silva Torres, Artificial Intelligence Group, Wageningen University & Research, Netherlands and Jorge Bernardino, Polytechnic University of Coimbra, Portugal, and the IC3K 2025 Program Chairs: Le Gruenwald, University of Oklahoma, School of Computer Science, United States, Frans Coenen, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom, Jesualdo Tomás Fernández-Breis, University of Murcia, Spain, Lars Nolle, Jade University of Applied Sciences, Germany, Elio Masciari, University of Napoli Federico II, Italy and David Aveiro, University of Madeira, NOVA-LINCS and ARDITI, Portugal. At the closing session, the conference acknowledged a few papers that were considered excellent in their class, presenting a "Best Paper Award", "Best Student Paper Award", and "Best Poster Award" for each of the co-located conferences.
- Europe > Netherlands (0.27)
- North America > United States > Oklahoma (0.25)
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Merseyside > Liverpool (0.25)
- (6 more...)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Machine Learning (0.75)
- Information Technology > Knowledge Management > Knowledge Engineering (0.64)
- Information Technology > Data Science > Data Mining > Knowledge Discovery (0.64)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Representation & Reasoning > Expert Systems (0.64)
Overview of the 17th International Joint Conference on Computational Intelligence
IJCCI 2025 (17th International Joint Conference on Computational Intelligence) received 146 paper submissions from 41 countries. To evaluate each submission, a double-blind paper review was performed by the Program Committee. After a stringent selection process, 36 papers were published and presented as full papers, i.e. completed work (12 pages/25' oral presentation), 83 papers were accepted as short papers (58 as oral presentation). The organizing committee included the IJCCI Conference Chair: Joaquim Filipe, Polytechnic Institute of Setubal, Portugal, and the IJCCI 2025 Program Chairs: Francesco Marcelloni, University of Pisa, Italy, Kurosh Madani, University of Paris-EST Créteil (UPEC), France, and Niki van Stein, Leiden University, Netherlands. At the closing session, the conference acknowledged a few papers that were considered excellent in their class, presenting a "Best Paper Award", "Best Student Paper Award", and "Best Poster Award" for each of the co-located conferences.
- Europe > Italy > Tuscany > Pisa Province > Pisa (0.27)
- Europe > Portugal > Setubal > Setubal (0.26)
- Europe > Netherlands > South Holland > Leiden (0.26)
- (4 more...)
Overview of the 22nd International Conference on Informatics in Control, Automation and Robotics
ICINCO 2025 (22nd International Conference on Informatics in Control, Automation and Robotics) received 158 paper submissions from 42 countries. To evaluate each submission, a double-blind paper review was performed by the Program Committee. After a stringent selection process, 43 papers were published and presented as full papers, i.e. completed work (12 pages/25' oral presentation), 86 papers were accepted as short papers (51 as oral presentation). The organizing committee included the ICINCO Conference Chair: Dimitar Filev, Ford Research, United States, and the ICINCO 2025 Program Chairs: Giuseppina Carla Gini, Politecnico di Milano, Italy, and Radu-Emil Precup, Politehnica University of Timisoara, Romania. At the closing session, the conference acknowledged a few papers that were considered excellent in their class, presenting a "Best Paper Award", "Best Student Paper Award", "Best Poster Award", and "Best Industrial Paper Award" for the conference.
- North America > United States (0.26)
- Europe > Romania > Vest Development Region > Timiș County > Timișoara (0.26)
- Europe > Italy > Lombardy > Milan (0.26)
- (4 more...)
AIhub monthly digest: September 2025 – conference reviewing, soccer ball detection, and memory traces
Welcome to our monthly digest, where you can catch up with any AIhub stories you may have missed, peruse the latest news, recap recent events, and more. This month, we hear about the latest research on soccer ball detection, learn about energy-based transformers, find out about memory traces in reinforcement learning, and explore some potential solutions to the problems with conference reviewing. Issues with the peer-review process, and pertaining to conferences in particular, are often discussed among authors, reviewers and conference chairs alike. However, coming up with potential solutions to the problem has proved challenging. Jaeho told us more in this interview .
- Research Report (0.76)
- Personal > Interview (0.70)
AIhub monthly digest: August 2025 – causality and generative modelling, responsible multimodal AI, and IJCAI in Montréal and Guangzhou
Welcome to our monthly digest, where you can catch up with any AIhub stories you may have missed, peruse the latest news, recap recent events, and more. This month, we dive into the world of agents, learn about responsible multimodal AI, apply generative AI to computer networks, and dig into the RoboCup@Work League. This month, Sanmay Das, Tom Dietterich, Sabine Hauert, Sarit Kraus, and Michael Littman tackled the topic of agentic AI, discussing recent developments, and lessons learned from the decades of research in the autonomous agents and multiagent systems community. The 34th International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI2025) took place in Montréal from 16-22 August, with a satellite event currently being held (from 29-31 August) in Guangzhou, China. You can find out more about the programmes of both venues here, and get a flavour of what attendees got up to in our social media round-ups: Part one Part two.
