Call For Participation

Fourth International Colloquium on Grammatical Inference (ICGI-98)


Program Co-Chairs: Vasant Honavar and Giora Slutzki, Iowa State University

July 12-14, 1998
Iowa State University
Ames, Iowa, USA.

Cosponsored at Iowa State University by
International Institute of Theoretical and Applied Physics
Complex Adaptive Systems Group
Iowa Computational Biology Laboratory
Artificial Intelligence Research Laboratory
Department of Computer Science
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences

In cooperation with
American Association for Artificial Intelligence
IEEE Systems, Man, and Cybernetics Society
ACL Special Interest Group on Natural Language Learning


Index
Introduction

Grammatical Inference, variously refered to as automata induction, grammar induction, and automatic language acquisition, refers to the process of learning of grammars and languages from data. Machine learning of grammars finds a variety of applications in syntactic pattern recognition, adaptive intelligent agents, diagnosis, computational biology, systems modelling, prediction, natural language acquisition, data mining and knowledge discovery.

Traditionally, grammatical inference has been studied by researchers in several research communities including: Information Theory, Formal Languages, Automata Theory, Language Acquisition, Computational Linguistics, Machine Learning, Pattern Recognition, Computational Learning Theory, Neural Networks, etc.

Perhaps one of the first attempts to bring together researchers working on grammatical inference for an interdisciplinary exchange of research results took place under the aegis of the First Colloquium on Grammatical Inference held at the University of Essex in United Kingdom in April 1993. This was followed by the (second) International Colloquium on Grammatical Inference, held at Alicante in Spain, the proceedings of which were published by Springer-Verlag as volume 862 of the Lectures Notes in Artificial Intelligence, and the Third International Colloquium on Grammatical Inference, held at Montpellier in France, the proceedings of which were published by Springer-Verlag as volume 1147 of the Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence. Following the success of these events and the Workshop on Automata Induction, Grammatical Inference, and Language Acquisition, held in conjunction with the International Conference on Machine Learning at Nashville in United States in July 1997, the Fourth International Colloquium on Grammatical Inference will be held from July 12 through July 14, 1998, at Iowa State University in United States.

The conference will have a single track and all the sessions will be held in Iowa State Memorial Union<.


Topics of Interest

The conference seeks to provide a forum for presentation and discussion of original research papers on all aspects of grammatical inference including, but not limited to:


Program Committee

Technical Program Chairs:
Vasant Honavar and Giora Slutzki, Iowa State University, USA.

Technical Program Committee:
R. Berwick, MIT, USA
A. Brazma, European Bioinformatics Institute, Cambridge, UK.
M. Brent, Johns Hopkins University, USA
C. Cardie, Cornell University, USA
W. Daelemans, Tilburg University, Netherlands
D. Dowe, Monash University, Australia
P. Dupont, University Jean Monnet at St. Etienne, France.
D. Estival, University of Melbourne, Australia
J. Feldman, International Computer Science Institute, Berkeley, USA
L. Giles, NEC Research Institute, Princeton, USA
J. Gregor, University of Tennessee, USA
C. de la Higuera, University Jean Monnet at St. Etienne, France
A. Itai, Technion, Israel
T. Knuutila, University of Turku, Finland
J. Koza, Stanford University, USA
K. Lang, NEC Research Institute, Princeton, USA.
M. Li, University of Waterloo, Canada
E. Makinen, University of Tampere, Finland
L. Miclet, ENSSAT, Lannion, France.
G. Nagaraja, Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay, India
H. Ney, University of Technology, Aachen, Germany
J. Nicolas, IRISA, France
R. Parekh, Allstate Research and Planning Center, Menlo Park, USA
L. Pitt, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
D. Powers, Flinders University, Australia
L. Reeker, National Science Foundation, USA
Y. Sakakibara, Tokyo Denki University, Japan.
C. Samuelsson, Lucent Technologies, USA
A. Sharma, University of New South Wales, Australia.
E. Vidal, U. Politecnica de Valencia, Spain


Additional Reviewers

Anand Venkat Raman, University of Massey, New Zealand


Local Arrangements Committee

Dale Grosvenor, Iowa State University, USA.
K. Balakrishnan, Iowa State University, USA.
R. Bhatt, Iowa State University, USA
J. Yang, Iowa State University, USA.


