INTERFACE 2008

RISK : Reality


May 21-24, 2008 in Durham, NC
Marriott Durham at the Civic Center

Sponsored by:
Interface Foundation of North America, Inc.
Hosted by:
National Institute of Statistical Sciences
Cooperating Organizations:
ASA, CSNA, ENAR, IASC
IMS, INFORMS, SIAM, WNAR

 

Schedule

       Complete Detailed Schedule of Technical Talks (PDF file)

Wednesday, May 21, 2008:
Board Dinner and Meeting—6:00 pm
Registration and Evening Mixer—8:00pm - 10pm

Thursday, May 22, 2008:
Registration—7:30 am - 5:30 pm
Keynote Addresss—8:30 am - 10:00 am
Technical Sessions10:30 am - 5:30 pm

THURSDAY, MAY 22  
Session 1 - Thursday, 10:30-12:15 Organizers
   Modeling of Extreme Events and Analysis of Risk Dipak Dey and David Rios-Insua
   Enhancing Knowledge and Assessing Risk through Analysis of Massive Data Karen Kafadar
   Streaming Data Analysis Edward Wegman
   
   Contributed Paper Session  
      Zhiliang Ma  
      Adam Cardinal-Stakenas  
      Joel Bernanke  

Session 2 - Thursday, 1:45-3:30 Organizers
   Probabalistic Models in Risk Assessment David Banks
   Air Pollution Risk Assessment: from Research to Regulation Amy Nail
   New Developments in Machine Learning and Statistical Modeling for Massive Data Helen Zhang
   
   Contributed Paper Session  
      Roy E. Welsch  
      Bonnie K. Ray  
      Leming Qu  

Session 3 - Thursday, 3:45-5:30 Organizers
   Multivariate Extremes Richard Smith
   Model-based Risk Assessment in Life Science Lutz Edler
   Recent Developments in Machine Learning and Classification -
   to appear in the Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics
David van Dyk
     


FRIDAY, MAY 23  
Session 4 - Friday, 8:30-10:15 Organizers
   Statistics and Modern Image Analysis, I Steve Marron
   SNP Analysis Methods and Software Stan Young
   Text Mining Edward Wegman and Yasmin Said
   
   Contributed Paper Session  
      Dusan Maletic  
      Amy Nail  
      Yongku Kim  
      Mariana Toma-Drane  

Session 5 - Friday, 10:30-12:15 Organizers
   Statistics and Modern Image Analysis, II Steve Marron
   Statistical and Computational Issues in Analyzing Sensor Networks Alan Gelfand
   Text Data Analysis Jeffrey Solka
   
   Contributed Paper Session  
      Zhenyu Liu  
      Ori Rosen
 
      Shih-Chuan Cheng  
      E. James Harner  

Session 6 - Friday, 1:45-3:30 Organizers
   Statistics and Evolutionary Biology, I Haipeng Shen
   Sensor Networks and Statistics - New Researchers Session George Michailidis
   Alcohol-related Public Health Risks Yasmin Said
   
   Contributed Papers Session  
      Vincent A. Cicirello  
      Eric Tassone  

Session 7 - Friday, 3:45-5:30 Organizers
   Statistics and Evolutionary Biology, II Haipeng Shen
   Assessing Health Risk from Complex Data David Dunson
   Integration of Disparate Types of Information Wendy Martinez
     


SATURDAY, MAY 24  
Session 8 & 9 - Saturday, 8:30-10:15 Organizers
   Spatial Risk Mapping: Prediction and Change Detection Michael Porter
   Text Mining Applications Edward Wegman and Yasmin Said
   
   Contributed Paper Session  
      Andrejus Parfionovas  
      Rebecca Nugent  
      Joran Elias  

Session 10 & 11 - Saturday, 10:30-12:15 Organizers
   Change Detection in Random Graphs David Marchette
   Risk of Reaching False Conclusions Stan Young
     

 

 

 

Invitation
Call for Papers
Symposium Theme

Program Committee
Local Arrangements

 

SECOND ANNOUNCEMENT (PDF file)

REGISTRATION FORM (PDF file)

