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Page 1: ICCBR Program Schedule - draft version.docx

Program of Events

Page 2: ICCBR Program Schedule - draft version.docx

Welcome to ICCBR 2014 from the Conference Organizers

Welcome to the Twenty-second International Conference on Case-Based Reasoning (ICCBR), organized

in collaboration with AAAI. ICCBR is the premier international meeting on research and applications in

Case-Based Reasoning (CBR). The CBR community welcomes new members and encourages you to

join it. The conference series steadily expands the frontiers of CBR as a scientific field. Each conference

reflects in keynote addresses on the progress of the field and its connections with related areas,

discusses topical problems in a set of workshops, presents industrial solutions, and holds a doctoral

consortium to encourage the progress of young researchers.

This year’s call for paper reached 49 submissions and each one was reviewed by at least three Program

Committee members using the criteria of relevance, significance, originality, technical quality, and

presentation. The committee accepted 19 papers for oral presentation and 16 papers for poster

presentation at the conference.

In addition to the main technical track, the ICCBR 2014 conference features the following events:

● ICCBR 2014 workshops provide an informal setting to meet and discuss current, interesting

aspects of CBR. This year’s program includes workshops on case-based agents, reasoning with

social media content, reasoning about time in CBR and synergies between CBR and Data

Mining.

● The Doctoral Consortium (DC) comprises presentations by 14 graduate students in collaboration

with their respective senior CBR research mentors. The DC gives early stage postgraduate

students the important opportunity to discuss their research ideas and get very valuable

feedback.

● The 7th Computer Cooking Contest (CCC) attracts researchers dealing with AI technologies such

as case-based reasoning, semantic technologies, information retrieval and information extraction.

This year’s contest offers 3 challenges: the basic challenge on suggesting cooking recipes, the

originality challenge on novel ideas and positions on computer cooking, and the more

sophisticated real life mixology challenge on suggesting high-quality cocktail recipes with a limited

set of ingredients.

We hope you enjoy ICCBR 2014 and will have a good time in Cork!

Luc Lamontagne & Enric Plaza

Program Chairs

Derek Bridge

Conference Chair

Page 3: ICCBR Program Schedule - draft version.docx

ICCBR 2014 Venue

The Imperial Hotel

South Mall, Cork

+353 (0)21 4274040

The conference takes place in the Business Centre on the first floor of the hotel.

The conference will use the Ballroom and the Morgan Room. On Monday morning, the Ballroom

will be partitioned into three suites (the Hillcrest Suite, the Rossmore Suite and the Whitechurch

Suite); on Monday afternoon, the Rossmore and Whitechurch Suites will be combined.

Wifi: The name of the Hotel network is “Imperial Business Centre”. There is no password.

