Page 13 of 25121 to 130 of 248 Past Events
2015
April
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Computing Science Mini-workshop "Student and Faculty Research on Law and Computing Science"
-In this mini-workshop, students and faculty at the University of Aberdeen and University of Edinburgh will present their research projects on topics in law and computing. Initial list of presenters and topics. Ruta Liepina. Arguing about evidence in law. Law School, University of Aberdeen. Jesus Niebla. Copyright enforcement and AI: an automated approach....
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Computing Science Seminar. Booth on "Trust-sensitive belief revision"
-Abstract: Belief revision is concerned with incorporating new information into a pre-existing set of beliefs. When the new information comes from another agent, we must first determine if that agent should be trusted. In this talk, we define trust as a pre-processing step before revision. We emphasise that trust in an...
February
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Computing Science Seminar. Wyner leading discussion on "The Computing Science Seminar"
-At this meeting, we will discuss the Computing Science Seminar. Topics: What role could it/should it play in the life of the department? Suggestions for improvement, change, development? How can Lecturers, ..., Professors contribute? How can Post-docs and Post-grads contribute? How can Undergrads contribute? Invitations for seminars? Ideas for 'mini-workshops'? What is the state of the budget? Time/place? Receptions? Other? Everyone...
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Computing Science Seminar. Thomas on "Users versus models: What observation tells us about effectiveness metrics"
-Abstract: Retrieval system effectiveness can be measured in two quite different ways: by monitoring the behaviour of users and gathering data about the ease and accuracy with which they accomplish certain specified information-seeking tasks; or by using numeric effectiveness metrics to score system runs in reference to a set of relevance...
2014
December
November
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Computing Science Seminar. Caminada on "A Discussion Game for Grounded Semantics"
-Abstract: We present a discussion game, based on the concept of strong admissibility, where the ability to win the game for a particular argument coincides with the argument being in the grounded extension. Our game is an improvement to the previously stated Standard Grounded Game (SGG) and Grounded Persuasion Game...
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Remembrance Sunday Service
-The University Chapel leading an Act of Remembrance
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Computing Science Seminar. du Boulay on "Motivation in Learning"
-Abstract: Intelligent Tutoring Systems and Intelligent Learning Environments have traditionally focused on adapting the content of the material that their students undertake according to the individual needs of each student. For the most part this has meant adapting to the intellectual progress that the students are making through whatever domain...
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Computing Science Seminar. Baader on "Ontology-based Monitoring of Dynamic Systems"
-Abstract: Our understanding of the notion “dynamic system” is a rather broad one: such a system has states, which can change over time. Ontologies are used to describe the states of the system, possibly in an incomplete way. Monitoring is then concerned with deciding whether some run of the system or all of its...