PASCAL2 Posts

Postdoctoral position in Machine Learing, University of Bristol

We are seeking to appoint an outstanding postdoctoral researcher with a background
in machine learning or statistics to contribute to a project with a core aim
of understanding the genetic basis of certain human diseases.

Technological changes in the field of human genetics have resulted in an unprecedented rate of data
generation, offering new opportunities for researchers with expertise in handling, integrating
and analysing large datasets. The goal of this Medical Research Council funded project is to
apply computational and mathematical approaches to the classification and analysis of disease
genes using data from high-throughput genomics platforms, particularly genome-wide
association study data. The post holder will contribute to the development and
application of machine learning and statistical approaches to genetic datasets,
the analysis and interpretation of results and the writing of research papers.

The successful applicant will have knowledge of and the capability to apply advanced
data analysis techniques to data classification and should have a mathematical, computer science or
bioinformatics background. The applicant should be qualified to PhD level (or equivalent) in one or
more of these fields, and should be able to work effectively in a multi-disciplinary
environment.

The successful applicant will have joint membership of the MRC Centre for Causal Analyses
in Translational Epidemiology (CAITE) and the Intelligent Systems Laboratory (ISL) at the
University of Bristol. Dr. Tom Gaunt will act as adviser at CAITE
(see http://www.bristol.ac.uk/caite/) and Dr. Colin Campbell is the adviser
within the ISL (see http://www.enm.bris.ac.uk/research/neural/staff/icgc.html).

Further information and details of the application procedure are available from:

https://www.bris.ac.uk/boris/jobs/feeds/ads?ID=90950

Informal enquiries are welcome, and may be made to Dr. Tom Gaunt
(0117-3310132, tom.gaunt(at)bristol.ac.uk) or Dr. Colin Campbell
(0117-33-15620, C.Campbell(at)bris.ac.uk).

The closing date for applications is: *** 9:00am on 19th November 2010 ***

Grade : Level A in Pathway 2
Starting Salary : £29,853
Timescale of Appointment: fixed term contract for 3 years.

IMAGAPP – FINAL CALL FOR PAPERS – DEADLINE 17th November 2010

IMAGAPP – FINAL CALL FOR PAPERS – DEADLINE 17th November 2010

International Conference on Imaging Theory and Applications

http://www.imagapp.visigrapp.org/home.asp

Algarve, Portugal, 5-7 March 2011

Dear Colleagues,

This is an invitation to submit a paper to the International Conference on Imaging Theory and Applications which is part of VISIGRAPP composed of four co-located conferences, specialized in computer vision, imaging, computer graphics and information visualization (http://www.visigrapp.org/). In additional, this conference is co-located with PECCS 2011 (1st International Conference on Pervasive and Embedded Computing and Communication Systems – http://www.peccs.org/) and registration to VISIGRAPP allows free access to the PECCS conference.

The main topic areas of IMAGAPP are:

· Image Capture, Display and Printing

· Imaging and Video Processing

· Imaging Applications and Services

and paper submissions are due to 17th November 2010 (strict deadline).

More detailed information can be found on the call for papers at http://www.imagapp.visigrapp.org/call_for_papers.asp.

Note that, all accepted papers will be published in the conference proceedings that will be submitted for indexation by several major international indexers, including INSPEC, DBLP, Thomson Reuters Conference Proceedings Citation Index and EI. All presented papers will be also available at the SciTePress Digital Library (http://www.scitepress.org/DigitalLibrary/).

Additionally, a selection of the best papers of the conference will be published by Springer-Verlag in a CCIS Series book. We also intend to publish extended versions of papers in a special issue of The Journal of Convergence Information Technology that are related to a specific theme identified at the conference as most interesting.

Should you have any question please don’t hesitate contacting me or the Imagapp secretariat (imagapp.secretariat (at) insticc.org)

Kind regards,

Gabriela Csurka

IMAGAPP Conference Chair

5 open positions in Brain Computer Interface Company

BitBrain Technologies has 5 open positions in the R&D Department.

BitBrain is a spin-off company from the University of Zaragoza focused
on the development and commercialization of Brain-Computer interfaces
(more info http://www.bitbrain.es)

BitBrain seeks candidates with expertise in:

* Real-time systems, networks, artificial intelligence, C++ programming,
programming with graphical libraries (preferably Qt) and UML.

* Signal processing and biomedical instrumentation, biological signal
analysis and treatment (preferably EEG), biostatistics and pattern
recognition.

Preferred qualifications:

* Expertise in Brain Computer Interfaces or related fields.
* PhD or Masters in Biomedical Engineering, Computer Science or
Electrical Engineering.