Sponsors

Page 4: ICCBR Program Schedule - draft version.docx

ICCBR 2014 Organizing Committee

Conference Chair

Derek Bridge, University College Cork, Ireland

Program Chairs

Luc Lamontagne, Laval University, Canada

Enric Plaza, IIIA-CSIC, Spain

Workshops Chairs

David Leake, Indiana University, USA

Jean Lieber, LORIA-INRIA Lorraine, France

Doctoral Consortium Chairs

Rosina Weber, Drexel University, USA

Nirmalie Wiratunga, The Robert Gordon University, United Kingdom

Computer Cooking Contest Chairs

Emmanuel Nauer, Loria, Université de Lorraine, France

Mirjam Minor, Goethe University, Germany

ICCBR 2014 Program Committee

Agnar Aamodt (NTNU, Norway) David W. Aha (Naval Research Laboratory, USA) Klaus-Dieter Althoff (University of Hildesheim, Germany) Ralph Bergmann (University of Trier, Germany) Isabelle Bichindaritz (State University of NY at Oswego, USA) Derek Bridge (University College Cork, Ireland) William Cheetham (GE Global Research, USA) Alexandra Coman (Northern Ohio University, USA) Amélie Cordier (LIRIS, France) Susan Craw (The Robert Gordon University, UK) Sarah Jane Delany (Dublin Institute of Technology, Ireland) Belen Diaz-Agudo (Complutense Univ. of Madrid, Spain) Michael Floyd (Knexus Research, USA) Ashok Goel (Georgia Institute of Technology, USA) Mehmet H. Göker (Salesforce, USA) Pedro González Calero (Complutense Univ. of Madrid, Spain) Luc Lamontagne (Laval University, Canada) David Leake (Indiana University, USA) Jean Lieber (LORIA - INRIA Lorraine, France) Ramon Lopez De Mantaras (IIIA - CSIC, Spain) Cindy Marling (Ohio University, USA)

Lorraine McGinty (University College Dublin, Ireland) David McSherry (University of Ulster, UK) Alain Mille (LIRIS, France) Mirjam Minor (Goethe Universitaet Frankfurt, Germany) Stefania Montani (University Piemonte Orientale, Italy) Hector Munoz-Avila (Lehigh University, USA) Santiago Ontañón (Drexel University, USA) Miltos Petridis (CEM, Brighton University, UK) Enric Plaza (IIIA - CSIC, Spain) Luigi Portinale (Univ. Piemonte Orientale "A. Avogadro", Italy) Ashwin Ram (PARC, USA) Juan Recio-Garcia (Complutense Univ. of Madrid, Spain) Thomas Roth-Berghofer (University of West London, UK) Jonathan Rubin (PARC, USA) Antonio Sánchez-Ruiz (Complutense Univ. of Madrid, Spain) Barry Smyth (University College Dublin, Ireland) Ian Watson (University of Auckland, New Zealand) Rosina Weber (Drexel University, USA) David Wilson (University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA) Nirmalie Wiratunga (The Robert Gordon University, UK)

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Conference Invited Speaker

Tuesday, September 30th, 9:10-10:10

Tony Veale

Lecturer

School of Computer Science, University College Dublin

Running with Scissors: Cut-Ups, Boundary Friction and Creative Reuse

Our experience of past problems can offer valuable insights into the solution of current problems, though

since novel problems are not merely re-occurrences of those we have seen before, their solutions require

us to integrate multiple sources of inspiration into a single, composite whole. The degree to which the

seams of these patchwork solutions are evident to an end-user offers an inverse measure of the practical

success of the reuse process: the less visible its joins, the more natural a solution is likely to seem.

However, since creativity is neither an objective nor an intrinsic property of a solution, but a subjective

label ascribed by a community, the more perceptible the tensions between parts, and the more evident

the wit that one must employ to ameliorate these tensions, then the more likely we are to label a solution

as creative. We explore here the conceit that creative reuse is more than practical problem-solving: it is

reuse that draws attention to itself, by reveling in boundary friction.

Bio:

Tony Veale (Afflatus.UCD.ie) is a computer scientist whose principal research topic is Computational

Linguistic Creativity. Veale teaches Computer Science at University College Dublin (UCD) and at Fudan

University Shanghai as part of UCD’s international BSc. in Software Engineering, which Veale helped

establish in 2002. Veale’s work on Computational Creativity (CC) focuses on creative linguistic

phenomena such as metaphor, simile, blending, analogy, similarity and irony. He leads the European

Commission’s coordination action on Computational Creativity called PROSECCO — Promoting the

Scientific Exploration of Computational Creativity — which aims to develop the CC field into a mature

discipline. He is author of the 2012 monograph Exploding the Creativity Myth: The Computational

Foundations of Linguistic Creativity and is principal co-editor of the multidisciplinary volume titled

Creativity and the Agile Mind. As a visiting professor in Web Science at the Korean Advanced Institute of

Science and Technology, M. Veale was funded by the Korean World Class University programme to

study the convergence of Computational Creativity and the Web in the form of Creative Web Services. He

has recently launched a new Web initiative called RobotComix.com to engage with the wider public on

the theory, philosophy and practice of building creative services, and one such system – the creative web

service Metaphor Magnet – can be sampled via the automated twitterbot @MetaphorMagnet.

