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DMCS 2011 : Fourth Workshop on Data Mining Case Studies and Success Stories and Fourth Data Mining Practice Prize

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When Dec 10, 2011 - Dec 10, 2011
Where Vancouver, Canada
Submission Deadline Jul 23, 2011
Notification Due Sep 23, 2011
Final Version Due Oct 11, 2011
Categories    data mining
 

Call For Papers

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Fourth Workshop on Data Mining Case Studies and Success Stories
and Fourth Data Mining Practice Prize
(DMCS 2011)
http://www.dataminingcasestudies.com/
December 10, 2011
Vancouver, Canada

to be held in conjunction with

ICDM 2011 IEEE International Conference on Data Mining
Vancouver, Canada, December 11-14, 2011
http://icdm2011.cs.ualberta.ca/

Call For Papers
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Motivation:

From its inception the field of data mining has been guided by the need to solve practical problems. Yet a cursory examination of the publications shows that few papers describe a completed implementation or what we will term a “case study”. The small number of case studies is counter-balanced by their prominence. Anecdotally case studies are one of the most discussed topics at data mining conferences. Some of the benefits of good case studies include

1. Inspiration: Case studies provide examples that can inspire data mining researchers to pursue important new technical directions.
2. Innovation: Data mining case studies demonstrate how whole problems were solved - not just part of the problem. Often building the prediction algorithm is only 10% of the problem - the other aspects that comprise a successful deployment are valuable for practitioners to understand.
3. Education: People are more likely to remember stories than facts.
4. Media Coverage: The media is more likely to report on completed data mining applications, than they are on isolated algorithms. We have an opportunity to present positive success stories to the wider community.
5. Public relations: Applications, particularly those that are socially beneficial, will help our perception both within the wider public and other scientific fields.
6. Connections to Other Scientific Fields: Completed systems knit together a range of scientific and engineering disciplines such as signal processing, chemistry, optimization theory, auction theory and so on. Fostering meaningful connections to these fields will benefit data mining academically, and will assist data mining practitioners to learn how to harness these fields to develop successful applications.

The Workshop:

The Data Mining Case Studies Workshop and Practice Prize was established seven years ago to showcase the very best in data mining case deployments. Data Mining Case Studies continues with ICDM 2011. Data Mining Case Studies will highlight data mining implementations that have been responsible for a significant and measurable improvement in business operations, or an equally important scientific discovery, or some other benefit to humanity.

Examples of Data Mining Case Studies from previous years have included: (a) a medical application that has save hundreds of lives by mining through hundreds of thousands of patient records to identify patients who have show all the signs for heart disease, yet have not been prescribed heart medication, (b) a system which has uncovered hundreds of millions in sheltered tax evasion rings, (c) a system which has raised revenue by improved cross-selling of computer peripherals and equipment.

Data Mining Case Studies will allow papers greater latitude in (a) range of topics - authors may touch upon areas such as optimization, operations research, inventory control, and so on, (b) page length - longer submissions are allowed, (c) scope - more complete context, problem and solution descriptions will be encouraged, (d) prior publication - if the paper was published in part elsewhere, it may still be considered if the new article is substantially more detailed, (e) novelty – the use of established techniques to achieve successful implementations will be given partial allowance.

Unsuccessful data mining systems that describe lessons learned and “war stories” will also be assessed.

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The Data Mining Practice Prize
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Introduction: The Data Mining Practice Prize will be awarded for the best Data Mining Case Study submission. The prize will be awarded for work that has had a significant and quantitative impact in the application in which it was applied, or has significantly benefited humanity. Detailed rules and regulations will be finalized upon workshop acceptance.

Eligibility: All papers submitted to Data Mining Case Studies will be eligible for the Data Mining Practice Prize, with the exception of the Data Mining Practice Prize Committee. Eligible authors must consent to allowing the Practice Prize Committee independently validate their claims by contacting third parties and their deployment client for independent verification and analysis.
Award: Winners and runners up can expect an impressive array of honors including
1. Prize money comprising $500 for first place, $300 for second place, $200 for third place.
2. Plaque.
3. Awards Dinner with organizers and prize winners.

