BELIEF 2014
3rd International Conference on Belief Functions
http://cms.brookes.ac.uk/staff/FabioCuzzolin/BELIEF2014
Oxford, UK, September 26-28 2014
CALL FOR PAPERS
The theory of belief functions, also referred to as evidence theory or Dempster-Shafer theory, was first introduced by Arthur P. Dempster in the context of statistical inference, and was later developed by Glenn Shafer as a general framework for modeling epistemic uncertainty. These early contributions have been the starting points of many important developments, including the Transferable Belief Model and the Theory of Hints.
The theory of belief functions is now well established as a general framework for reasoning with uncertainty, and has well understood connections to other frameworks such as probability, possibility and imprecise probability theories.
In 2012 alone, more than 300 papers on belief functions and their applications have been published worldwide. The ambition of the series of International Conferences on Belief Functions - BELIEF - is to bring together the large and expanding community of mathematicians, statisticians, computer scientists, engineers, economists and practitioners which work on the theoretical foundations of belief calculus or its application to all fields of applied science.
TOPICS
Original contributions are solicited on theoretical aspects, including:
- decision making
- combination rules
- conditioning
- continuous belief functions
- independence and graphical models
- statistical inference
- geometry and distance metrics
- mathematical foundations
- computational frameworks
as well as on applications in various areas including, but not limited to:
- data and information fusion
- pattern recognition
- machine learning and clustering
- tracking and data association
- data mining
- signal and image processing
- computer vision
- medical diagnosis
- business decision
- risk analysis
- engineering and environment
- climatic change.
SUBMISSION
Authors are invited to prepare full papers not exceeding 8 pages, including results, figures and references, using the LaTeX style files provided, via the following Easychair website:�
https://www.easychair.org/account/signin.cgi?key=8343858.pGCAALD0kFZm3QnM�
Papers will be presented during the conference in a single track oral session.�
IMPORTANT DATES
Full paper submission deadline: April 30th, 2014.
Notification of acceptance : June 10, 2014
Final version due : June 15, 2014
Author registration : June 15, 2014
Early registration : July 15, 2014
Conference : September 26-29, 2014
PROCEEDINGS
All accepted papers will be published by Springer-Verlag in a volume of the Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence (LNCS/LNAI) series.
AWARDS
A Best Paper award, sponsored by Elsevier, worth 1000 euros will be assigned to the most
outstanding technical contribution based on the reviews received by each accepted paper. The final�decision will be made by the Belief Functions and Applications Society (BFAS) board.
A Best Student Paper award will be specifically assigned to the best work by a student. This award is�sponsored by the International Society of Information Fusion (ISIF). The lead student author will�receive a free student registration to attend FUSION 2015.
IJAR SPECIAL ISSUE
Authors of selected papers from the BELIEF 2014 conference will be invited to submit an extended version of their papers for possible inclusion in a special issue of the International Journal of Approximate Reasoning.
VENUE
The 3rd International Conference on Belief Functions will take place in Oxford, United Kingdom. Oxford is a world-famous university city, home of two major universities.�
The Belief 2014 Conference will take place in the beautiful St. Hugh's college, University of Oxford.
ORGANISATION
The conference series is organised by the Belief Functions and Applications Society:�
http://www.bfasociety.org/�
Program Chair: Dr Fabio Cuzzolin, Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, UK
http://cms.brookes.ac.uk/staff/FabioCuzzolin/
Honorary Chairs: Arthur P. Dempster (USA), Glenn Shafer (USA)
INVITED SPEAKERS
The invited speaker will be Professor Thomas Lukasiewicz and Professor Nando de Freitas, from the Computer Science department of Oxford University.
TECHNICAL PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Alessandro Antonucci (Switzerland)�
Alain Appriou (France)
�Yaxin Bi (UK)�
Boutheina Ben Yaghlane (Tunisia)�
Isabelle Bloch (France)�
Thomas Burger (France)�
V�ronique Cherfaoui (France)�
Olivier Colot (France)�
Frank Coolen (UK)�
Fabio Cuzzolin (UK)�
Milan Daniel (Czech Republic)�
Fran�ois Delmotte (France)�
Yong Deng (China)�
Thierry Denoeux (France)�
S�bastien Destercke (France)�
Jean Dezert (France)�
Didier Dubois (France)�
Emmanuel Duflos (France)
Zied Elouedi (Tunisia)�
Scott Ferson (USA)�
Michel Grabisch (France)�
Van Nam Huyn (Japan)�
Radim Jirousek (Czech Republic)�
Anne-Laure Jousselme (Canada)�
Tomas Kroupa (Czech Republic)�
Jonathan Lawry (UK)�
Eric Lef�vre (France)�
Shoumei Li (China)�
Chuanhai Liu (USA)�
Liping Liu (USA)�
Weiru Liu (UK)�
Arnaud Martin (France)
Marie-H�l�ne Masson (France)�
David Mercier (France)�
Theodore Mock (USA)�
Serafin Moral (Spain)�
Hung T. Nguyen (USA)�
Christophe Osswald (France)�
Benjamin Quost (France)�
Gavin Powell (UK)�
Mich�le Rombaut (France)�
Johan Schubert (Sweden)�
Prakash Shenoy (USA)�
Paul Snow (USA)�
Rajendra P. Srivastava (USA)�
Jian-Bo Yang (UK)