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Conference Invited Speaker

Wednesday, October 1st, 9:30-10:30

Frode Sørmo

Chief Technology Officer

Verdande Technology

What I Talk About When I Talk About CBR

In the last two years, Verdande Technology has branched out from our first application in monitoring

drilling operations of oil and gas wells to look at other use-cases of case-based reasoning (CBR). In

particular, we have looked at monitoring applications that use real-time sensor data and require a person

in the decision making loop.

This talk will briefly present our pre-existing use-case in oil & gas, as well as two use cases from financial

services and healthcare that were taken to the prototype stage. In exploring these use cases as well as

others that were not taken as far, we have spoken to customers, end users, data scientists, industry

analysts and managers in order to understand if CBR is or could be on their radar. We present what we

learned from these interactions, as well as how we learned to talk about CBR to these different groups.

Finally, we will ask what, if anything, holds CBR back from the type of large scale industrial adoption we

see happening with rule-based systems and “analytics” technologies.

Bio:

Frode Sørmo is the Chief Technology Officer of Verdande Technology, which delivers decision support

software based on case-based reasoning to the oil & gas industry. As one of the founders of Verdande

Technology, Sørmo led the development team from 2006 to 2008 before taking on his current role as

CTO to provide strategy on technology, research and product development in 2009. He holds a PhD in

computer science from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU).

Page 7: ICCBR Program Schedule - draft version.docx

ICCBR 2014 Conference Program at a Glance

September 29th (Monday)

September 30th (Tuesday)

October 1st (Wednesday)

8:30 - 9:00 Registration Registration Registration

9:00 - 9:30 Workshop sessions DC, Case-Based Agents,

CCC, CBR-DM

Welcome (9:00 - 9:10) Workshop reports

9:30 - 10:30 Invited Talk: Tony Vale (9:10 - 10:10)

Invited Talk: Frode Sørmo

10:30 - 11:00 Break Break (10:10-10:40) Break

11:00 - 12:00 Workshop sessions DC, Case-Based Agents,

CCC, CBR-DM

Paper session 1 Adaptation

Paper session 4 Planning and Design

12:00 - 13:30 Lunch Lunch Lunch

13:30 - 14:30 Workshop sessions DC, RATIC

Paper session 2 Recommender systems

Paper session 5 Reliability, Trust and

Emotions

14:30 - 15:00 Break Break Break

15:00 - 16:00 Workshop sessions DC, RATIC

Paper session 3 Applications of CBR

Paper session 6 Case Authoring,

Maintenance and Reuse

16:00 - 17:00 Workshop sessions

CCC system evaluation, DC

Refreshments & Posters Community meeting

18:30 Depart to Welcome Reception

(Aula Maxima, University College Cork)

Depart to Conference Dinner

(Old Jameson Distillery, Midleton)

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ICCBR 2014 Social Program

Day Trip

Sunday 28th September

Depart from Imperial Hotel at 10a.m.

This event is open only to those who reserved a place in advance.

Time: We depart the Imperial Hotel at 10a.m. and return around 5p.m. after a day trip to Killarney that

includes a surprise (!), a lake cruise, a lunch of soup-and-sandwiches, and a stroll in the grounds of

Muckross House.

Doctoral Consortium Dinner

Sunday 28th September

Depart from Imperial Hotel at 7.45p.m.

Venue: Milano Restaurant, Oliver Plunkett Street, Cork

This event is open to DC participants (DC students, DC mentors, DC invited speakers, DC chairs) only.

Participants will depart together from the Imperial Hotel at around 7.45p.m. for the short walk to the

restaurant.