Invited Papers
  1. J. Feldman, International Computer Science Institute and University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA. Topic: Real Language Learning.
  2. A. Brazma, European Bioinformatics Institute, Cambridge. Topic: Pattern Discovery in Biosequences.


Tutorial(s)
  1. Kolmogorov Complexity and Its Applications, Jack Lutz, Iowa State University.

List of Accepted Papers

  1. Stochastic Regular Tree Language Inference, Rafael C. Carrasco, Jose Oncina and Jorge Calera
  2. The Data Driven Approach Applied to the OSTIA Algorithm, Jose Oncina
  3. Approximate Learning of Random Subsequential Transducers, Antonio Castellanos
  4. How considering incompatible state mergings may reduce the DFA induction search tree, Francois Coste and Jacques Nicolas
  5. Learning Regular Grammars to Model Musical Style: Comparing Different Coding Schemes, P. P. Cruz-Alcazar and E. Vidal-Ruiz
  6. Using symbol clustering to improve probabilistic automaton inference, Pierre Dupont and Lin Chase
  7. Learning a Subclass of Context-Free Languages J. Emerald, K. Subramanian, and D. Thomas
  8. Learning a determinisitic finite automaton with a recurrent neural network, L Firoiu, T Oates, and P R Cohen
  9. Learning Feature-Based Phrase-Structure Rules with the Grammar Inference Tool, B. Geistert
  10. Learning Stochastic Finite Automata from Experts, Colin de la Higuera.
  11. A stochastic search approach to grammar induction Hugues Juille and Jordan Pollack
  12. Grammar Model and Grammar Induction in the System NL Page, Keselj
  13. Results of the Abbadingo One DFA Learning Competition and a New Evidence Driven State Merging Algorithm K.J. Lang, B.A. Pearlmutter and R. Price
  14. Transducer-learning Experiments on Language Understanding Picó and E. Vidal
  15. Learning k-variable pattern languages efficiently stochastically finite on average from positive data Peter Rossmanith and Thomas Zeugmann
  16. Locally Threshold Testable Languages in Strict Sense: Application to the Inference Problem, Jose Ruiz, Salvador Espana, and Pedro Garcia
  17. Grammatical Inference in Document Recognition, Saidi, Tayeb-bey
  18. Learning a Subclass of Linear Languages from Positive Structural Information, Jose Sempere and G. Nagaraja
  19. Why Meaning Helps Learning Syntax, Isabelle Tellier
  20. A Performance Evaluation of automatic Survey Classifiers, Viechnicki
  21. Applying grammatical inference by learning a language model for oral dialogue Jacques Chodorowski and Laurent Miclet
  22. A polynomial Time incremental Algorithm for learning DFA, R. Parekh, C. Nichitu, V. Honavar


Conference Format and Proceedings

The conference will include oral and possibly poster presentations of accepted papers, a small number of tutorials and invited talks. All accepted papers will appear in the conference proceedings to be published by Springer-Verlag as a volume in the Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence which is part of the Springer-Verlag Lecture Notes in Computer Science Series.

Instructions for preparation of Camera-Ready Versions of Accepted and Invited Papers for Publication


Financial Support

Limited financial support might be available, subject to the availability of funds, for:

Additional details will be posted as they become available.


Registration Information

Early Registration Deadline:    May 11, 1998 for authors and May 21, 1998 for everyone else. Presenting authors of accepted papers should register by May 11, 1998.

Registration Fees:     The conference registration includes the conference proceedings and the banquet (on Monday, July 13, 1998).


To register, you can use either the Online Registration Form or the Printable Registration Form

Ames Related Information


If you want to be informed when this page is updated, please enter your email address here: