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MPhil-PhD transfer seminar – Charitos Charitou

News, Seminar.

MPhil-PhD transfer presentation

When: Fri, 1st Mar 2019, 2.00pm
Where: C323 (3rd Floor, Tait Building)

Who: Charitos Charitou; City, University of London

Title: Deep Learning for Compliance: “Application of machine learning to online gambling data to identify money laundering”

Abstract:  Most of the current online gambling operators are using handcrafted basic rules for their anti money laundering (AML) strategy. These methods are not enough anymore for identifying complex fraudulent activities. Kindred group entered into research collaboration with City University and the main goal is to effectively use machine learning to detect money laundering. Understanding the needs of the industry and what the industry stakeholders believe was a priority. A series of interviews with various stakeholders of the gambling industry took place and the findings were published earlier this year in the form of a white paper.
The second part  of the research involved the analysis and evaluation of the gambling data that were provided by Kindred. We present how the imbalanced dataset problem was tackled, and the new experimental dataset that was created for supervised learning. The performance of  Logistic Regression (LR), Random Forest (RF) and Multilayer perceptron (MLP) was examined and compared. Our results, showed that Random Forest was the best model for predicting the normal players, while the MLP managed to detect suspicious players with the higher accuracy. Finally, the sequential relationship of the data was investigated using discrete and continuous Hidden Markov Models (HMM).

All welcome!

ML seminar, Wed 20 Feb, 2pm

News, Seminar.

Machine Learning seminar

When: Wed, 20 Feb 2019, 2pm
Where: AG21, College Building

Who: Dr. Alberto Ferreira De Souza, Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo (UFES), Brazil.

Title: Building IARA – The Intelligent Autonomous Robotic Automobile

Abstract: 

The Intelligent Autonomous Robotic Automobile  (IARA) is one of the most advanced self-driving cars in world, figuring in eighth place according to the metric of number of interventions per 1000 miles in 2017. We start building IARA in 2009 and, since then, more than 30 students, including Ph.D., M.Sc., and undergraduates, have completed their courses working on the project. IARA is based on the precise localization paradigm where the self-driving car must have a detailed map of the environment to operate autonomously. In this talk, we will present some of the history behind the 10 years of research that led to the current status of development of IARA and will describe how some of its main software modules work, including the modules responsible for mapping, localization and autonomous navigation.
A demonstration video can be found here.

Bio: 

Dr. Alberto Ferreira De Souza is a Professor of Computer Science and Coordinator of the Laboratório de Computação de Alto Desempenho (LCAD – High Performance Computing Laboratory) at the Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo (UFES), Brazil. He received B. Eng. (Cum Laude) in electronics engineering and M. Sc. in systems engineering and computer science from Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (COPPE/UFRJ), Brazil, in 1988 and 1993, respectively; and Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in computer science from the University College London, United Kingdom in 1999. He has authored/co-authored one USA patent and over 130 publications. He has edited proceedings of four conferences (two IEEE sponsored conferences), and is a Standing Member of the Steering Committee of the International Conference in Computer Architecture and High Performance Computing (SBAC-PAD).

All welcome!

MPhil-PhD transfer seminar – Fatemeh Najibi

News, Seminar.

MPhil-PhD transfer presentation

When: Fri, 1st Feb 2019, 1.30pm
Where: C103 (1st  Floor, Tait Building)

Who: Fatemeh Najibi, City, University of London

Title: Deterministic Microgrid Optimal Operation

Abstract: With the inclusion of renewable energy into power systems, traditional power system face new challenges. Due to their inherent fluctuations and variability,  the introduction of renewable energies in power systems poses new challenges in modeling uncertainty. Controlling and optimizing the operation cost by adjusting the output generation of renewable energy resources make power systems operation more reliable and secure. In this work, we aim to solve one optimal microgrid management problem in deterministic and probabilistic framework. This microgrid is connected to the utility and comprises of different renewable energy generators such as photovoltaic (PV), wind generators, batteries, hydroelectric plants, and microturbine.
The objective is to minimize the cost of generation and the voltage deviation from the reference.
The optimization problem is nonlinear since the AC load flow which is a constraint in the optimization problem is nonlinear. we linearize AC load flow in the first step. Secondly, we model the problem in a deterministic framework without considering the impact of uncertainties on power system. The other physical constraints which are taken into account in this work are the equality constraint of load generation balance, output power limitation and voltage limitation. Finally, we will model the nonlinear problem in probabilistic framework to see how uncertainties can affect the system. The first two steps have been done before transferring to PhD and the final step will be done in the next following two years.

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NeurIPS 2018 and End-of-Year ML party

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Tillman Weyde, Rahda Kopparti, Dan Philps and Artur Garcez attended and presented papers at NeurIPS 2018 in Montreal, Canada, during the week of 3 Dec 2018. Dan and Artur provided an informal overview of their impressions of NeurIPS to the ML group’s End-of-Year meeting on 14 Dec 2018. Thanks to Benedikt Wagner for organising the meeting.

 

Research Visit

News, Seminar.

