(apologies for multiple copies) ICML 2005 call for workshop and tutorial proposals below. Submission deadlines: Dec 17, 2004 (workshops) - Feb 11, 2005 (tutorials) http://icml2005.ais.fraunhofer.de/call_for_proposals.php ------------------------------------------------------------------------ --------------------- The 22nd International Conference On Machine Learning (ICML 2005) August 7-11, 2005, Bonn, Germany http://icml2005.ais.fraunhofer.de Call for Workshop and Tutorial Proposals ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------ The ICML 2005 Organizing Committee invites proposals for workshops and tutorials to be held at the 22nd International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML 2005), which will take place August 7-11, 2005, in Bonn, Germany. ICML 2005 will be co-located with ILP 2005 (15th International Conference on Inductive Logic Programming, August 10-13) and will closely follow IJCAI 2005 (19th International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence, Edinburgh, July 30 - August 5). The ICML 2005 workshops and tutorials will be held on August 7 and 11. Workshops provide organizers and participants with an opportunity to focus intensively on a specific topic in machine learning. Workshops can choose to concentrate on emerging research topics, but can also be devoted to application issues, or to questions concerning the economic and social aspects of machine learning. Proposals that aim at a cross-fertilization between machine learning and one of the topics of the co-located conferences are particularly welcome. Tutorials should provide an introduction and/or a review of the state-of-the-art of a topic that is of interest to attendants of a machine learning conference. These could be on particular research topics within the two fields, but could also be on topics from other research fields if the proposal makes clear why this is considered to be an important topic for researchers from other areas. A tutorial must be broad enough to cover a research area in which there is a significant publication activity in the community. Presentations that focus on the presenters' own research results or commercial presentations are not eligible. For practical information on the workshops and tutorials, and for details on the submission procedure, see below or refer to the detailed calls for workshops and tutorials that are available at http://icml2005.ais.fraunhofer.de/call_for_proposals.php Tutorial notes and working notes of the workshops will be made available to participants in electronic form prior to the conference. They will also be distributed at the conference itself (CD and paper versions). ============= How to Propose a Workshop Workshop proposals should contain the necessary information for the workshop chair and reviewers from the conference organizing committee to judge the importance, quality and community interest in the proposed topic. Each workshop should have one or more designated organizers and a workshop program committee. When proposing a workshop, please provide (at least) the following information: * Topic -- What will the workshop be about? Why do you believe this is an interesting and significant topic? Why is the topic best addressed in an ICML workshop, as opposed to a workshop at another conference or papers in an ICML technical session? * Goals -- What do you expect will come out of the workshop? How will the workshop change the participants' understanding of the area? Do you think it will have an impact on the Machine Learning community at large? * Intended audience -- From which areas do you expect potential participants to come? How many participants do you expect? Can you already name some of them? * Format -- How will the workshop sessions be scheduled? How much time will be used for discussion, panel discussions, paper presentations, invited talks, or other methods for encouraging communication and consensus? Organizers are encouraged to focus on mechanisms other than traditional paper presentations and to differentiate themselves clearly from typical conference sessions. * Publicity -- How do you intend to publicize the workshop? How will you reach the most interested and appropriate participants? Are there any plans to document the workshop results (beyond ICML's web publication)? * Organizers -- Please include the name, postal address, phone number, e-mail address, and webpage of all members of the program committee. In addition, indicate the organizers' background in the workshop area. Proposals should be submitted in electronic form to: Hendrik Blockeel E-mail: hendrik.blockeel@cs.kuleuven.ac.be Important Dates Dec 17, 2004 Proposal deadline Jan 7, 2005 Acceptance notification Jan 21, 2005 Publicity Materials Due Apr 1, 2005 WS Paper submission deadline Apr 22, 2005 Notification of participants May 13, 2005 WS final paper deadline May 20, 2005 Workshop notes due (on-line) URL http://icml2005.ais.fraunhofer.de/call_for_proposals.php =============== How to Propose a Tutorial Proposals should provide sufficient information to evaluate the quality and importance of the topic, the likely quality of the presentation materials, and the speakers' teaching ability. We encourage tutorials taught by two-person teams because the added perspective of a second presenter can provide richer, more balanced coverage of an area. When proposing a tutorial, please provide (at least) the following information: * Topic -- What will the tutorial be about? Why do you believe this is an interesting and significant subject for the machine learning community at large? * Intended audience -- From which areas do you expect potential participants to come? Which prior knowledge, if any, do you expect from the audience? What will the participants learn? How many participants do you expect? * Content -- Provide a detailed outline of the topics to be presented, including estimates for the time that will be devoted to each subject. If possible, provide samples of past tutorial slides or teaching materials. In case of multiple presenters, specify how you will distribute the work. * Format -- How will you present the material? Will there be multi-media parts of the presentation? Do you plan software demonstrations? Specify any extraordinary technical equipment that you would need. Will the tutorial be full-day or half-day? * Presenters -- Please include the name, postal address, phone number, e-mail address, and webpage of all presenters. In addition, indicate the presenters' background and a list of publications in the tutorial area. Proposals should be submitted in electronic form to: Hendrik Blockeel E-mail: hendrik.blockeel@cs.kuleuven.ac.be Important Dates Feb 11, 2005 Proposal deadline Feb 28, 2005 Acceptance notification Mar 7, 2005 Tutorial abstracts due May 20, 2005 Tutorial notes due URL http://icml2005.ais.fraunhofer.de/call_for_proposals.php