BitBrain offers:
* Immediate integration into a young and collaborative team.
* Competitive salaries in a high-tech company.
* Professional carrier with high projection.

BitBrain is located in the CEEI-Aragón of Zaragoza, a 2-minute walk from
the Polytechnic Campus of the University of Zaragoza.

If you are interested, send your CV to info@bitbraintec.com with the
subject: JOB OFFERS 2010.

Best regards,
Cecilio Angulo – UPC, Spain
Javier Minguez – UniZar, Spain

e-LICO multi-omics prediction challenge with background knowledge on Obstructive Nephropathy

We present a biological data-mining problem that poses a number of significant challenges; the available data: (i) are of high dimensionality but of extremely small sample size, (ii) come from different sources which correspond to different biological levels, (iii) exhibit a high degree of feature dependencies and interactions within and between the different sources; some of the interactions between the different sources are known and available as background knowledge, and (iv) are incomplete.

This data was obtained from patients with Obstructive Nephropathy (ON) which is the most frequent nephropathy observed among newborns and children, and the first cause of end stage renal disease usually treated by dialysis or transplantation. The goal is to construct diagnostic models that accurately connect the biological levels to the severity of the pathology. We particularly welcome data mining approaches and learning methods that are able to accommodate the available background information in order to address the formidable challenge of high dimensionality small sample size of our setting and deliver better models.

A prize is envisaged for the top performing approaches (2500EU in total). The price is sponsored by Rapid-I the company that supports RapidMiner, probably the most popular open-source data mining environment, and the European Commission through the e-Lico EU project. Participants are expected to prepare a paper, maximum 8 pages, describing their approach. We plan to have a number of selected papers considered for publication in a special issue of a journal (to be announced soon).

Challenge web page: http://tunedit.org/challenge/ON .

Started: Sep 15, 2010
Ends: Dec 19, 2010

Organizing Committee:
– Alexandros Kalousis, University of Geneva, Switzerland
– Julie Klein, Inserm U858, Toulouse, France
– Joost Schanstra, Inserm U858, Toulouse, France
– Adam Woznica, University of Geneva, Switzerland

NIPS 2010 workshop: Monte Carlo Methods for Bayesian Inference in Modern Day Applications

Call for Contributions

—————————————————————————
NIPS 2010 workshop
Monte Carlo Methods for Bayesian Inference in Modern Day Applications
http://montecarlo.wikidot.com/
http://nips.cc/

December 10 or 11, 2010
Whistler, Canada. Westin Resort and Spa and Hilton Resort and Spa
—————————————————————————

We invite submissions on Monte Carlo methods and their practical
application. Particularly welcome are “tricks of the trade” and “war
stories” that might not make it into conventional publications.
Submissions are solicited both from researchers developing new
methodology and from practitioners using established techniques.

Send poster abstracts of up to one page to
montecarlo-2010@cs.toronto.edu
by Oct 31, 2010. Use the NIPS style file with no anonymity. We will
notify acceptances by Nov 5, and before the NIPS early registration
deadline.

We intend to invite key contributions from the workshop to submit full
papers to a JMLR W&CP issue to appear in the new year.

We also invite contributions to the wiki, including suggested readings
and discussion topics:
http://montecarlo.wikidot.com/

The organizers:
Ryan Prescott Adams, http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~rpa/
Mark Girolami, http://www.dcs.gla.ac.uk/inference/
Iain Murray, http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/imurray2/

Confirmed invited speakers:
Derek Bingham
Arnaud Doucet
Andrew McCallum
Yee-Whye Teh

Workshop description:

Monte Carlo methods have been the dominant form of approximate inference for
Bayesian statistics over the last couple of decades. Monte Carlo methods are
interesting as a technical topic of research in themselves, as well as enjoying
widespread practical use. In a diverse number of application areas Monte Carlo
methods have enabled Bayesian inference over classes of statistical models which
previously would have been infeasible. Despite this broad and sustained
attention, it is often still far from clear how best to set up a Monte Carlo
method for a given problem, how to diagnose if it is working well, and how to
improve under-performing methods. The impact of these issues is even more
pronounced with new emerging applications. This workshop is aimed equally at
practitioners and core Monte Carlo researchers. For practitioners we hope to
identify what properties of applications are important for selecting, running
and checking a Monte Carlo algorithm. Monte Carlo methods are applied to a broad
variety of problems. The workshop aims to identify and explore what properties
of these disparate areas are important to think about when applying Monte Carlo
methods.

We look forward to seeing you in Whistler this December!

