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Published byMorgan Gaines Modified over 9 years ago
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A preliminary analysis of AAAI-99 submissions Devika Subramanian Rice University
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Distribution of 400 submitted papers by area
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Trends in submissions n Multi-agent/agents, KR, reasoning/UAI, planning, learning are the largest constituencies. n Robotics papers are coming into AAAI; however these are mobile robot papers. n Neural computation papers are not a large part of the submissions.
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Overall acceptance statistics n Before SPC meeting: –Accepts (105) –Undecided (50) –Rejects (255) n After SPC meeting –Accepts (104) –Conditional accepts (5) –Rejects (290) n 15 papers accepted with 1 A/2M or R. n 3 papers rejected with 2 A/1 strong R. n Every other accepted paper had two As. n 32 accepted papers had 3 As! (just under 30%)
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Distribution of 109 accepted papers by area
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Trends in accepted papers n Search, planning, neural computation, and information extraction/information retrieval have higher than average acceptance rates. n Data on information extraction/information retrieval and neural computation unreliable because of small sample size.
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Other trends in papers n AAAI still attracts the best work in planning, constraint satisfaction, search, multi-agent systems and KR.
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Other trends in papers n The best work in machine learning, uncertainty, KDD, neural computation, natural language and Web agents (not including multi-agent systems) is not being submitted to the conference. n The work in mobile robotics submitted to the conference is not competitive with the work represented at the top vision/robotics conferences..
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Any new ideas in the papers? n Proverb: a system that solves NY Times crosswords. A tour-de- force integration of ideas in AI. n Hybrid approaches to collaborative filtering. n New extensions to Graphplan and Satplan. n Active learning: analysis and implementation. n Integrating the fields of constraint satisfaction and classical planning.
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Remarks gathered from SPC n Number of NLP papers submitted to AAAI is increasing; they are of much better quality than in years past. Still not the very best papers (which tend to go to ACL), but solid work at the intersection of statistics/machine learning and NLP. n Neural computation papers should be reviewed on a special track as they were this year (with two special SPC members Giles and Sun) even though the actual number of submissions from that community was small this year.
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More remarks from the SPC n Need to develop mechanisms to get the best work in machine learning, UAI, agents, KDD, robotics and neural computation to be submitted to conference. n Many were concerned about the fact that most accepted papers were incremental advances. –signs of a maturing field? Or self-selection among submissions because of reputation as archival conference? n Mechanisms to detect and encourage revolutionary work among the submissions not working well. –reflects fundamental split in community on what a significant result is, and about the extent of evaluation needed to “prove” that an idea works.
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Some SPC statistics Acceptance rates vary widely among SPC. Partially explains variation in acceptance rates across sub-areas. Mean=26.37 stdev=10.22
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110 PC members
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SPC statistics for AAAI-98 Acceptance rates vary widely. Mean=30.95 stdev=12.33
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204 PC members
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Issues to consider for AAAI-2000 and beyond n Size of SPC and PC to get consistent reviewing standards. n Ways of attracting “work-in-progress” to AAAI and to set good evaluation guidelines for them. n Reconsider need for an SPC meeting. n Paper assignment to reviewers benefits from a manual component. Consider providing electronic access to paper abstracts and to assignment software so chairs can teleconference and do reviewer assignment. n Consider accepting few papers for plenary presentation (say 20) and have all papers presented at poster sessions. n How to exist and cooperate/compete with speciality conferences.
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