Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

February 3, 2011

Twenty-Fourth Annual Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NIPS) 2010

Filed under: Biomedical,Conferences,Neural Networks — Patrick Durusau @ 3:18 pm

Twenty-Fourth Annual Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NIPS) 2010

Another treasure trove of conference presentations, tutorials and other materials of interest to anyone working on information systems.

From the website:

You are invited to participate in the Twenty-Fourth Annual Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems, which is the premier scientific meeting on Neural Computation.

A one-day Tutorial Program offered a choice of six two-hour tutorials by leading scientists. The topics span a wide range of subjects including Neuroscience, Learning Algorithms and Theory, Bioinformatics, Image Processing, and Data Mining.

The NIPS Conference featured a single track program, with contributions from a large number of intellectual communities. Presentation topics include: Algorithms and Architectures; Applications; Brain Imaging; Cognitive Science and Artificial Intelligence; Control and Reinforcement Learning; Emerging Technologies; Learning Theory; Neuroscience; Speech and Signal Processing; and Visual Processing.

There were two Posner Lectures named in honor of Ed Posner who founded NIPS. Ed worked on communications and information theory at Caltech and was an early pioneer in neural networks. He organized the first NIPS conference and workshop in Denver in 1989 and incorporated the NIPS Foundation in 1992. He was an inpiring teacher and an effective leader. His untimely death in a bicycle accident in 1993 was a great loss to our community. Posner Lecturers were Josh Tenebaum and Michael Jordan.

The Poster Sessions offered high-quality posters and an opportunity for researchers to share their work and exchange ideas in a collegial setting. The majority of contributions accepted at NIPS were presented as posters.

The Demonstrations enabled researchers to highlight scientific advances, systems, and technologies in ways that go beyond conventional poster presentations. It provided a unique forum for demonstrating advanced technologies — both hardware and software — and fostering the direct exchange of knowledge.

1 Comment

  1. […] This is the Michael Jordan who gave a Posner Lecture at the 24th Annual Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems 2010. […]

    Pingback by Practical Machine Learning « Another Word For It — May 18, 2011 @ 6:45 pm

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