Research Fellow in Computer Vision and Machine Learning

Research Fellow in Computer Vision and Machine Learning
School of Computing, University of Leeds, UK

(Full Time, Fixed term 14 months)

You will work with Dr Mark Everingham (http://www.comp.leeds.ac.uk/me/) on an
EPSRC funded project investigating new methods for learning articulated human
pose estimation from weak or approximate supervision. The project has three
main aims: (i) developing machine learning methods to learn from approximate
annotation and “side information” for example simple models of human anatomy;
(ii) developing strong models of appearance to give robust pose estimation,
using the developed machine learning approach. This will include higher order
cues modelling appearance of limbs, dependencies between limbs and appearance
of joints and configurations of limbs; (iii) producing a large dataset of
approximately annotated consumer images, at least two orders of magnitude
larger than available datasets. Further information about the project can be
found online:

http://www.comp.leeds.ac.uk/me/Pose/

Applicants are expected to have a PhD (or to be awarded shortly) in a related
topic. You should have experience in developing and applying computer vision
and machine learning algorithms, especially probabilistic methods. Expertise
in graphical models, structured learning or human pose estimation would be a
particular advantage. You should be a proficient programmer in MATLAB and
C/C++. You should be self-motivated, good at time management and planning,
and have a proven ability to meet deadlines. Good communication and
presentation skills are also important.

Salary: Grade 7 (£29,853 – £35,646 p.a)

Job description and person specification:
http://hr.leeds.ac.uk/jobs/FileDownload.aspx?filename=312501%20-%20RF%20-%20Computer%20Vision.doc

Apply using: Application form, CV and Equal Opportunities Monitoring form

Download an application form:
http://www.leeds.ac.uk/hr/forms/recruitment/app_form.pdf
http://www.leeds.ac.uk/hr/forms/recruitment/newapplicationform.doc

Informal enquiries:

Dr Mark Everingham, email: m.everingham(at)leeds.ac.uk

Send completed applications to:
Judi Drew, email j.a.drew(at)leeds.ac.uk or by post to:

Judi Drew
School of Computing
University of Leeds
Leeds
LS2 9JT

Closing date: 22 September 2010 at 17:00 GMT

Anticipated interview date: 01 October 2010

MLSB 2010 – call for posters/registration

******************* Call for Posters/Registration **********************

MLSB 2010

The Fourth International Workshop on Machine Learning in Systems Biology

15-16 October 2010, Edinburgh, Scotland

***********************************************************************

http://mlsb10.ijs.si/

(apologies for multiple postings)

REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN: http://tinyurl.com/2cp7xwc

MOTIVATION

Molecular biology and all the biomedical sciences are undergoing a
true revolution as a result of the emergence and growing impact of a
series of new disciplines/tools sharing the “-omics” suffix in their
name. These include in particular genomics, transcriptomics,
proteomics and metabolomics, devoted respectively to the examination
of the entire systems of genes, transcripts, proteins and metabolites
present in a given cell or tissue type.

The availability of these new, highly effective tools for biological
exploration is dramatically changing the way one performs research in
at least two respects. First, the amount of available experimental
data is not a limiting factor any more; on the contrary, there is a
plethora of it. Given the research question, the challenge has
shifted towards identifying the relevant pieces of information and
making sense out of it (a “data mining” issue). Second, rather
than focus on components in isolation, we can now try to understand
how biological systems behave as a result of the integration and
interaction between the individual components that one can now monitor
simultaneously (so called “systems biology”).

Taking advantage of this wealth of “genomic” information has become a
conditio sine qua non for whoever ambitions to remain competitive in
molecular biology and in the biomedical sciences in general. Machine
learning naturally appears as one of the main drivers of progress in
this context, where most of the targets of interest deal with complex
structured objects: sequences, 2D and 3D structures or interaction
networks. At the same time bioinformatics and systems biology have
already induced significant new developments of general interest in
machine learning, for example in the context of learning with
structured data, graph inference, semi-supervised learning, system
identification, and novel combinations of optimization and learning
algorithms.

The Workshop is organized as “core – event” of Pattern Analysis,
Statistical Modelling and Computational Learning – Network of Excellence
2 (PASCAL 2, http://www.pascal-network.org/)

OBJECTIVE

The aim of this workshop is to contribute to the cross-fertilization
between the research in machine learning methods and their
applications to systems biology (i.e., complex biological and medical
questions) by bringing together method developers and
experimentalists. We encourage submissions bringing forward methods
for discovering complex structures (e.g. interaction networks,
molecule structures) and methods supporting genome-wide data analysis.

LOCATION AND CO-LOCATION

The workshop will take place 15-16 October 2010 at the Edinburgh
International Conference Centre and the Informatics Forum of the
University of Edinburgh. It will be part of the wokshop program of
ICSB 2010, The 11th International Conference on Systems Biology
(11-14 OCT 2010, http://www.icsb2010.org.uk/).

