------------------------------------------------------------------------- Call for papers ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1st Workshop on Cognitive Information Processing June 9-10, 2008, Santorini, Greece http://cip2008.di.uoa.gr Sponsored by the International Association for Pattern Recogntion (IAPR) In co-operation with the IEEE Signal Processing Society and the European Association for Signal Processing (EURASIP) General Co-Chairs: Prof. Simon Haykin Prof. Sergios Theodoridis Program Co-Chairs: Prof. Tulay Adali Prof. Eleftherios Kofidis Plenary Speakers: Prof. Simon Haykin (McMaster University, Canada) Prof. Timo Honkela (Helsinki Univeristy of Technology, Finland) Prof. Jose Principe (University of Florida, U.S.A.) Prof. Ali Sayed (University of California LA, U.S.A) Prof. Bernhard Scholkopf (Max Planck Institute, Germany) Prof. Naftali Tishby (The Hebrew University, Israel) Important Dates: Submission of full paper: January 5, 2008 Notification of acceptance: March 5, 2008 Camera-ready paper: March 31, 2008 ----------------------- Overview ----------------------- Cognitive Information Processing (CIP) extends the current engineering paradigm to one with the ability to perceive, learn, reason, and interact robustly in open-ended changing environments. Real world problems and large digital environments (such as Internet) usually are too complex to be modelled within a limited set of predefined specifications. Thus, there will inevitably be a need for robust decisions and behaviour in novel situations based on the capability and knowledge of artificial cognitive systems. Further, there will be a need for automatic extraction and organization of meaning, purpose and intentions in interplay with the environment, beyond current systems, with built-in semantic representations and ontologies. Research in CIP is widely interdisciplinary. The aim of this new series of workshops is to bring together researchers from the machine learning, pattern recognition, signal processing and communications communities in an effort to encourage cross-fertilization of ideas and tools. ------------------------ Topics of Interest ---------------------- Theory: * Learning theory and modelling * Bayesian learning and models * Information theoretic learning * Graphical and kernel methods * Adaptive learning algorithms * Ensembles: committees, mixtures, boosting, etc. * Data representation and analysisPCA, ICA, CCA, etc. * Other topics for cognitive information processing Applications: * Cognitive radio * Cognitive component analysis--blind source separation, ICA, etc. * Cognitive dynamic systems * Distributed, cooperative, and adaptive processing * Other application areas