- North America > Canada > Quebec > Montreal (0.62)
- Asia > China > Guangdong Province > Guangzhou (0.62)
- South America > Brazil > Bahia > Salvador (0.06)
- North America > United States > Arkansas (0.06)
AIhub monthly digest: May 2025 – materials design, object state classification, and real-time monitoring for healthcare data
Welcome to our monthly digest, where you can catch up with any AIhub stories you may have missed, peruse the latest news, recap recent events, and more. This month, we learn about drug and material design using generative models and Bayesian optimization, find out about a system for real-time monitoring for healthcare data, and explore domain-specific distribution shifts in volunteer-collected biodiversity datasets. Ananya Joshi recently completed her PhD, where she developed a system that experts have used for the past two years to identify respiratory outbreaks (like COVID-19) in large-scale healthcare streams across the United States. In this interview, she tells us more about this project, how healthcare applications inspire basic AI research, and her future plans. Onur Boyar is a PhD student at Nagoya university, working on generative models and Bayesian methods for materials and drug design.
- Information Technology > Security & Privacy (0.61)
- Health & Medicine > Consumer Health (0.61)
Overview of the 16th International Joint Conference on Knowledge Discovery, Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge Management
IC3K 2024 (16th International Joint Conference on Knowledge Discovery, Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge Management) received 175 paper submissions from 47 countries. To evaluate each submission, a double‐blind paper review was performed by the Program Committee. After a stringent selection process, 37 papers were published and presented as full papers, i.e. completed work (12 The organizing committee included the IC3K Conference Chair: Jorge Bernardino, Polytechnic University of Coimbra, Portugal and the IC3K 2024 Program Chairs: David Aveiro, University of Madeira, NOVA- LINCS and ARDITI, Portugal, Antonella Poggi, Università di Roma "La Sapienza", Italy, Ana Fred, Instituto de Telecomunicações and Instituto Superior Técnico (University of Lisbon), Portugal, Le Gruenwald, University of Oklahoma, School of Computer Science, United States, Elio Masciari, University of Napoli Federico II, Italy and Frans Coenen, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom. At the closing session, the conference acknowledged a few papers that were considered excellent in their class, presenting a "Best Paper Award", "Best Student Paper Award" and "Best Poster Award" for each of the co-located conferences. A short list of presented papers will be selected so that revised and extended versions of these papers will be published by Springer in a CCIS Series Book.
- Europe > Italy (0.48)
- North America > United States > Oklahoma (0.26)
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Merseyside > Liverpool (0.26)
- (4 more...)
AIhub interview highlights 2024
Over the course of 2024, we had the pleasure of finding out more about a whole range of AI topics from researchers around the world. Here, we highlight some of our favourite interviews from the past 12 months. Please note: we have not included our interviews with AAAI/ACM SIGAI Doctoral Consortium participants – these are highlighted in this dedicated collection. Christopher Chandler tells us about model checking and how it is used in the context of autonomous robotic systems, specifically looking at creating multi-step plans for a differential-drive wheeled robot so that it can avoid immediate danger. Bo Li and colleagues won an outstanding datasets and benchmark track award at NeurIPS 2023 for their work DecodingTrust: A Comprehensive Assessment of Trustworthiness in GPT Models.
- North America > United States > Texas > Andrews County (0.05)
- Africa (0.05)
AIhub monthly digest: November 2024 – dynamic faceted search, the kidney exchange problem, and AfriClimate AI
Welcome to our monthly digest, where you can catch up with any AIhub stories you may have missed, peruse the latest news, recap recent events, and more. This month, we hear from AfriClimate AI co-founder Amal Nammouchi, learn about the kidney exchange problem, and find out how to improve the interpretability of logistic regression models. This month, we had the pleasure of chatting to Amal Nammouchi, co-founder of AfriClimate AI, a grassroots community focused on using artificial intelligence to tackle climate challenges in Africa. Amal told us about the inspiration behind the initiative, some of their activities and projects, and plans for the future. In this blog post, Danial Dervovic writes about work presented at IJCAI 2024 on improving the interpretability of logistic regression models.
AIhub monthly digest: August 2024 – IJCAI, neural operators, and sequential decision making
Welcome to our monthly digest, where you can catch up with any AIhub stories you may have missed, peruse the latest news, recap recent events, and more. This month, we find out about Neural Operators, take a virtual trip to IJCAI, and try to bridge the gap between user expectations and AI capabilities. Anima Anandkumar is the inventor of Neural Operators which extend deep learning to modelling multi-scale processes in many scientific domains, including weather and climate modelling, drug discovery, and engineering design problems. In the next in our series of interviews with the 2024 AAAI Fellows, Anima tells us about Neural Operators and how she has applied them to many important science and engineering problems. Florian Tramer, Gautam Kamath and Nicholas Carlini won an International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML 2024) best paper award for their work Position: Considerations for Differentially Private Learning with Large-Scale Public Pretraining, in which they challenge the paradigm of pretraining models with public data, and then privately fine-tuning the weights with sensitive data.