Welcome Reception

Monday 29th September

Depart from Imperial Hotel at 6.30p.m.

Venue: Aula Maxima, University College Cork

Everyone who is registered for the conference is invited to this event.

A bus will leave from outside the Imperial Hotel at 6.30p.m. for the short drive to the University. It will

make another trip at around 6.45p.m. It is also possible to walk to the University in 20-30 minutes.

A bus will bring us back from the University to the Imperial Hotel, departing from the University at

8.30p.m. It will make another trip at around 8.45p.m.

Conference Dinner

Tuesday 30th September

Depart from Imperial Hotel at 6.30p.m. sharp

Venue: Old Jameson Distillery, Midleton, County Cork

Everyone who is registered for the conference is invited to this event.

Two buses will leave from outside the Imperial Hotel at 6.30p.m. sharp for the drive to the village of

Midleton.

The buses will depart from the Distillery at 11.15p.m. to bring us back to the Imperial Hotel.

If you miss the buses, you can see whether a taxi will take you; the journey is approximately 24km.

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Day 0: Sunday, September 28, 2014

DOCTORAL CONSORTIUM

VENUE: Morgan Room

18:00 – 19:00 Session 0 Welcome to all DC attendees, agenda, etc. Meet and greet: Come meet your mentor/mentee in person Time to discuss presentations

19:00 – 19:30 Invited Talk: David Wilson, University of North Carolina

19:45 – 20:00 Walk to Milano restaurant for dinner

20:00 – 22:00 Dinner at Milano restaurant (DC participants only: DC students, DC mentors, DC invited speakers, DC organizers)

Page 10: ICCBR Program Schedule - draft version.docx

Day 1: Monday, September 29, 2014

DOCTORAL CONSORTIUM

VENUE: Morgan Room

8:30 - 9:00 Registration at the Imperial Hotel (Business Centre, first floor)

9:00 - 10:30 Session 1 Welcome, Agenda for the day Invited Talk: Career Cases: Tips for CBR Doctoral Students, David Leake, Indiana University Presentation Session 1 Student (1) Padraig O Duinn, mentor Klaus-Dieter Althoff, DFKI / Univ. of Hildesheim:

Classification of Posts to Internet Forums Student (2) Xavier Ferrer Aran, mentor Nirmalie Wiratunga, The Robert Gordon Univ.:

The Web of Experience: Reusing Other People’s Experiences in Analytical

Tasks

10:30 - 10:50 Break

10:50 - 12:05 Presentation Session 2 Student (3) Pol Schumacher, mentor Jean Lieber, LORIA - INRIA Lorraine:

Workflow extraction from textual process descriptions Student (4) Emmanuelle Gaillard, mentor David Wilson, University of North Carolina:

Building a case-based reasoning system exploiting knowledge coming from the web

Student (5) Luca Canensi, mentor Mirjam Minor, Goethe University Frankfurt: A tool for mining and checking processes

12:05 - 13:15 Lunch Break

13:15– 14:30 Presentation Session 3

Student (6) Gilbert Müller, mentor Miltos Petridis, Brighton University:

Process-oriented Case-based Reasoning Student (7) Gulmira Khussainova, mentor Cindy Marling, Ohio University:

Case-Based Reasoning Adaptation for Radiotherapy Treatment Planning Student (8) Hugo Hromic, mentor David Aha, Naval Research Laboratory:

News Filtering and Event Detection in Social Media Streams

14:30– 14:45 Break

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14:45 - 16:00 Presentation Session 4 Student (9) Yoke Yie Chen, mentor Sarah Jane Delany, Dublin Institute of

Technology: Aspect-based Sentiment Analysis for Social Recommender System

Student (10) Dileep Kvs, mentor Pinar Ozturk, Norwegian University of Science and Technology: Intelligent Integration of Knowledge Sources for Textual Case Based Reasoning

