2001-2006 Special Focus on Data Analysis and Mining: Working Groups
Interdisciplinary working groups will explore specific research
areas. Each working group will consist of researchers with expertise
in the field and/or in one of the applications areas. We will bring
these working groups together for several days to a week for a first meeting.
There will be informal presentations and lots of time for
discussion and interaction. At the end or beginning of this first
get-together, we will hold a public workshop with more formal
presentations. During the public workshop, others in the community
interested in the field will be given an opportunity to learn about
the working group's efforts and the working group will have the
opportunity to learn about the efforts of others that they might not
have known about. Because we want to be inclusive, we will use this
public meeting to identify individuals from the community who might
wish to join the working group or have their students do so, and we
will include them in the second working group meeting. The goals of
this first get-together at DIMACS will be to formulate problems, share
ideas and approaches, and set an agenda for future interactions.
These interactions will take place via email and such interactions as
take place normally in scientific collaborations. After six to twelve
months, we will bring the working groups back together at DIMACS for
another meeting. We expect that at this second meeting, the
participants will have an opportunity for intensive collaborations and
also that they will make informal presentations to each other about
their progress. At the end of the second get-together, we hope that
the working groups will have obtained exciting results, at least of a
preliminary nature, and we will have laid the groundwork for extensive
future collaborations.
The working groups will be interdisciplinary. Researchers who have
addressed the problems we shall investigate include theoretical and
applied computer scientists, statisticians, discrete and non-discrete
mathematicians, chemists, astronomers, economists, psychologists,
information theorists, management scientists, ecologists, molecular
biologists, and others. Most of these fields will be represented in
our working groups. DIMACS has a long and successful history of
getting researchers with different backgrounds and approaches
together, stimulating new collaborations, helping to set the agenda
for future research, and acting as a catalyst for major new
developments at the interface among disciplines and we hope to build
on this tradition with these working groups.
The following is the meeting schedule of the groups:
- Algorithms for Multidimensional Scaling I
- Dates: August 6 - 10, 2001
- Location: DIMACS Center, CoRE Building, Rutgers University
- Organizers: J. Douglas Carroll and Phipps Arabie, Rutgers University
- Email: dcarroll@rci.rutgers.edu, arabie@andromeda.rutgers.edu
- Streaming Data Analysis and Mining I
- Dates: November 5 - 9, 2001
- Location: DIMACS Center, CoRE Building, Rutgers University
- Organizers: Adam Buchsbaum, AT&T Labs
- Email: alb@research.att.com
-
Computer-Generated Conjectures from Graph Theoretic and Chemical Databases I
- Dates: November 12 -16, 2001
- Location: DIMACS Center, CoRE Building, Rutgers University
- Organizers: Patrick Fowler, University of Exeter; Pierre Hansen, GERAD - University of Montreal
- Email: P.W.Fowler@exeter.ac.uk, pierreh@crt.umontreal.ca
- Streaming Data Analysis and Mining II
- Dates: March 24-26, 2003
- Location: DIMACS Center, CoRE Building, Rutgers University
- Organizers: Adam Buchsbaum, AT&T Labs and Rajeev Motwani, Stanford University
- Email: alb@research.att.com, rajeev@cs.stanford.edu
- Algorithms for Multidimensional Scaling II
- Dates: June 11-12, 2003
- Location: Doubletree Hotel, Tallahassee, FL
- Organizers: J. Douglas Carroll and Phipps Arabie, Rutgers University
- Email: dcarroll@rci.rutgers.edu, arabie@andromeda.rutgers.edu
- New Algorithms for Inferring Molecular Structure from Distance Restraints
- Dates: January 12 - 16, 2004
- Location: DIMACS Center, CoRE Building, Rutgers University
- Organizers: Michael W Trosset, College of William & Mary
- Email: trosset@MATH.WM.EDU
-
Computer-Generated Conjectures from Graph Theoretic and Chemical Databases II
- Dates: June 2 - 5, 2004
- Location: Centre de Recherches Mathematiques (CRM), Universite de Montreal, Quebec, Canada
- Organizers: Patrick Fowler, Univeristy of Exeter; Pierre Hansen, GERAD - University of Montreal
- Email: P.W.Fowler@exeter.ac.uk, pierreh@crt.umontreal.ca
- Working Group on The Burrows - Wheeler Transform: Ten Years Later
- Dates: August 19 - 20, 2004
- Location: DIMACS Center, CoRE Building, Rutgers University
- Organizers: Paolo Ferragina, University of Pisa; Giovanni Manzini, University of Piemonte Orientale; S. Muthukrishnan, Rutgers University
- Email: muthu@cs.rutgers.edu
This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. 0100921
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Document last modified on July 19, 2005.