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Keynote Speakers
1. Professor Shin'ichi Satoh (National Institute of Informatics (NII), Tokyo,Japan)Shin'ichi Satoh is a professor at National Institute of Informatics (NII), Tokyo. Hereceived PhD degree in 1992 at the University of Tokyo. His research interestsinclude image processing, video content analysis and multimedia database. Currently he is leading the video processing project at NII, addressing videoanalysis, indexing,retrieval, and mining for broadcasted video archives.
Talk: Observing Society via Television Challenges towards Social Analysis by Using LargeScaleBroadcast Video ArchiveWe can obtain many interesting aspects only by watching television, e.g., what's going on in Japan and theworld, what is the current trends, how is economic activities, and so on. This talk will introduce couple of trialsto automatically analyze such information by computers. Especially, with NII TVRECS video archivecontaining 300,000 hours of broadcast videos, we developed and deployed couple of key technologies includingface detection and matching, fast commercial film mining, and visual object retrieval towards social analysistools.
2. Professor. Dr. Gerhard Rigoll (Institute for HumanMachine CommunicationTU München (TUM), Germany)Gerhard Rigoll obtained the Dipl.Ing degree from Stuttgart University/ Germany, in1982. He joined FraunhoferInstitute (IAO) in Stuttgart and received the Dr.Ing.degree in 1986 in the area of automatic speech recognition. From 1986 to 1988 heworked as postdoctoral fellow at IBM T.J. Watson Research Centre in YorktownHeights/USA for the IBM Tangora speech recognition project. He received the Dr.Ing. habil. degree in 1991 from Stuttgart University with a thesis on speechsynthesis. From 1991 to 1993 he worked as a guest researcher in the framework ofthe EC Scientific Training Programme in Japan for the NTT Human InterfaceLaboratories in Tokyo/Japan. In 1993 he was appointed full professor of computerscience at GerhardMercatorUniversity in Duisburg, Germany. In 2002, he joined
Technische Universität München (TUM), where he is now heading the institute for HumanMachineCommunication. He has been a visiting professor at Nara Institute of Science and Technology (NAIST) in spring2005 and is regularly lecturing at Singapore Institute of Technology (SIT) since 2011.His research interests are in the field of humanmachine communication and multimedia information processing,covering areas such as speech and handwriting recognition, gesture recognition, face detection & identification,emotion recognition, person tracking, and interactive computer graphics. Dr. Rigoll is a Senior Member of theIEEE and is the author and coauthor of more than 500 papers in the field of pattern recognition, covering theabove mentioned application areas. He has supervised more than 40 PhD dissertations during the last twodecades. He was Associate Editor of the IEEE Transactions on Audio, Speech and Language Processing andother international journals, has served as session chairman, organizer and member of the program committeefor numerous international conferences, and has been the general chairman of the Annual DAGMSymposiumon Pattern Recognition in 2008
Talk: Recent Developments in Multimodal HumanMachine and HumantoHuman CommunicationToday, almost everybody can get an impression of the progress in the area of humanmachine communication,because one can experience this technology on a daily basis. The best example for this is the development ofsmartphones, where e.g. Personal Digital Assistants such as Siri from Apple or Cortana from Microsoft havesignificantly improved the usage of automatic speech recognition. Additionally, other modalities, such as e.g.face detection, emotions or gazeinteraction became more and more involved, so that nowadays multimodalinteraction is already reality on advanced smartphones.This talk will highlight some of these developments by explaining some of the underpinning methods formultimodal HCI, such as statistical pattern recognition and machine intelligence techniques, including deeplearning methods. The talk will conclude with the presentation of two relatively new emerging application areasinvolving a high degree of multimodality: The first one is the area of humanrobot interaction (HRI), whichbecame popular due to the transition of robots from autonomously acting machines in factories to interactiveassistants for cooperation with humans. The other is in the emerging area of humantohuman communication.Here we present a novel system for videoconferencing, where Augmented Reality (AR) methods are employedin order to project a user interactively into the environment of the other conference participant.
3. Professor Limsoon Wong (National University of Singapore)Limsoon Wong is a professor of computer science at the NationalUniversity of Singapore. He currently works mostly on knowledgediscovery technologies and their application to biomedicine. He is a Fellowof the ACM, named for his contributions to database theory andcomputational biology. He was a corecipient of the ICDT 2014 Test ofTime Award for his work on naturally embedded query languages. Limsoonserves on the editorial boards of Information Systems, IEEE Transactionson Big Data, Biology Direct, Drug Discovery Today, etc. He cofoundedMolecular Connections, an information extraction and curation servicescompany in India, and oversaw its steady growth over the past decade to
some 1000 research engineers, scientists, and curators.Talk: Some issues that are often overlooked in big data analyticsThe arrival of the “big data” era is opening up new avenues in business, healthcare, etc. Much attention hasbeen paid to scaling challenges arising from the huge increase in volume, velocity, and variety. Not as muchattention has been paid to nonscalingrelated issues that affect a number of fundamental assumptions incurrent statistical analysis approaches. Having more data is tremendously helpful in some analysis procedures.At the same time, having more data can also make the same analysis procedures fail in fundamental ways. Wediscuss some examples of these issues and how they might be fixed.
4. Dr. Koji Zettsu (National Institute of Information and CommunicationsTechnology NICT)Dr. Koji Zettsu: received Ph.D in Informatics from Kyoto University in 2005. Heis a Director of Information Services Platform Laboratory at UniversalCommunication Research Institute of National Institute of Information andCommunications Technology (NICT), Japan. He was a visiting associateprofessor of Kyoto University, Osaka University from 2008 to 2012. He was avisiting researcher of ChristianAlbrechtsUniversity Kiel, Germany in 2009. Hewas the technical editor of Valuecreating Network subworking group of NewGeneration Network Forum, Japan from 2009 to 2010. His research interestsare information retrieval, databases and software engineering. He is a memberof IPSJ, IEICE, DBSJ and ACM.