Student (11) Egon Sewald Jr., mentor David Leake, Indiana University: Textual Case Based Reasoning and Semantic Similarity Comparison of Documents to Decision-making of the court judgment

16:00- 16:15 Break

16:15- 17:30 Presentation Session 5 Student (12) Racha Khelif, mentor Luc Lamontagne, Laval University; off-site mentor

Amélie Cordier, LIRIS:

Health monitoring of equipment throughout its lifecycle using CBR Student (13) Khalil Muhammad, mentor David McSherry, University of Ulster:

Explanation-driven Product Recommendation from User-Generated Reviews Student (14) Stefan Wender, mentor Santiago Ontanon, Drexel University: A multi-layer hybrid CBR/RL approach to micromanagement in RTS games

18.30 & 18.45 Buses depart from the Imperial Hotel

19:00 - 20:30 Reception (Aula Maxima, University College Cork)

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Day 1: Monday, September 29, 2014

WORKSHOP 1 – Case-Based Agents

VENUE: Whitechurch Suite

8:30 – 9:00 Registration at the Imperial Hotel (Business Centre, first floor)

9:00 - 10:30 Workshop session 1 Introduction Explanation of Opportunities Pinar Öztürk, Héctor Muñoz-Avila, Agnar Aamodt Motivation Discrepancies for Rebel Agents: Towards a Framework for Case-based Goal-Driven Autonomy for Character Believability Alexandra Coman, Héctor Muñoz-Avila Case-Based Behavior Recognition to Facilitate Planning in Unmanned Air Vehicles Hayley Borck, Justin Karneeb, Ron Alford, David W. Aha Panel Discussion

10:30 - 11:00 Break

11:00 - 12:00 Workshop session 2 A Case-Based Approach To Imitation Learning in Robotic Agents Tesca Fitzgerald, Ashok Goel Creating Non-Player Characters in a First-Person Shooter Game Using Learning by Observation Vivian Andreeva, Jordan Beland, Sabrina Gaudreau, Michael W. Floyd, Babak Esfandiari Case-based agents within the OMAHA project

Pascal Reuss, Alexander Hundt, Klaus-Dieter Althoff, Wolfram Henkel, Matthias Pfeiffer Case Adaptation with Modal Logic: The Modal Adaptation Fadi Badra Wrapup

Page 13: ICCBR Program Schedule - draft version.docx

Day 1: Monday, September 29, 2014

WORKSHOP 2 – Computer Cooking Contest (Talks)

VENUE: Hillcrest Suite

8:30 – 9:00 Registration at the Imperial Hotel (Business Centre, first floor)

9:00 - 10:30 Workshop session 1

Compositional Adaptation of Cooking Recipes using Workflow Streams

Gilbert Müller and Ralph Bergmann

Case-Based Cooking with Generic Computer Utensils: Taaable Next Generation

Emmanuelle Gaillard, Jean Lieber and Emmanuel Nauer

GoetheShaker - Developing a rating score for automated evaluation of cocktail recipes Alexander Spät, Marius Keppler, Matthias Schmidt, Moritz Kohlhase, Niels Lauritzen and Pol Schumacher

10:30 - 11:00 Break

11:00 - 12:00 Workshop session 2

Subs and Sandwiches: Replacing One Ingredient By Another

Henry Larkin and Derek Bridge

Creating New Sandwiches From Old

Derek Bridge and Henry Larkin

WORKSHOP 2 – Computer Cooking Contest (Jury & Audience Evaluation)

VENUE: Whitechurch + Rossmore Suites

16:00 - 18:00 System evaluation by the CCC Jury & Audience (All welcome)

18.30 & 18.45 Buses depart from the Imperial Hotel

19:00 - 20:30 Reception (Aula Maxima, University College Cork)

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Day 1: Monday, September 29, 2014

WORKSHOP 3 – Synergies of Case-Based Reasoning and Data Mining

VENUE: Rossmore Suite

8:30 – 9:00 Registration at the Imperial Hotel (Business Centre, first floor)