 

Invitation

The Interface Foundation of North America cordially invites you to participate in the 40th Interface Symposium, the premier annual conference on the interface of computing science and statistics. The Foundation is a non-profit educational corporation founded in 1987 to sponsor the symposium and to publish the proceedings. IFNA also co-publishes the Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics. For further information about IFNA, visit our website at :

http://www.interfacesymposia.org

Call for Papers

The theme of Interface 2008 is RISK : Reality. Through the dual focus on the problems of information extraction, risk modeling, analysis and decision-making and on the computational technology and advances in tools to make characterization, quantization and evaluation of risk possible, this symposium will address issues central to understanding real risks and to conceptualizing potential risks and potential risks and risk management scenarios.

Contributed papers are specifically invited that pertain to any of the bulleted topics listed below.

Papers are also highly encouraged in the traditional focus areas of the Symposia including advances in data visualization, data mining, computational statistics, computational sciences, statistical computation, and statistical graphics; these advances need not have particular relevance to RISK.

Abstracts should be sent directly to: interface2008@niss.org

Deadlines for abstracts: 15 April

The submission must contain in a word document, text or latex file (NOT a pdf file):

Title
Speaker (clearly indicated) & speaker's affiliation
Co-authors (if any), each listed with affiliation

Abstract Text (300 word maximum)

Full papers received by 30 June 2008 will appear in the Proceeding of Interface 2008. (Length, format and other specifications will appear on the web and also in the Interface 2008 Program with Abstracts.)

Symposium Theme
RISK : Reality

Everywhere today RISK is assessed, projected, analyzed, managed. Decisions based on perceived RISK are made daily in every economic sector and, indeed each aspect of life. The pharmaceutical industry continually deals with risk of rare and unexpected side effects of marketed drugs. Homeowners and federal agencies like NOAA deal with the risk of Categories IV and V hurricanes. Security agencies deal with risk of terrorists crossing borders into the US. Federal agencies and companies risk unauthorized penetration of classified and/or proprietary databases. Nuclear power plants must manage risk of radiation escape; while other energy resource managers evaluate strategies to manage risk to the power grid.

Understanding RISK depends crucially on Information –
    First - Acquiring Information:
    • data acquisition
    • data bases
    • expert opinion

Second - Extracting Knowledge-
    Computational/statistical tools for:
    • massive data / data bases
    • high-dimensional data
    • streaming data
    • text

Third - Drawing Inference:
    • modeling complex systems
    • dynamic analytic processes
    • verification and validation of models and algorithms
    • decision theory

Managing RISK depends on understanding specific Contexts
    • extreme events
    • natural disasters
    • infrastructure (e.g., energy)
    • communications & internet
    • portfolios
    • adversaries & human threats


Program Committee

David Banks (Duke University)
Dipak Dey (University of Connecticutt)
David Dunson (NIEHS)
Lutz Edler (German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg)
Alan Gelfand (Duke University)
Karen Kafadar (CU Denver) David Marchette ()
Steve Marron (University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill)
Wendy Martinez (ONR)
George Michailidis (University of Michigan)
Amy Nail (North Carolina State University)
Michael Porter (North Carolina State University)
David Rios-Insua (Universidad Rey Juan Carlos)
Yasmin Said (George Mason University)
Michael G. Schimek (University of Graz)
Richard Smith (University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill)
Jeff Solka (George Mason University)
David van Dyk (University of California-Irvine)
Ed Wegman (George Mason University)
Stanley Young (NISS)
Helen Zhang (North Carolina State University)

 

Local Host

NISS (National Institute of Statistical Sciences)
Alan Karr, Director
Nell Sedransk, Associate Director
919.685.9300



Local Arrangements

Durham Marriott
201 Foster Street
Durham, North Carolina 27701
For Reservations:
800 - 909 - 8375 (Group Name is: NISS)
Closing Date: 21 April 2008

Rate is $109.00/night

Raleigh-Durham International Airport (RDU) serves the Triangle Area with domestic and international flights.
Ground service to Durham (16 miles) via taxi or direct shuttle service to Durham Marriott.

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