Talk: CyberPhysicalSocial Data Fusion in IoT
Internet of Things (IoT) brings us to the new era of information where information can be collected andcommunicated among everybody and everything and anything. In this way, cyberspace, physical space andhuman knowledge and social activities can be synchronized to bring us an ability to monitor the real world underdifferent facets. That will help us to discover useful knowledge from gathered information from cyber physicalsocial space and turn these knowledge to wisdoms. In this talk, I am going to discuss the platform for CyberPhysical Social Data Fusion that can be built on top of IoT. Event Data Warehouse, being developed by NICT,provides functionality for collecting, integrating, analyzing and visualizing multisourced heterogeneous sensingdata from cyber, physical social spaces. The fundamental technologies and potential applications of the EventData Warehouse are introduced as well as some recent reserch issues.
5. Associate Professor Yuichi Tanaka (Tokyo University of Agriculture andTechnology) Yuichi Tanaka received the B.E., M.E. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineeringfrom Keio University, Yokohama, Japan, in 2003, 2005 and 2007, respectively. Hewas a Postdoctoral Scholar at Keio University, Yokohama, Japan, from 2007 to2008, and supported by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS).From 2006 to 2008, he was also a visiting scholar at the University of California,San Diego (Video Processing Group supervised by Prof. T. Q. Nguyen). From2008 to 2012, he was an Assistant Professor in the Department of InformationScience, Utsunomiya University, Tochigi, Japan. Since 2012, he has been anAssociate Professor in Graduate School of BASE, Tokyo University of Agriculture
and Technology, Tokyo, Japan. His current research interests are in the field of multidimensional signalprocessing which includes: graph signal processing, image and video processing with computer visiontechniques, distributed video coding, objective quality metric, and effective spatialfrequency transform design.Dr. Tanaka has been an Associate Editor of IEICE Trans. Fundamentals since 2013. Currently he is an electedmember of the APSIPA Image, Video and Multimedia Technical Committee. He was a recipient of the YasujiroNiwa Outstanding Paper Award in 2010, the TELECOM System Technology Award in 2011, and Ando IncentivePrize for the Study of Electronics in 2015. He also received APSIPA ASC 2014 Best Paper Award.Talk: Graph signal processing: Extracting information from signals on networksGraph signal processing is an emerging field of signal processing. It aims to extract useful information fromsignals on complex (and possibly largescale) networks. In graph signal processing, signals are treated as graphsignals; each element is placed onto a vertex of a graph. Signal processing tasks, e.g., compression, filtering,denoising, and inpainting, will be very efficient and intuitive when we consider graph spectral domainrepresentation of graph signals. There exists numerous applications in sensor network, social network, brainnetwork and image processing. First, fundamentals of graph signal processing are introduced in this talk, suchas graph Fourier transform, graph filtering, and downsampling. Then some recent works from my research groupin graph wavelet/filter bank design and denoising of graph signals are presented.
6. Professor Keiji Hirata (Future University Hakodate) Keiji Hirata received degree of Doctor of Engineering from University of Tokyo in1987. He joined NTT Basic Research Laboratories in 1987 (later changed to NTTCommunication Science Laboratories) and Future University Hakodate as professor in2011. His research interest includes music informatics (computational music theory),smart city (demandresponsive transportation), ICT support for depression, and videocommunication system. Talk: Introduction to computerized music theory
ORGANIZERS
The University of Information
Technology (UIT)
Japan Advanced Institute of Science
and Technology
TECHNICAL SPONSORS
In this talk, I would like to introduce you to an interdisciplinary research area of computer and music. At a firstglance, music may be considered subjective, ambiguous, and aesthetic. In reality, however, manymusicologists and musicians have been devoting much effort to developing a music theory for understandingand creating music in the systematic and analytic way. My colleagues and I have been formalizing andcomputerizing such a music theory. This talk will focus on some recent results of my work; in particular, thedata representation of musical structures such as a melody and a rhythm, the distance between melodiessuitable for computer calculation, and the algebraic operations for melodies.
7. Assoc. Prof. Jason J. Jung (ChungAng University) Dr. Jason J. Jung is an Associate Professor in ChungAng University, Korea, sinceSeptember 2014. Before joining CAU, he was an Assistant Professor in YeungnamUniversity, Korea since 2007. Also, He was a postdoctoral researcher in INRIARhoneAlpes, France in 2006, and a visiting scientist in Fraunhofer Institute (FIRST)in Berlin, Germany in 2004. He received the B.Eng. in Computer Science andMechanical Engineering from Inha University in 1999. He received M.S. and Ph.D.degrees in Computer and Information Engineering from Inha University in 2002 and2005, respectively. Dr. Jung serves as Editorial board member of many international
journals, e.g., Journal of Universal Computer Science, International Journal of Intelligent Information andDatabase Systems, International Journal of Social Network Mining and International Journal of Web Engineeringand Technology. He has edited 10 special issues in international journals, 2 conference proceedings. He is theauthor of about 100 international publications. His research topics are knowledge engineering on social networksby using many types of AI methodologies, e.g., data mining, machine learning, and logical reasoning. Recently,he have been working on intelligent schemes to understand various social dynamics in large scale social media(e.g., Twitter and Flickr). Talk: Social Data Analytics and Knowledge Management In this talk, we will survey the state of the art technologies on knowledge management systems (KMS) and theemerging social networking services (SNS). A lot of social activities on SNS are expected to stimulate the KMS(e.g., enriching the knowledge). Thereby, in this talk, we will discuss several issues on integratingthe meaningful features of SNS into KMS.
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