Topics:

Most operational industrial and scientific systems that involve data mining to some extent are likely to be acceptable. Systems that are responsible for mission critical systems, medical applications, cash flow, or applications that significantly benefit humanity will be particularly good candidates. If you are unsure as to the suitability of your paper, please contact the organizers with your topic at the email address at the bottom of the page. Topics include but are not limited to

- Genomics
- Inventory control
- Customer Relationship Management (CRM)
- ShopBots
- Recommendation systems
- Auction trading systems
- Clinical patient monitoring
- Seismic Data interpretation
- Survival analysis for medical procedures
- Climate analysis
- Correlates of genes with disease
- Dangerous Drug interactions
- Law enforcement applications
- Search Engine Marketing
- Food spoilage elimination
- Price optimization
- Data visualization in mission-critical user interfaces
- Text understanding


Dates:

Notify organizers of intent to submit:
Now

Submissions open:
May 8Optional Draft submission including client contact information*:
Jun 15Final submission including client contact information if it has not already been provided:
Jul 23Notification of acceptance:
Sep 23

Camera ready paper submission:
Oct 11

Workshop held, Practice Prize winners announced
: Dec 10


* Although this is an optional deadline, we encourage authors to make use of the opportunity to submit their drafts and receive early feedback on their paper.


Submission instructions:

In order to contact the organizers, submit, or for any other correspondence, please use the following email address

submissions@dataminingcasestudies.com

1. Please email the organizers as early as possible with your intention to submit.
2. If possible, it is recommended that you provide an optional draft of the article by the draft submission date. This draft will only be viewed by the Chairs - it will not be given to the reviewers or affect the prize competition.
3. Please provide us with three persons who use the system in their day to day activities, or are responsible for the system, and who may be contact to validate the claims made in the paper. Ideally these individuals belong to a different company than the authors. Also, ideally these individuals are not personal acquaintances or friends of the authors.
4. Provide your author names, addresses, affiliations, phone numbers and email. Also note the nature of relationship of each contact to the system and authors. Finally, provide any information of relevance to contacting deployment users.
5. Please submit your completed article, in IEEE Proceedings format to the email address above. Due to editing requirements for the Workshop Proceedings, we strongly encourage documents to be submitted in Microsoft Word format.

Guidelines:

1. Word limits: Word limits will be relaxed for submission to Data Mining Case Studies, so that participants may explain their problem and solution in as much detail as necessary to both captivate the reader and explain the solution. The maximum submission page length will be 20 pages. Despite the longer page length, articles will be critically assessed for relevancy, and authors risk rejection if their articles do not keep the reader's interest. In addition, the PC will look for ways to cut the article, and so any recommendations made by the PC for cutting the article will need to be followed to prior to inclusion in the workshop program
2. Commercial product mentions: Data Mining Case Studies is not a sales venue. References to commercial products will be carefully scrutinized by our Program Committee for applicability. Where possible the underlying techniques should be described. The purpose of Data Mining Case Studies is to illustrate real applications with descriptions that are concise and complete. Commercial software if introduced, should be named briefly and then described at a technical level (eg. don't mention that "SAS Neural Nets(TM) increased our forecast accuracy by 20%" - instead say that you used 'SAS PROC Neural Net(TM)' which implemented a 3- layer sigmoidal backpropagation model with 10 inputs, 4 hidden and 1 output node, and this net increased forecast accuracy by 20%". Any papers violating these ethics will be deemed inadmissible. If in doubt please contact the organizers prior to submission. We will allow a single product mention along the lines described above, and this should be sufficient for establishing commercial credibility.
3. Valid contact information for the company that deployed the data mining system must be supplied to the Program Committee. The Program Committee should be afforded the right to contact individuals that were the beneficiaries of the data mining system and ask them questions about the implementation. In particular, the claims made in the paper submission will need to be verified. Failure to provide factual or complete descriptions of results obtained with the system, that are discovered through this fact checking process, will result in forfeiture of prize and dismissal from the conference. The Prize Committee will endeavor to be discrete in its contacts, so please inform us of any information we need to know before contacting the system users.
4. Copyright: Authors will agree to allow the display of their articles on the web. Authors should also agree to allow their articles to be published in book form. If authors wish to opt out of website or book publication, please contact the Workshop organizers.
5. Confidentiality: The reviewing process will be confidential.

Venue:

ICDM 2011: The 11th IEEE International Conference on Data Mining, December 11-14, 2011, Vancouver, Canada

Organizing Committee:

Wei Ding, PhD, University of Massachusetts
Gabor Melli, Prediction Works
Brendan Kitts, Lucid Commerce
Gregory Piatetsky-Shapiro, PhD, President, KD-Nuggets
Robert Grossman, PhD, University of Chicago and Open Data Group
Peter van der Putten, PhD., Leiden University and Pegasystems
Karl Rexer, PhD., Rexer Analytics
Gang Wu, PhD, Microsoft
Jing Ying Zhang, PhD, Microsoft
Dean Abbott, Abbott Analytics
Richard Bolton, PhD., KnowledgeBase Marketing, Inc.
Ricardo Vilalta, PhD. University of Houston

Further Information
http://www.dataminingcasestudies.com


Sponsors

IEEE Computer Society, MarketScale

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