The 2nd International Workshop on Soft Computing Applications and Knowledge Discovery (SCAKD 2016)
NEW: Venue
The workshop session will be held at the main venue (Myasnitskaya 11) in room 424.
Call for papers
Soft computing is a collection of methodologies, which aim to exploit tolerance for imprecision, uncertainty and partial truth to achieve tractability, robustness and low solution cost in real life tasks. The workshop proposes to present high quality scientific results and promising research in the area of soft computing and data mining, particularly by young researchers, with an objective of bringing them to the focus while promoting collaborative research activities. By holding the workshop in conjunction with CLA 2016, we hope to provide the participants exposure and interaction with eminent scientists, engineers, professionals, and researchers in related fields. Papers are invited in all areas of Soft Computing Applications and Knowledge Discovery, including but not limited to the following.
Subject coverage
- Pattern Recognition, Data Mining & Knowledge Discovery
- Fuzzy Sets & Neural Networks, Evolutionary & Probabilistic Computing
- Swarm Intelligence & Collective Intelligence
- Machine Learning & Information Retrieval
- Rough Sets & Soft Computing
- Clustering, Formal Concept Analysis & Ontology Learning
- Decision Support Systems & Business Intelligence (OLAP and BI, Data Warehouse Modeling, ETL techniques and technologies, and Data Visualization)
- Recommender Systems & Modeling of user behavior
- Applications of Soft Computing
Workshop chairs
Manuel Ojeda Aciego, University of Málaga, Spain
Dmitry I. Ignatov, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Russia
Alexander Lepskiy, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Russia
Program committee
Simon Andrews, Sheffield Hallam University, United Kingdom
Alexey N. Averkin, Dorodnicyn Computing Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia
Jaume Baixeries, Barcelona, Spain
Sergei Bartunov, National Research University Higher School of Economics
Daniel Borchmann, TU Drezden, Germany
Alexei Buzmakov, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Russia
Inma P. Cabrera, University of Málaga, Spain
Víctor Codocedo, LORIA, Nancy
Pablo Cordero, University of Málaga, Spain
Fritjhof Dau, SAP, Germany
Felix Distel, TU Drezden, Germany
Florent Domenach, University of Nicosia, Cyprus
Bernd Fischer, Stellenbosh University, South Africa
Boris Galitsky, Knowledge Trail, USA
Bernhard Ganter, Technical University of Dresden, Germany
Gillian Greene, Stellenbosh University, South Africa
Dmitry Ilvovsky, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Russia
Robert Jaeshke, Leibniz Universität Hannover, Germany
Yuri Katkov, EPFL, Geneva, Switzerland
Mehdi Kaytoue, LORIA, Lyon, France
Francesco Kriegel, TU Drezden, Germany
Sergei O. Kuznetsov, National Research University Higher School of Economics
Victor Lempitsky, Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology, Russia
Natalia Loukachevitch, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russia
Jesús Medina, University of Cádiz, Spain
Dmitry Mouromtsev, National Research University of Information Technologies, Mechanics and Optics, Russia
Xenia Naidenova, Military Medical Academy, Russia
Amedeo Napoli, LORIA, Nancy, France
Alexey Neznanov, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Russia
Artem Revenko, TU Drezden, Germany
Sergei Obiedkov, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Russia
Jan Outrata, Palacky University, Czech Republic
Alexander Panchenko, Tehcnische Universitat Darmstadt, Germany
Simon Polovina, Sheffield Hallam University, United Kingdom
Uta Priss, Edinburgh Napier University, United Kingdom
Sebastian Rudolph, TU Drezden, Germany
Vladimir Selegey, ABBYY Software, Russia
Barish Sertkaya, Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences, Germany
Dominik Slezak, University of Warsaw, Poland
Rustam Tagiew, Polarez GmBH, Germany
Valery B. Tarasov, Bauman Moscow State Technical University, Russia
Johanna Voelker, University of Mannheim, Germany
Rostislav Yavorskiy, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Russia
Important dates
Submission deadline: June 12, 2016
Notification of acceptance: June 18, 2016
Camera-ready due: June 23, 2016Workshop: July 18, 2016
Proceedings
All accepted papers will be included in the workshop’s proceedings to be published online on the CEUR-Workshop web site in a volume with ISSN and indexed by Scopus. The previous edition is available at the CEUR-Workshop web site: http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-758/.
