ODD v5.0: ODD v5.0 @ KDD 2018: Workshop on Outlier Detection De-constructed |
Website | http://www.andrew.cmu.edu/user/lakoglu/odd/index.html |
Submission link | https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=oddv50 |
Abstract registration deadline | May 8, 2018 |
Submission deadline | May 15, 2018 |
ODD v5.0 @ KDD 2018
Workshop on Outlier Detection De-constructed
will be held in conjunction with KDD 2018
August 20, 2018 in London, UK
http://www.andrew.cmu.edu/user/lakoglu/odd/index.html
ODD v5.0 is a full day workshop, organized in conjunction with ACM SIGKDD 2018.
We build on the successful series of past four ODD Workshops that have been organized at ACM KDD 2016, KDD 2015, KDD 2014, and KDD 2013.
The main goal of the ODD workshop is to bring together academics, industry and government researchers and practitioners to discuss and reflect on outlier mining challenges.
This year, our workshop is motivated by the need for new means to de-construct the black-box nature of outlier detection methods. Such new techniques are to offer solutions for flagged outliers to be interpreted, adopted, trusted, and safely used by decision makers in mission-critical applications. By de-construction we mean the process of tracing the contribution of each input to the output (for one or more given examples) and evaluate to which extent a particular input would move the output due to inherited variations.
The glossary definitions of the word deconstruct include “analyze (a text or a linguistic or conceptual system) by deconstruction, typically in order to expose its hidden internal assumptions and contradictions and subvert its apparent significance or unity” and “reduce (something) to its constituent parts in order to reinterpret it”. This is exactly what the ODD v5.0 workshop focuses on in the context of outlier mining, that is, identifying the constituent parts of a detection model to expose its hidden/underlying reasoning to flag an outlier.
ODD v5.0 (2018) aims to increase awareness of the community to the following topics on outlier mining:
How can we (verbally or visually) explain the reasoning behind the decisions of various outlier detection models?
What techniques can be used for identifying root causes and generating mechanisms of outliers for diagnosis and treatment?
What is the extent to which we can draw causal (i.e. beyond descriptive) explanations to the emergence of outliers?
How can we create an ensemble of outlier detectors that is interpretable?
How can we employ novel deep learning models for outlier detection?
How can we apply recurrent models to outlier detection in complex data such as graph or text data streams?
How can we design explanation techniques for complex detectors such as deep models as well as ensemble methods?
How can we leverage interactions with human experts to mine outliers?
How can we incorporate complex user feedback for outlier detection?
Submission Guidelines
We invite submission of unpublished original research papers that are not under review elsewhere. All papers will be peer reviewed. If accepted, at least one of the authors must attend the workshop to present their work. The submitted papers must be written in English and formatted according to the ACM Proceedings Template (Tighter Alternate style) available at:
https://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template-16dec2016
The maximum length of papers is 9 pages in this format. We also invite vision papers and descriptions of work-in-progress or case studies on benchmark data as short paper submissions of up to 4 pages.
The papers should be in PDF format and submitted via EasyChair submission site
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=oddv50
If you are considering submitting to the workshop and have questions regarding the workshop scope or need further information, please do not hesitate to contact the organizers at oddv5.0 (at) gmail.com.
Important Dates
Abstract registration: May 8, 2018, 23:59 PST
Submission deadline: May 15, 2018, 23:59 PST
Acceptance notification: June 8, 2018, 23:59 PST
Camera-ready deadline: June 22, 2018, 23:59 PST
Workshop day: Aug 20, 2018
List of Topics
Topics of interests for the proposed workshop include, but are not limited to:
- interleaved detection and description of outliers
- explanation models for given outliers
- quantitative input influence measures for outlier detection models
- pattern and local information based outlier description
- subspace outliers, feature selection, and space transformations
- ensemble methods for outlier detection
- deep neural network models for outlier detection
- explanation techniques for complex/black-box detectors
- identification of outlier rules
- descriptive local outlier ranking
- finding intensional knowledge
- contrast mining and causality analysis
- visualizations for outlier mining results
- visual analytics for interactive detection and evaluation of outliers
- human-in-the-loop modeling and learning
- comparative studies on outlier description
- decision rule set mining for outliers
Application areas of interest include, but are not limited to:
- fraud detection, and data logs
- fake news and misinformation
- healthcare analysis, and other sensor databases
- security and surveillance, and other streaming databases
- user behavior analysis, and other transactional data sources
- process logs, and other sequential or ordered data
- social networks, and other graph databases
We encourage submissions describing innovative work in related fields that address the issue of interpretability in outlier mining.
Publication
Accepted papers will be included in the KDD 2018 Digital Proceedings, and made available in the ACM Digital Library.
Venue
The conference will be held in in London, UK on August 20, 2018
Contact
All questions about submissions should be emailed to oddv5.0 (at) gmail.com
Organizers
Leman Akoglu (Carnegie Mellon University)
Evgeny Burnaev (Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology)
Charu Aggarwal (IBM Research)
Christos Faloutsos (Carnegie Mellon University)