posted by user: fouardi || 2007 views || tracked by 2 users: [display]

ICGI 2023 : The 16th International Conference on Grammatical Inference

FacebookTwitterLinkedInGoogle


Conference Series : International Colloquium on Grammatical Inference
 
Link: http://www.fsr.ac.ma/icgi2023
 
When Jul 10, 2023 - Jul 13, 2023
Where Rabat, Morocco
Submission Deadline Mar 12, 2023
Notification Due May 15, 2023
Final Version Due Jun 15, 2023
Categories    grammatical inference   machine learning   formal language theory
 

Call For Papers

Call for papers: ICGI 2023, 16th International Conference on Grammatical Inference
Rabat (Morocco), July 10-13, 2023

Website: http://www.fsr.ac.ma/icgi2023
Contact: icgi@fsr.ac.ma
Submission portal: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=icgi23



Grammatical Inference is the research area at the intersection of Machine Learning and Formal Language Theory. Since 1993, the International Conference on Grammatical Inference (ICGI) is the meeting place for presenting, discovering, and discussing the latest research results on the foundations of learning languages, from theoretical and algorithmic perspectives to their applications (natural language or document processing, bioinformatics, model checking and software verification, program synthesis, robotic planning and control, intrusion detection...).

This 16th edition of ICGI will be held in-person in Rabat, the modern capital with deep-rooted history of Morocco located on the Atlantic Coast. To celebrate the 30th anniversary of the ICGI conference, the program will include a distinguished lecture by Dana Angluin. The program will also include two invited talks, on recent advances of Grammatical Inference for Natural Language Processing and Bioinformatics by Cyril Allauzen (Google NY) and Ahmed Elnaggar (TU München), a half-day tutorial at the beginning of the conference on formal languages and neural models for learning on sequences by Will Merrill, as well as oral presentations of accepted papers.

The 16th edition of ICGI will also partner with the Transformers+RNN: Algorithms to Yield Simple and Interpretable Representations (TAYSIR) competition, an online challenge on extracting simpler models from already trained neural networks. The conference will include a special session organized by TAYSIR on the presentation of the results of the competition with an opportunity for competitors to present their approach.

Invited Speakers

Dana Angluin (Yale University)
Cyril Allauzen (Google NY)
Ahmed Elnaggar (TU München)
Will Merrill (NYU)


Types of contributions

We welcome three types of papers:

- Formal and/or technical papers describe original contributions (theoretical, methodological, or conceptual) in the field of grammatical inference. A technical paper should clearly describe the situation or problem tackled, the relevant state of the art, the position or solution suggested, and the benefits of the contribution.

- Position papers can describe completely new research positions, approaches, or open problems. Current limits can be discussed. In all cases, rigor in the presentation will be required. Such papers must describe precisely the situation, problem, or challenge addressed, and demonstrate how current methods, tools, or ways of reasoning, may be inadequate.

- Tool papers describing a new tool for grammatical inference. The tool must be publicly available and the paper has to contain several use-case studies describing the use of the tool. In addition, the paper should clearly describe the implemented algorithms, input parameters and syntax, and the produced output.

Topics of interest

Typical topics of interest include (but are not limited to):

- Theoretical aspects of grammatical inference: learning paradigms, learnability results, the complexity of learning.

- Learning algorithms for language classes inside and outside the Chomsky hierarchy. Learning tree and graph grammars.

- Learning probability distributions over strings, trees or graphs, or transductions thereof.

Theoretical and empirical research on query learning, active learning, and other interactive learning paradigms.

- Theoretical and empirical research on methods using or including, but not limited to, spectral learning, state-merging, distributional learning, statistical relational learning, statistical inference, or Bayesian learning

- Theoretical analysis of neural network models and their expressiveness through the lens of formal languages.

- Experimental and theoretical analysis of different approaches to grammar induction, including artificial neural networks, statistical methods, symbolic methods, information-theoretic approaches, minimum description length, complexity-theoretic approaches, heuristic methods, etc.

- Leveraging formal language tools, models, and theory to improve the explainability, interpretability, or verifiability of neural networks or other black box models.

- Learning with contextualized data: for instance, Grammatical Inference from strings or trees paired with semantic representations, or learning by situated agents and robots.

- Novel approaches to grammatical inference: induction by DNA computing or quantum computing, evolutionary approaches, new representation spaces, etc.

- Successful applications of grammatical learning to tasks in fields including, but not limited to, natural language processing and computational linguistics, model checking and software verification, bioinformatics, robotic planning and control, and pattern recognition.




Guidelines for authors

Accepted papers will be published within the Proceedings of Machine Learning Research series (http://proceedings.mlr.press/). Submission instructions can be found on the conference website. The total length of the paper should not exceed 12 pages on A4-size paper (references and appendix may exceed this limit but Authors are warned that Reviewers may not read after page 12). The prospective authors are strongly recommended to use the JMLR style file for LaTeX (https://ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/latex/contrib/jmlr) since it will be the required format for the final published version.

The peer review process is double-blind: we expect submitted papers to be anonymous.

Timeline
- The deadline for submissions is: March 12, 2023 (anywhere on Earth)
- Notification of acceptance: May 15, 2023
- Camera-ready copy: June 15, 2023
- Conference: July 10-13, 2023

Conference Chairs
- François Coste, Inria Rennes, France
- Faissal Ouardi, Mohammed V University in Rabat, Morocco
- Guillaume Rabusseau, University of Montreal - Mila, Canada

Related Resources

ICML 2024   International Conference on Machine Learning
IEEE-Ei/Scopus-SGGEA 2024   2024 Asia Conference on Smart Grid, Green Energy and Applications (SGGEA 2024) -EI Compendex
LearnAut 2024   Learning and Automata
IEEE Big Data - MMAI 2024   IEEE Big Data 2024 Workshop on Multimodal AI
CHIL 2024   5th AHLI Conference on Health, Inference, and Learning
SPIE-Ei/Scopus-DMNLP 2025   2025 2nd International Conference on Data Mining and Natural Language Processing (DMNLP 2025)-EI Compendex&Scopus
ISIT 2024 2024   2nd Conference on Intelligent Systems and Information Technologies Logic, Knowledge, and Reasoning in Intelligent Systems
Ei/Scopus-ACAI 2024   2024 7th International Conference on Algorithms, Computing and Artificial Intelligence(ACAI 2024)
EDCCS 2024   Workshop on Engineering techniques for Distributed Computing Continuum Systems
AMLDS 2025   IEEE--2025 International Conference on Advanced Machine Learning and Data Science