9:00 - 10:40 Workshop session 1 Data Mining Methods in Case-Based Reasoning Isabelle Bichindaritz Fault Diagnosis of Heavy Duty Machines: Automatic Transmission Clutches Tomas Olsson, Elisabeth Källström, Daniel Gillblad, Peter Funk, John Lindström, Lars Håkanssson, Joakim Lundin, Magnus Svensson and Jonas Larsson Potential Synergies between Case-Based Reasoning and Regression Analysis in Assembly Processes Ivan Tomasic and Peter Funk ChAPMaN: a Context Aware Process MiNer Luca Canensi, Stefania Montani, Giorgio Leonardi and Paolo Terenziani Classification of Ocular Artifacts in EEG Signals Using Hierarchical Clustering and Case-based Reasoning Shaibal Barua, Shahina Begum, Mobyen Uddin Ahmed and Peter Funk

10:40 - 11:00 Break

11:00 - 12:00 Workshop session 2 Intelligent Integration of Knowledge Sources for TCBR K.V.S Dileep and Sutanu Chakraborti An Analysis Framework for Content-based Job Recommendation Xingsheng Guo, Houssem Jerbi and Michael O'Mahony Constructing Twitter Datasets using Signals for Event Detection Evaluation Hugo Hromic and Conor Hayes

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Day 1: Monday, September 29, 2014

WORKSHOP 4 – Reasoning About Time in Case-Based Reasoning (RATIC)

VENUE: Whitechurch + Rossmore Suites

13:30 - 14:40 Workshop session 1

Keynote Address Ashwin Ram

An Analysis of Long Term Dependence and Case-Based Reasoning Odd Erik Gundersen Representation and Similarity Evaluation of Symbolic Time Series Data in Uncertain Environments Ning Xiong, Peter Funk and Tomas Olsson

14:40 - 15:00 Break

15:00 - 16:00 Workshop session 2 Taking Time to Make Time: Types of Temporality and Directions for Temporal Context in CBR David Leake and David Wilson Temporal Knowledge Representation for Case Based Reasoning Based on a Formal Theory of Time Miltos Petridis, Stelios Kapetanakis, Jixin Ma and Nikolay Burlutskiy Group discussion

18:30 & 18.45 Buses depart from the Imperial Hotel

19:00 – 20:30 Reception (Aula Maxima, University College Cork)

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Day 2: Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Main Technical Program

VENUE: Ballroom

8:30 - 9:00 Registration at the Imperial Hotel (Business Centre, first floor)

9:00 - 9:10 Welcome

9:10 - 10:10 Invited talk: Tony Veale (Session Chair: Enric Plaza) Running with Scissors: Cut-Ups, Boundary Friction and Creative Reuse

10:10 - 10:40 Break

10:40 - 12:00 Session 1 – Adaptation (Session Chair: David W. Aha) ● Workflow Streams: A Means for Compositional Adaptation in Process-

Oriented CBR. Gilbert Müller and Ralph Bergmann ● Adapting Propositional Cases Based on Tableaux Repairs Using Adaptation

Knowledge. Gabin Personeni, Alice Hermann, and Jean Lieber ● Algorithm for Adapting Cases Represented in a Tractable Description Logic.

Liang Chang, Uli Sattler, and Tianlong Gu ● On Retention of Adaptation Rules. Vahid Jalali and David Leake

12:00 - 13:30 Lunch

13:30 - 14:30 Session 2 - Recommender systems (Session Chair: Sarah Jane Delany) ● Sentiment and Preference Guided Social Recommendation. Yoke Yie Chen,

Xavier Ferrer, Nirmalie Wiratunga, and Enric Plaza ● Exploring the Space of Whole-Group Case Retrieval in Making Group

Recommendations. David C. Wilson and Nadia A. Najjar ● Further Experiments in Opinionated Product Recommendation. Ruihai Dong,

Michael P. O’Mahony, and Barry Smyth

14:30 - 15:00 Break

15:00 - 16:00 Session 3 - Applications of CBR (Session Chair: Klaus D. Althoff) ● Case-Based Reasoning for Improving Traffic Flow in Urban Intersections.

