Dear all,

This is a reminder of the call for papers for the
following European Conference on Machine Learning
Workshop:

Machine Learning as Experimental Philosophy of Science 

Machine learning studies inductive strategies in 
algorithms. The philosophy of science investigates 
inductive strategies as they appear in scientific 
practice. Although the two disciplines have developed 
largely independently, they share many of the same 
issues. This is slowly coming to be recognized, as 
evidenced in the annual Uncertainty in AI and AI and 
Statistics conferences. This workshop will explore the 
extent to which the methods and resources of philosophy 
of science and machine learning can inform one another. 

In Computational Philosophy of Science (1988) Paul 
Thagard presented a challenge to the philosophical 
community: philosophical theories of scientific method, 
if they are worth their salt, should be implementable 
as computer programs. In this workshop we will address 
this challenge and also the inverse challenge to 
machine learning researchers: both machine learning 
algorithms and methods for evaluating machine learning 
algorithms should be implementations of sensible 
approaches to philosophy of science. Machine learning 
researchers have only recently discovered the relevance 
of statistics and philosophical views on the 
foundations of statistics to evaluating the performance 
of their systems; we hope this workshop will carry that 
discussion further. 

The workshop will therefore focus on such questions as: 




How machine learning experiments and results can inform 
our knowledge of scientific inductive discovery? 
What theoretical results in computational learning can 
be useful to understand scientific methods? 
How accounts of confirmation, explanation, discovery 
and theoretical unification developed in the philosophy 
of science area can be used to develop automatic 
learning systems? 
How induction is to be assessed: is empirical adequacy 
(predictive accuracy) enough both to account for 
scientific dynamics and to evaluate automated induction 
performance? 
Is there a substantial difference between scientific 
reasoning as conceived in the philosophy of science and 
in artificial intelligence? 
Is scientific method mechanisable? Are scientific 
practices algorithmic? 
Venue
This workshop is one of a number of workshops jointly 
sponsored by the 12th European Conference on Machine 
Learning (ECML'01) 5th European Conference on 
Principles and Practice of Knowledge Discovery in 
Databases (PKDD'01). Have a look at their workshop 
program. 
Invited Speakers
Professor Kevin Kelly (CMU, Philosophy), author of "The 
Logic of Reliable Inquiry (Oxford, 1996). His recent 
work concerns reliable belief revision, the solution of 
methodological regresses, and efficient convergence. 
Dr Peter Flach (Bristol, Computer Science), co-editor 
of Abduction and Induction: essays on their relation 
and integration (Kluwer, 2000) and co-organiser of 
workshops on Abductive and Inductive Reasoning in AI at 
ECAI'96, IJCAI'97 and ECAI'98. 
Publication
Accepted papers will be published in the first instance 
as workshop notes and on the web. Authors are invited 
to revise their articles in the light of the 
discussions at the workshop and submit them to a 
special issue we have arranged with the Journal for 
Experimental and Theoretical Artificial Intelligence. 
Important Dates
 
Papers due:  8 June 2001  
Notification:  25 June 2001  
Camera-ready due:  13 July 2001  
Workshop:  3 Sept 2001  

Submission Instructions
We prefer papers to be submitted electronically in a 
postscript email attachment to both organizers 
simultaneously (i.e., to [EMAIL PROTECTED] and 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]). Only if strictly necessary, 
submissions may be sent alternatively as an MS Word 
attachment. A last resort would be to mail or fax 
submissions to the address below. 
MLEPS Workshop
c/o Kevin B. Korb
School of Computer Science
Monash University
Clayton, VIC 3800
AUSTRALIA

Fax: +61 (03) 9905-5146 
Workshop Organisers
Kevin Korb (Monash University, Australia)
Hilan Bensusan (Bristol University, UK) 

Program Committee
Atocha Aliseda (Mexico) 
Hilan Bensusan (Bristol) 
Peter Flach (Bristol) 
Ronald Giere (Minn) 
Holger Hoos (UBC) 
Colin Howson (LSE) 
John Josephson (Ohio State) 
Kevin Kelly (CMU) 
Kevin Korb (Monash) 
Henry Kyburg (Rochester) 
David Pearce (DFKI) 
Peter Slezak (UNSW) 
Thomas Stuetzle (Darmstadt) 
Paul Thagard (Univ of Waterloo) 
Charles Twardy (Monash) 
Henry Tirri (Helsinki) 
Chris Wallace (Monash) 
Jon Williamson (KCL) 
Jan Zytkow (deceased; in memoriam) 


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