10.366, Calls: American Indigenous Lang., Knowledge Discovery

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Tue Mar 9 21:42:26 UTC 1999


LINGUIST List:  Vol-10-366. Tue Mar 9 1999. ISSN: 1068-4875.

Subject: 10.366, Calls: American Indigenous Lang., Knowledge Discovery

Moderators: Anthony Rodrigues Aristar: Wayne State U.<aristar at linguistlist.org>
            Helen Dry: Eastern Michigan U. <hdry at linguistlist.org>
            Andrew Carnie: U. of Arizona <carnie at linguistlist.org>

Reviews: Andrew Carnie: U. of Arizona <carnie at linguistlist.org>

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                    Brett Churchill <brett at linguistlist.org>
                    Ljuba Veselinova <ljuba at linguistlist.org>

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		    Jody Huellmantel <jody at linguistlist.org>
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Editor for this issue: Jody Huellmantel <jody at linguistlist.org>
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=================================Directory=================================

1)
Date:  Mon, 8 Mar 1999 08:19:15 -0800 (PST)
From:  Fiona Whalen <6500frw0 at ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu>
Subject:  Workshop on American Indigenous Languages

2)
Date:  Mon, 8 Mar 1999 17:13:49 +0100
From:  Mohamed.Quafafou at irin.univ-nantes.fr (Mohamed Quafafou)
Subject:  KDAD'99

-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------

Date:  Mon, 8 Mar 1999 08:19:15 -0800 (PST)
From:  Fiona Whalen <6500frw0 at ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu>
Subject:  Workshop on American Indigenous Languages



 	            SECOND CALL FOR PAPERS

        WOR ON AMERICAN INDIGENOUS LANGUAGES
		       Santa Barbara, CA
			May 14-16, 1999

The linguistics department at the University of California, Santa Barbara
announces its second annual Workshop on American Indigenous Languages
(WAIL), a forum for the discussion of theoretical and descriptive
linguistic studies of indigenous languages of the Americas.

		Invited Speaker: Sara Trechter

Anonymous abstracts are invited for talks on any topic in Native American
linguistics. Talks will be 20 minutes, followed by 10 minutes for
discussion. Individuals may submit abstracts for one single and one
co-authored paper. Abstracts should be 500 words or less and can be
submitted by hard copy or e-mail. For hard copy submissions, please send
five copies of your abstract and a 3x5 card with the following
information:
	(1) name;
	(2) affiliation;
	(3) mailing address;
	(4) phone number;
	(5) e-mail address;
	(6) title of your paper.

Send hard copy submissions to:
	Workshop on American Indigenous Languages
	Department of Linguistics
	University of California, Santa Barbara
	Santa Barbara, CA 93106

E-mail submissions are encouraged. Include the information from the 3x5
card (above) in the body of the e-mail message, with the anonymous
abstract as an attachment.

Send e-mail submissions to:
wail at humanitas.ucsb.edu

DEADLINE FOR RECEIPT OF ABSTRACTS: March 19, 1999
Notification of acceptance will be by e-mail in late-March.

Registration: $20 (checks payable to WAIL)

For further information contact the conference coordinator at
wail at humanitas.ucsb.edu or (805) 893-3776
or check out our web site at http://www.linguistics.ucsb.edu/wail/wail.html







-------------------------------- Message 2 -------------------------------

Date:  Mon, 8 Mar 1999 17:13:49 +0100
From:  Mohamed.Quafafou at irin.univ-nantes.fr (Mohamed Quafafou)
Subject:  KDAD'99


The PAKDD Workshop on Knowledge Discovery from Advanced Databases (KDAD'99)

In conjunction with

Third Pacific-Asia Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining
(PAKDD'99) Beijing, China, April 26, 1999

                http://www.sciences.univ-nantes.fr/kdad99

MOTIVATION

The main goal of knowledge discovery is to convert the massive amount of
the captured data to actionable knowledge. The last few years have seen a
growing development of algorithms and approaches to automatic discovery of
knowledge from for well-structured raw data stored in very large relational
databases. However, different kind of data, i.e., image, text, video, etc.
are know available in file systems, objects servers and web sites and
accessed by a wide range of users, ranging from discipline experts to
novice users.  There is a growing need for new generation of data mining
and KDD tools to automatically and intelligently analyzes complex data
types as audio, image, video, spatial data, temporal data and textual
information.  The challenge for the next decade is to develop theoretical
foundations, technological support and integrated tools to make easy the
discovery of knowledge from advanced databases (KdAd) by converting its
heterogeneous information to useful and actionable knowledge according to a
users goals.