Anders Kofod-Petersen, Ole Johan Andersen, and Agnar Aamodt ● Automatic Case Capturing for Problematic Drilling Situations. Kerstin Bach,

Odd Erik Gundersen, Christian Knappskog, and Pinar Öztürk

● Case-Based Prediction of Teen Driver Behavior and Skill. Santiago Ontañón, Yi-Ching Lee, Sam Snodgrass, Dana Bonfiglio, Flaura K. Winston, Catherine McDonald, and Avelino J. Gonzalez

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Main Technical Program: Poster Session

VENUE: Morgan Room

16:00 - 17:30 Refreshments and Posters ● A Hybrid CBR-ANN Approach to the Appraisal of Internet Domain. Names.

Sebastian Dieterle and Ralph Bergmann ● Tuuurbine: A Generic CBR Engine over RDFS. Emmanuelle Gaillard, Laura

Infante-Blanco, Jean Lieber, and Emmanuel Nauer ● Case-Based Object Placement Planning. Kellen Gillespie, Kalyan Moy

Gupta, and Michael Drinkwater ● Estimating Case Base Complexity Using Fractal Dimension. K.V.S. Dileep

and Sutanu Chakraborti ● Using Case-Based Reasoning to Detect Risk Scenarios of Elderly People

Living Alone at Home. Eduardo Lupiani, Jose M. Juarez, Jose Palma, Christian Serverin Sauer, and Thomas Roth-Berghofer

● An Algorithm for Conversational Case-Based Reasoning in Classification Tasks. David McSherry

● Towards Process-Oriented Cloud Management with Case-Based Reasoning. Mirjam Minor and Eric Schulte-Zurhausen

● Collective Classification of Posts to Internet Forums. Padraig Ó Duinn and Derek Bridge

● NudgeAlong: A Case Based Approach to Changing User Behaviour. Eoghan O’Shea, Sarah Jane Delany, Rob Lane, and Brian Mac Namee

● Explaining Probabilistic Fault Diagnosis and Classification Using Case-Based Reasoning. Tomas Olsson, Daniel Gillblad, Peter Funk, and Ning Xiong

● Estimation of Machine Settings for Spinning of Yarns – New Algorithms for Comparing Complex Structures. Beatriz Sevilla-Villanueva, Miquel Sànchez-Marrè, and Thomas V. Fischer

● Linking Cases Up: An Extension to the Case Retrieval Network. Shubhranshu Shekhar, Sutanu Chakraborti, and Deepak Khemani

● Case-Based Plan Recognition Using Action Sequence Graphs. Swaroop S. Vattam, David W. Aha, and Michael W. Floyd

● Combining Case-Based Reasoning and Reinforcement Learning for Unit Navigation in Real-Time Strategy Game AI. Stefan Wender and Ian Watson

18:30 sharp Buses depart from the Imperial Hotel

19:00 - 23:00 Conference Dinner (Old Jameson Distillery, Midleton, County Cork)

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Day 3: Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Main Technical Program

VENUE: Ballroom

9:00 - 9:30 Workshop reports

9:30 - 10:30 Invited talk: Frode Sørmo (Session Chair: Luc Lamontagne) What I Talk About When I Talk About CBR

10:30 - 11:00 Break

11:00 - 12:00 Session 4 - Planning and design (Session Chair: Susan Craw) ● Case-Based Parameter Selection for Plans: Coordinating Autonomous

Vehicle Teams. Bryan Auslander, Tom Apker, and David W. Aha ● Least Common Subsumer Trees for Plan Retrieval. Antonio A. Sánchez-Ruiz

and Santiago Ontañón ● On the Role of Analogy in Resolving Cognitive Dissonance in Collaborative

