Sunday, September 20, 2015

ECML-PKDD 2015 Review

ECML-PKDD was a delight this year. Porto is definitely on the short list of the best European cities in which to have a conference. The organizers did a wonderful job injecting local charm into the schedule, e.g., the banquet at Taylor's was a delight. It's a wine city, and fittingly wine was served throughout the conference. During the day I stuck to coffee: jet lag, soft lights, and whispered mathematics are sedating enough without substituting coffee for alcohol. There is no question, however, that poster sessions are far better with a bit of social lubrication.

The keynotes were consistently excellent. Some standouts for me were:
  • Pedros Domingos presented his latest take on sum-product networks as a class of nonconvex functions for which finding a global maximum is tractable. Machine learning was (is?) obsessed with convex functions because it is a large class for which finding the global maximum is tractable. Lately the deep learning community has convincingly argued that convexity is too limiting, and as a result we are all getting more comfortable with more ``finicky'' optimization procedures. Perhaps what we need is a different function class?
  • Hendrik Blockeel talked about declarative machine learning. I work in a combination systems-ML group and I can tell you systems people love this idea. All of them learned about how relational algebra ushered in a declarative revolution in databases via SQL, and see the current state of affairs in machine learning as a pre-SQL mess.
  • Jure Leskovec did an unannounced change of topic, and delivered a fabulous keynote which can paraphrased as: ``hey you machine learning people could have a lot of impact on public policy, but first you need to understand the principles and pitfalls of counterfactual estimation.'' I couldn't agree more, c.f., Gelman. (Jure also gave the test-of-time paper talk about Kronecker graphs.)
  • Natasa Milic-Frayling detailed (with some disdain) the miriad of techniques that digital web and mobile advertising firms use to track and profile users. It was all very familiar because I worked in computational advertising for years, but the juxtaposition of the gung-ho attitude of ad networks with the European elevated respect for privacy was intriguing from a sociological perspective.
There were also some papers with which I'm going to spend quality time.

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