Luciano Serafini (FBK, Trento, Italy) and Michael Spranger (Sony CSL, Tokyo, Japan) visited City’s Research Centre for Machine Learning during the week of 10 Dec 2018. The main focus of the visit was to continue research collaborations on Logic Tensor Networks. LTNs are a deep learning system implemented in Tensorflow, capable of reasoning with first-order many-valued logic. For more information, please check the webpage of the IJCAI’2018 tutorial on LTNs: https://sites.google.com/fbk.eu/ltn/tutorial-ijcai-2018.

 

EurAI Advanced Course on AI, 27-31 Aug 2018

News, Seminar.

Artur Garcez gave a lecture on Relational Neuro-Symbolic AI at the EurAI Advanced Course on AI, 2018, which took place in beautiful Ferrara, Italy.

All the lectures, with overarching theme Statistical Relational AI, are available from the University of Ferrara’s YouTube channel: https://youtu.be/KeFhKi-tOTs?list=PLJPXEH0boeNDWTNwWTWnVffXi5XwAj1mb

Artur Garcez gave two talks: Part 1 gives an overview of two decades of research on neuro-symbolic AI. Part 2 describes in some detail two neuro-symbolic systems for relational learning: Connectionist ILP and the Logic Tensor Networks framework.

NeSy18, 23-24 Aug 2018

News, Seminar.

The 13th International Workshop on Neural-Symbolic Learning and Reasoning took place in Prague during HLAI 2018 with a record number of participants. We thank all those who attended and, in particular, the speakers who contributed papers and our distinguished invited speakers: Hava Siegelmann, DARPA & University of Massachusetts Amherst, Luciano Serafini, Fondazione Bruno Kessler, Simo Dragicevic, CEO, BetBuddy Ltd, Thomas Lukasiewicz, University of Oxford, and Paul Smolensky, Johns Hopkins University & Microsoft Research. Contributions to the workshop will be published (revised and extended) in the Journal of Applied Logics, College Publications.

A meeting with Paul Smolensky

News, Seminar.

21 Aug 2018, 12noon to 3pm, AG05

Prof Paul Smolensky, Johns Hopkins University and Microsoft Research, will be visiting the Research Centre for Machine Learning for a conversation on neuro-symbolic computing, his book (with Legendre), The Harmonic Mind, MIT Press, and recent papers and results using Tensor Product Representations (TPR) and learning such as A neural-symbolic approach to design of captcha, https://arxiv.org/abs/1710.11475, as well as applications of TPRs to natural language tasks and data sets such as the Stanford question answering dataset SQuAD.

 

ML seminar, Wed 11 Apr, 2pm

News, Seminar.

Machine Learning seminar

When: Wed, 11 Apr 2018, 2pm
Where: AG24a, College Building

Who: Sebastian Riedel, University College London

Title: Reading and Reasoning with Neural Program Interpreters 

Abstract: We are getting better at teaching end-to-end neural models how to answer questions about content in natural language text. However, progress has been mostly restricted to extracting answers that are directly stated in the text. In this talk, I will present our work towards teaching machines not only to read but also to reason with what was read and to do this in an interpretable and controlled fashion. Our main hypothesis is that this can be achieved by the development of neural abstract machines that follow the blueprint of program interpreters for real-world programming languages. We test this idea using two languages: an imperative (Forth) and a declarative (Prolog/Datalog) one. In both cases, we implement differentiable interpreters that can be used for learning reasoning patterns. Crucially, because they are based on interpretable host languages, the interpreters also allow users to easily inject prior knowledge and inspect the learnt patterns. Moreover, on tasks such as math word problems and relational reasoning, our approach compares favourably to state-of-the-art methods.

Bio: 

Sebastian Riedel is a reader in Natural Language Processing and Machine Learning at the University College London (UCL), where he is leading the Machine Reading lab. He is also the head of research at Bloomsbury AI and an Allen Distinguished Investigator. He works in the intersection of Natural Language Processing and Machine Learning, and focuses on teaching machines how to read and reason. He was educated in Hamburg-Harburg (Dipl. Ing) and Edinburgh (MSc., PhD), and worked at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and Tokyo University before joining UCL.

All welcome!

Cognitive Computation Symposium: Thinking Beyond Deep Learning, 27 Feb 2018

News, Seminar.
We were proud to host a Symposium on Cognitive Computation at City, University of London.
The event sold-out and counted with the following speakers, whom we thank for their contribution:

Eduardo Alonso, City, University of London.
Antoine Bordes, Facebook AI Research.
Artur d'Avila Garcez, City, University of London.
Edward Grefenstette, DeepMind.
Barbara Hammer, Bielefeld University.
Kristian Kersting, TU Darmstadt.
Alessio Lomuscio, Imperial College London.
Stephen Muggleton, Imperial College London.
Alessandra Russo, Imperial College London.
Luciano Serafini, Fondazione Bruno Kessler.
Michael Spranger, Sony.
Francesca Toni, Imperial College London.
Volker Tresp, LMU Munich & Siemens.
Frank van Harmelen, VU Amsterdam.
Geraint Wiggins, VU Brussel & Queen Mary, University of London.
Michael Witbrock, IBM research
Willem Zuidema, University of Amsterdam.

For more information, please visit: http://www.neural-symbolic.org/CoCoSym2018

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City, University of London is an independent member institution of the University of London. Established by Royal Charter in 1836, the University of London consists of 18 independent member institutions with outstanding global reputations and several prestigious central academic bodies and activities.