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Category NIPS 2011
Deadline: September 23, 2011 | Date: December 16, 2011-December 17, 2011
Venue/Country: Granada, Spain
Updated: 2011-09-02 07:01:57 (GMT+9)
. Submissions should be formatted using the NIPS 2011 stylefiles, with blind review and not exceeding 8 pages plus an extra page for references. Author and submission information can be found at http://nips.cc/PaperInformation/AuthorSubmissionInstructions
. The stylefiles are available at http://nips.cc/PaperInformation/StyleFiles
. Each submission will be reviewed at least by two members of the programme committee. Accepted papers will be published in the workshop proceedings. Dual submissions to the main NIPS 2011 conference and this workshop are allowed; if you submit to the main session, indicate this when you submit to the workshop. If your paper is accepted for the main session, you should withdraw your paper from the workshop upon notification by the main session.Important Dates- Aug 30, 2011: Call for papers- Sep 23, 2011: Deadline for submission of workshop papers- Oct 15, 2011: Notification of acceptance- Oct 31, 2011: Camera-ready papers due- Dec 16 - 17, 2011: Workshop dateOrganisersThe organizing committee are researchers who are all directly involved in machine learning of higher cognitive states, and have previous experience running similarly themed interdisciplinary workshops, including the NAACL Workshop on Computational Neurolinguistics (2010), ICCS Symposium on Neural Decoding of Higher Cognitive States (2010), the CAOS Special Session on Computational Approaches to the Neuroscience of Concepts (2010).- Kai-min Kevin Chang, Language Technologies Institute & Centre for Cognitive Brain Imaging, Carnegie Mellon University- Anna Korhonen, Computer Laboratory & Research Centre for English and Applied Linguistics, University of Cambridge- Brian Murphy, Computation, Language and Interaction Group, Centre for Mind/Brain Sciences, University of Trento- Irina Simanova, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics & Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, NijmegenInvited speakers- Elia Formisano, Universiteit Maastricht, Netherlands- Francisco Pereira, Princeton University, USA (provisional)Programme committeeThe preliminary programme comittee listing is given below, and includes leading researchers in a range of fields covering machine learning, neuroscience and wider cognitive sciences:- John Anderson, Carnegie Mellon University, USA- Yi Chen, Max-Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences Leipzig, Germany- Mark Cohen, University of California Los Angeles, USA- Kevyn Collins-Thompson, Microsoft Research, USA- Andy Connolly, Dartmouth College, USA- Jack Gallant, University of California Berkeley, USA- Marcel van Gerven, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands- Michael Hanke, Dartmouth College, USA- Jim Haxby, Dartmouth College, USA & University of Trento, Italy- Tom Heskes, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands- Mark Johnson, Macquarie University, Australia- Marius Peelen, University of Trento, Italy- Francisco Pereira, Princeton University, USA- Russ Poldrack, University of Texas Austin, USA- Dean Pomerleau, Intel Labs Pittsburgh, USA- Diego Sona, Fondazione Bruno Kessler, ItalyReferences- Anderson, J. R., Carter, C. S., Fincham, J. M., Qin,. Y., Ravizza, S. M., and Rosenberg-Lee, M. (2008). Using fMRI to Test Models of Complex Cognition. Cognitive Science, 32, 1323-1348.- Connolly, A. C., Guntupalli, J. S., Gors, J., Hanke, M., Halchenko, Y. O., Wu, Y., Abdi, H. and Haxby, J. V. (Submitted). Representation of biological classes in the human brain.- De Martino F., Valente G., de Borst A. W., Esposito F., Roebroeck A., Goebel R., Formisano E. (2010). Multimodal imaging: an evaluation of univariate and multivariatemethods for simultaneous EEG/fMRI. Magn Reson Imaging. 28(8), 1104-12.- Devereux, B., Kelly, C., and Korhonen, A. (2010). Using fMRI Activation to Conceptual Stimuli to Evaluate Methods for Extracting Conceptual Representations from Corpora. Proceedings of the NAACL-HLT Workshop on Computational Neurolinguistics.- Formisano E., De Martino F., Valente G. (2008). Multivariate analysis of fMRI time series: classification and regression of brain responses using machine learning. Magn Reson Imaging, 26(7), 921-34.- Kriegeskorte, N., Mur, M., Ruff, D., Kiani, R., Bodurka, J., Esteky, H., Tanaka, K., and Bandettini, P. (2008). Matching categorical object representations in inferior temporal cortex of man and monkey. Neuron, 60(6), 1126-1141.- Mitchell, T. M., Shinkareva, S. V., Carlson, A., Chang, K. M., Malave, V. L., Mason, R. A., and Just, M. A. (2008). Predicting Human Brain Activity Associated with the Meanings of Nouns. Science, 320, 1191-1195.- Murphy, B., Poesio, M., Bovolo, F., Bruzzone, L., Dalponte, M., and Lakany, H. (2011). EEG decoding of semantic category reveals distributed representations for single concepts. Brain and Language, 117, 12-22.- Pereira F., Mitchell T., Botvinick M. (2009). Machine learning classifiers and fMRI: a tutorial overview. Neuroimage. 45(1 Suppl) S199-209.- Simanova, I., Van Gerven, M., Oostenveld, R., and Hagoort, P. (2010). Identifying object categories from event-related EEG: Toward decoding of conceptual representations. Plos One, 512, E14465.- Staeren N., Renvall H., De Martino F., Goebel R., Formisano E. (2009). Sound categories are represented as distributed patterns in the human auditory cortex. Curr Biol, 19(6), 498-502.- Xiang, J. and Chen, J. and Zhou, H. and Qin, Y. and Li, K. and Zhong, N. 2009: Using SVM to predict high-level cognition from fMRI data: a case study of 4* 4 Sudoku solving. Brain Informatics, 171-181.Links- NIPS 2011 website: http://nips.cc/Conferences/2011/
- Workshop website: https://sites.google.com/site/decodehighcogstate
- Call for Papers: https://sites.google.com/site/decodehighcogstate/cfp/
(Please feel free to distribute the CFP to all the interested persons and groups.)-- Kai-min Kevin Changhttp://www.cs.cmu.edu/~kkchang/
Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
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