POSTER SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS

We invite you to submit an abstract of up to 4 pages (minimum 1 page)
describing new or recently published (2010) results, formatted
according to the Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science
style. Each extended abstract must be submitted online via the Easychair
submission system: http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=mlsb10

KEY DATES

30th September: Poster submission deadline.
REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN: ttp://tinyurl.com/2cp7xwc

TOPICS

A non-exhaustive list of topics suitable for this workshop is given
below:

Methods

Machine learning algorithms
Bayesian methods
Data integration/fusion
Feature/subspace selection
Clustering
Biclustering/association rules
Kernel methods
Probabilistic inference
Structured output prediction
Systems identification
Graph inference, completion, smoothing
Semi-supervised learning

Applications

Sequence annotation
Gene expression and post-transcriptional regulation
Inference of gene regulation networks
Gene prediction and whole genome association studies
Metabolic pathway modeling
Signaling networks
Systems biology approaches to biomarker identification
Rational drug design methods
Metabolic reconstruction
Protein function and structure prediction
Protein-protein interaction networks
Synthetic biology

INVITED SPEAKERS (confirmed)

Florence d’Alche Buc, Universite d’Evry-Val d’Essonne, Evry, France
Nir Friedman, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel
Ursula Kummer, BIOQUANT, University of Heidelberg, Germany
Hans Lehrach, Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics, Berlin, Germany
Vebjorn Ljosa, The Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, USA

MLSB10 PROGRAM CHAIRS

Saöo Dûeroski, Jozef Stefan Institute, Ljubljana, Slovenia
Simon Rogers, University of Glasgow, UK
Guido Sanguinetti, University of Sheffield/University of Edinburgh, UK

SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM COMMITTEE (tentative)

Florence d’AlchÈ-Buc, University of Evry, France
Paolo Frasconi, Universit‡ degli Studi di Firenze, Italy
Cesare Furlanello, Fondazione Bruno Kessler, Trento, Italy
Pierre Geurts, University of LiËge, Belgium
Mark Girolami, University of Glasgow, UK
Dirk Husmeier, Biomathematics & Statistics Scotland, UK
Samuel Kaski, Helsinki University of Technology, Finland
Ross D. King, Aberystwyth University, UK
Neil Lawrence, University of Manchester, UK
Elena Marchiori, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Yves Moreau, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium
William Stafford Noble, University of Washington, USA
Gunnar R‰tsch, FML, Max Planck Society, T¸bingen
Juho Rousu, University of Helsinki, Finland
CÈline Rouveirol, University of Paris XIII, France
Yvan Saeys, University of Gent, Belgium
Ljupco Todorovski, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
Koji Tsuda, Max Planck Institute, Tuebingen
Jean-Philippe Vert, Ecole des Mines, France
Louis Wehenkel, University of LiËge, Belgium
Jean-Daniel Zucker, University of Paris XIII, France
Blaz Zupan, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia

LOCAL ORGANIZATION

Fiona Clark, University of Edinburgh, UK
Dragi Kocev, Jozef Stefan Institute, Ljubljana, Slovenia (webmaster)

Dr Simon Rogers
Lecturer in Inference
School of Computing Science
University of Glasgow
simon.rogers (at) glasgow.ac.uk
skype: sdrogersskype

Call for additional partners of PASCAL 2 Network of Excellence

PASCAL 2 is a European Commission financed FP7 Network of Excellence that started in March 2008 and that will run until February 2013. It focuses on the development of principled approaches to machine learning, statistical analysis and pattern recognition and their applications to diverse areas including cognitive systems and robotics, user interfaces, and vision, speech and text understanding. Many of the leading European research groups in these areas participate. The funding is allocated dynamically by a range of network programmes that promote network themes and encourage interaction and community building in these areas. As a part of this activity, we have held an annual call for new sites for the past two years, and we will hold a limited call again this year. Any site that is eligible to participate in EC financed projects can apply, but the process is highly selective and for budgetary and network-focus related reasons only a very small number of new sites can be admitted this year. New sites are expected to be world leading in their research areas and they must demonstrate links with existing sites that are sufficient to ensure future collaboration and good integration into the network. Sites working on any network-related theme can apply, but for this call preference will be given to building critical mass in our thematic priority area of creating artificial cognitive systems (including but not limited to robotic systems, embedded agents, etc) based on sound statistical and machine learning principles. For more information about the application process and deadlines, see below.