Submission Procedure
Electronic version of full paper complete with authors’ affiliations should be submitted through the conference electronic submission system.
Use the submission link http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=scakd2016.
Manuscripts must be prepared with LaTeX or Microsoft Office and should follow the Springer format available at http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html.
The maximum number of accepted papers by an individual author that can be covered by the workshop’s registration charge is 3. The papers over 12 pages are not allowed.
Accepted Papers (regular papers unless stated otherwise)
- Xenia Naidenova, Vladimir Parkhomenko and Konstantin Shvetsov, Modification of Good Tests in Dynamic Contexts: Application to Modeling Intellectual Development of Cadets
- Tatyana Afanaseva, Nadezhda G. Yarushkina and Gleb Guskov, ACL-Scale as a Tool for Preprocessing of Many-Valued Contexts
- Alexey Namestnikov, Valeria Avvakumova and Alexandra Chekina, The Ontology-Based Model of Technical Documentation Fuzzy Structuring
- Alexander Bozhenyuk and Evgeniya Gerasimenko, Maximum Dynamic Flow Finding Task with the Given Vitality Degree
- Andrew Bronevich, Alexander Lepskiy and Henry Penikas, An Analysis of Coherence of Financial Analysts' Recommendations in the Framework of Evidence Theory
- Marina Savelyeva and Marina Belyakova, Motion Control in the Mechanical Transport System with Fuzzy Given Distance and Time
- Andrew Mironov, Logics for Representation of Propositions with Fuzziness Modalities
- Vitaly Martynovich and Evgenii Vityaev, Recovering Noisy Contexts with Probabilistic Formal Concepts
- Artem Grachev and Andrey Shiriy, Are Clustering Techniques Better than Binary Thresholding for Detection of Signal Tracks in Ionogramms? (research proposal)
- Gerald Plesniewicz, Vu Nguen Thi Min and Dmitry Masherov, Query Answering over Fact Bases for Fuzzy Interval Ontologies (research proposal)
Program
- 9:40 - 10:20. Xenia Naidenova, Vladimir Parkhomenko and Konstantin Shvetsov, Modification of Good Tests in Dynamic Contexts: Application to Modeling Intellectual Development of Cadets
- 10:20 - 10.40. Tatyana Afanaseva, Nadezhda G. Yarushkina and Gleb Guskov, ACL-Scale as a Tool for Preprocessing of Many-Valued Contexts
- 10:40 - 11:00. Alexey Namestnikov, Valeria Avvakumova and Alexandra Chekina, The Ontology-Based Model of Technical Documentation Fuzzy Structuring
- 11:00 - 11:20. Coffee-break
- 11:20 - 11:40. Alexander Bozhenyuk and Evgeniya Gerasimenko, Maximum Dynamic Flow Finding Task with the Given Vitality Degree
- 11:40 - 12:00. Marina Savelyeva and Marina Belyakova, Motion Control in the Mechanical Transport System with Fuzzy Given Distance and Time.
- 12:00 - 12:20. Andrew Mironov, Logics for Representation of Propositions with Fuzziness Modalities
- 12:20 - 12:40. Vitaly Martynovich and Evgenii Vityaev, Recovering Noisy Contexts with Probabilistic Formal Concepts
- 12:40 - 13:00. Andrew Bronevich, Alexander Lepskiy and Henry Penikas, An Analysis of Coherence of Financial Analysts' Recommendations in the Framework of Evidence Theory
- 13.00 - 14.00. Lunch
- 14:00 - 14:20. Gerald Plesniewicz, Vu Nguen Thi Min and Dmitry Masherov, Query Answering over Fact Bases for Fuzzy Interval Ontologies (research proposal)
- 14:20 - 14:40. Artem Grachev and Andrey Shiriy, Are Clustering Techniques Better than Binary Thresholding for Detection of Signal Tracks in Ionogramms? (research proposal, 10 mins)