Interdisciplinary Design. Ashok K. Goel and Bryan Wiltgen

12:00 - 13:30 Lunch (also Meeting of the Programme Committee in the Morgan Room)

13:30 - 14:30 Session 5 - Reliability, Trust and Emotions (Session Chair: Mirjam Minor) ● How Case-Based Reasoning on e-Community Knowledge Can Be Improved

Thanks to Knowledge Reliability. Emmanuelle Gaillard, Jean Lieber, Emmanuel Nauer, and Amélie Cordier

● How Much Do You Trust Me? Learning a Case-Based Model of Inverse Trust. Michael W. Floyd, Michael Drinkwater, and David W. Aha

● CBR Tagging of Emotions from Facial Expressions. Paloma Lopez-de-Arenosa, Belén Diaz-Agudo, and Juan A. Recio-García

14:30 - 15:00 Break

15:00 - 16:00 Session 6 - Case Authoring, Maintenance and Reuse (Session Chair: Belén Díaz-Agudo)

● Supervised Semantic Indexing Using Sub-spacing. Sadiq Sani, Nirmalie Wiratunga, Stewart Massie, and Robert Lothian

● Acquisition and Reuse of Reasoning Knowledge from Textual Cases for Automated Analysis. Gleb Sizov, Pinar Öztürk, and Jozef Štyrák

● A Proposal of Temporal Case-Base Maintenance Algorithms. Eduardo Lupiani, Jose M. Juarez, and Jose Palma

16:00 - 17:00 Community Meeting

Page 19: ICCBR Program Schedule - draft version.docx

Lunch and Dinner Suggestions

The Imperial Hotel opens onto the South Mall. One block behind the hotel and running parallel to the

South Mall is Oliver Plunkett Street. The streets that connect the two are full of cafés, restaurants and

pubs. Here are a few suggestions.

Location Cafés Restaurants Pubs

The Imperial Hotel itself Lafayette’s: just off the hotel lobby

The Pembroke: the hotel restaurant, behind the lobby

South’s: adjacent to the hotel; pub grub lunchtimes and evenings

The South Mall Jacob’s: good restaurant, across from the AIB bank Electric: decent restaurant above a bar at the end of the South Mall near the Grand Parade

Oliver Plunkett Street O’Brien’s: opposite the

Post Office for soups and sandwiches O’Flynn’s Gourmet Sausage Company:

opposite the Post Office for sausage sandwiches Farmgate Café: a café above the English Market; soups & sandwiches on one side, traditional meals on the other

Jacques: nice restaurant,

near the Post Office Milano: towards the junction with Maylor Street, for pizzas Market Lane: good food, just beyond Milano

The Long Valley: opposite

the Post Office, lunchtime sandwiches The Old Oak: near the Post Office, lunchtime sandwiches The Oliver Plunkett: near the Post Office, pub grub at lunchtimes

Pembroke Street The Bookshelf: the former

city library, serving sandwiches, coffees, etc. Orso: soups, sandwiches, etc.

Counihan’s: a nice pub Crane Lane: a late night pub Canty’s: lunchtime sandwiches Arthur Mayne’s: looks like an old pharmacy but inside is a wine bar with light meals at lunch and evenings; food and drink can be taken out the back door into Crane Lane

Cook Street Dashi: noodles and sushi L.A. Bagels: have a bagel and then cross the road to Scup for an ice-cream

Il Padrino: Italian restaurant Les Gourmandises: good restaurant

Princes Street Wildways: organic soups, sandwiches, salads Nash19: for a lunch that is more than a soup and sandwich

Castellis: Italian restaurant Restaurante Rossini: Italian restaurant Ivory Tower: very small

restaurant with maverick chef!

Clancy’s: with pub grub at lunchtimes and evenings