The problem of efficiently discovering knowledge from advanced databases is
an important problem in a wide variety of application areas including
astronomy, geology, biology, urbanism, environment, biomedical, spatial
relationship marketing, etc. Knowledge discovery from advanced databases
development faces challenges in several issues, including data storage and
access, data preprocessing, data mining algorithms and architectures,
visualization and interactive exploration, interfaces and languages for
data mining, etc.:

1. Complex data which may be extremely varied in content,  structure and
format, can not be stored and manipulated in a traditional RDBMS.
Alternative ways are extending object-relational databases to store and
manage both data and methods encapsulated into objects, and objects
databases which allow a persistent storage of objects and as the use
object-oriented programming language.
2. Large preprocessing efforts are generally necessary to understand the
data and data preprocessing includes different kind of operators as
indexing schemes, retrieval methods, data integration, metadata creation,
etc.
3. Efficient data mining algorithms are needed to analyse this
heterogeneous data which may be strongly structured (i.e., multimedia
object) or poorly structured  (i.e., informal notes added to an image).
The integration of KDD tools into software environment is primary of
importance in real world applications, i.e., coupling KDD tools with a
geographical information system.  The KdAd99 workshop will be focused on
algorithms, methodologies,  technologies and standards related to knowledge
discovery from advanced databases, i.e., OODB, text mining, spatial and
temporal data exploration and analysis, image, audio, video and more
generally multimedia objects mining. Real world applications are strongly
encouraged.


WORKSHOP OUTLINE

The Workshop includes invited and contributed talks which give a
description of open questions in KdAd, work in progress, solutions
presented by specific approaches, lessons learned from realized real world
projects. This workshop is a forum for discussion of new ideas and
techniques and will lead to identify the main problems which should be
addressed in the immediate future. We invite participants from academia,
government and industry to share ideas and experiences.


SUBMISSION OF PAPERS

Currently, researchers in different communities (i.e., data mining,
database, multimedia, digital libraries, metadata, data engineering and
object) are looking at different aspects of this problem. The primary
purpose of this workshop is threefold :

1. to bring together researchers and practitioners interested by KdAd
problem in order to exchange ideas,
2. to gain a better understanding of the state of the art and the
technological solutions,
3. to identify and explicit the search challenges to address in getting
specific tools and/or integrated solutions supporting the emergence of
knowledge from Advanced databases.

Among others, papers of the following kind are welcome :
        - Heterogeneous Database systems
        - Semi-structured Data mining
        - Temporal and Spatial Database systems
        - Multimedia and Digital Libraries
        - Image, Video and Audio Data exploration and analysis
        - OODB mining
        - Text Mining
        - Metadata and complex object mining
        - Agent-based architectures
        - Analysis and methodology issues
        - Applications in Sciences, Engineering, GIS-based mining, Internet
          and web mining, etc.

This workshop addresses practitioners as well as researchers from those
communities which contribute to the KdAd topic. Potential attendees submit
a full technical paper (not exceeding 5000 words), or a summary of an
ongoing research effort (not exceeding 1500 words). Electronic submission
(postscript, pdf, or MS Word format) is highly encouraged.
Submission should be sent to quafafou at irin.univ-nantes.fr. Hard-copy
submission are also accepted, please sent three (3) copies of the paper to
Mohamed Quafafou (see address below)


IMPORTANT DATES

Submission deadline    March 15, 1999
Notification of acceptance April 5, 1999
Workshop date  April 26, 1999


REVIEW & PUBLICATION

All submissions will be reviewed on the basis of relevance, originality,
significance and clarity. Two referees will review each submission and
their results will be sent to the first author via email, unless requested
otherwise. Authors of selected papers will be invited to extend their
papers for inclusion in a special issue of An International Journal.


KDAD'99 ORGANISATION

Mohamed Quafafou  (co-chair)
University of Nantes,  2, rue de la Houssiniere, BP. 92208  44322 Nantes
Cedex 3 France.
e-mail : quafafou at irin.univ-nantes.fr

Philip Yu  (co-chair)
IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
30 Saw Mill River Road Hawthorne, NY 10532, USA
e-mail: psyu at watson.ibm.com


PROGRAM COMMITTE

Chung Sheng Li  IBM T.J. Watson Research Center, USA
Hannu Toivonen  University of Helsinki, Finland,
Raymond Ng  Univ. of British Columbia, Canada
Kyusoek Shim  Bell Labs, USA
Jiawei Han  Simon Fraser University, Canada
Rakesh Agrawal  IBM Almaden Research Center, USA
Hongjun Lu  National University of Sangapore, Singapore
Vijay V. Raghavan  University of Southwestern Louisiana, USA
Ahmed K. Elmagarmid  Perdue University, USA
Ning Zhong  Yamagushi university, Japan
Xindong Wu Colorado School of Mines, USA


-  Mohamed Quafafou

IRIN, 2 rue la Houssiniere, BP 92208 - 44322, Nantes cedex 03, France.
* tel: +33 (0) 251 125 853 * fax: +33 (0) 251 125 812 *
quafafou at irin.univ-nantes.fr *

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