———————————————————————
Information required for an application to become a new PASCAL 2 site

For consideration at the 3 September 2010 Steering Committee meeting, applications including all of the following information must reach the Committee by FRIDAY 6 AUGUST 2010 and the corresponding letters of reference must reach the Committee by FRIDAY 13 AUGUST 2010. There will be no extensions. Applications and letters should be sent in PDF or plain text format to the PASCAL administrator Rebecca Martin at UCL, Rebecca.Martin at cs.ucl.ac.uk.

Information to include:

  • The site name and manager.
  • The name of the PASCAL 2 Beneficiary that will manage the site’s budget for it (for most sites this will be UCL [1])
  • The names of two previously agreed sponsors from within the PASCAL 2 network. These must be from two different countries (one country can be that of the candidate site) and they must be permanent staff at their respective institutions. The applicant should ask each sponsor to email a confidential letter of support for the application to the Committee by FRIDAY 13 AUGUST 2010. The letters should evaluate the leadership and excellence of the site and the added value for the network as a whole of including it (complementarity, critical mass, probable collaborations, advancement of network goals…)
  • A proposed initial list of members at the site, giving their employment status (permanent, postdoc, PhD student) and keywords for their research interests.
  • A few paragraphs (absolute maximum 1 page) explaining concisely how the site intends to contribute to PASCAL 2 and describing the kind of work that it does, its alignment with PASCAL 2 and its goals, any past or current participations in PASCAL activities, how the group plans to interact with other PASCAL 2 sites,… Include a list of at most 5 recent publications that illustrate the quality and alignment of the work at the site. Small sites will need to argue that they have the critical mass to participate as an autonomous PASCAL site.
  • The information required for a Contract Preparation Form: official names and addresses of the institution(s) concerned; names, email addresses and telephone numbers of the people in their contracts offices who will handle contract preparation; full names and titles of their contract signatories.
  • Before submitting an application, you must also verify that your institution has read the Non-Beneficiary accession agreement and is willing to accede to it (Downloadable version available here).

———————————————————————-

[1] Most new sites are expected to join as “Non-Beneficiary” members. This essentially allows full network participation except that the site budget is managed by UCL rather than the site itself and staff can not be employed. If staff need to be employed later (e.g. following a successful Pump Priming or Harvest request) the site can apply for promotion to full Beneficiary status at that stage. However sites that are attached to existing multi-site Beneficiaries, notably the CNRS, can immediately become full members via their Beneficiary, subject to the agreement of that Beneficiary. The application and approval process is the same for all new sites.

Call for new members of PASCAL2 – update to contact details

It appears that the address for the applications to be sent to did not appear in the orginal advert.

Everything should be sent to Rebecca Martin – rebecca.martin at cs.ucl.ac.uk

The original advert has also been updated, and is available here: http://www.pascal-network.org/?q=node/164

Apologies for any inconvenience.

Postdoctoral position within the area of Distributed Text Mining at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology

A post-doctoral position in the area of distributed text mining within the
COMIDOR project is available at the Department of Computer and Information
Science (IDI) in the Faculty of Information Technology, Mathematics and
Electrical Engineering (IME), the Norwegian University of Science and
Technology (NTNU).

COMIDOR (Cooperative Mining of Independent Document Repositories) is a
research project at NTNU that will focus on the mechanisms and algorithms
necessary to perform mining of independent document repositories. COMIDOR is
funded by the Norwegian Research Council.

Traditionally, text mining has been performed on a single text
collection, and in the case of collections from several repositories
these collections have first been merged before performing the mining
process. In some application areas, merging of collections is not
acceptable. For example, some repositories can not be merged for legal
reasons, while some can not be merged because of risk of revealing
classified information. In the COMIDOR project the aim is to develop
new solutions to mining of independent document repositories without
communication of base repositories. A more detailed description of the
project can be found at http://research.idi.ntnu.no/comidor/.

The candidate should have a Ph.D. in Computer Science with solid
knowledge of text mining, data mining, or distributed data management, and
familiarity with program development. The postdoc position is for two
years.

For more information, please Prof. Kjetil Norvag (project leader), noervaag
at idi.ntnu.no.

Specific Conditions: The postdoc position is placed in Norwegian salary code
1352, gross NOK 446.700 per year (equivalent to approx. EUR 56.500 and USD
75.600).

Living Costs in Norway: A rule of thumb is that one pays appr. 35% tax on
net income. Public health care system is free for all (due to the tax
level). Generally there is no need for private health care insurances.
Education on all levels is free for all. Housing normally cost between NOK
4000 (for a simple one bed studio with kitchenette, possibly shared
bathroom) and 8000 (for a 3-4 piece apartment suitable for a small family)
per month.