Title: Overview Advanced AI
 1Overview Advanced AI
History of AI thr. 1995 
 AI and the Web Traditional 
Clustering 
 Graph Mining Spatial and Spatio-Temporal Data 
Mining Reinforcement Learning and Learning to 
Lean Shape-based Image Retrieval
Hyla-Tree Frog 
 2General Thoughts and Teaching Philosophy I 
- Focus of the course is providing more indepth 
 knowledge in the areas mentioned on the previous
 slight and to learn how to read, summarize,
 present, and evaluate scientific papers.
- Interactive discussion of papers and research 
 topics
- No cheating! No cheating! No cheating! 
- Teaching Philosophy 
- You will have to face some criticism otherwise, 
 you will not learn anything. Learning without
 exposing yourself to errors is impossible!!
- If you do not know what you do wrong, it is hard 
 to improve!
- No matter if you like it are not, you will have 
 to talk a lot in this course.
- During the course you will make a lot of 
 informal, unstructured presentations.
You do Something
Learn
Feedback 
 3General Thoughts and Teaching Philosophy II 
- No projects and only 2 quizzes first week of 
 March and 3rd week of April.
- Learning by doing!! 
- I am aware that most of you are not too 
 experienced in these matters consequently, my
 expectations are initially quite low.
- Not reading papers that will be discussed on a 
 particular day is not acceptable!
- One objective if this course is to describe what 
 other do in your own words  consequently, no
 copying from any sources (web or class mates).
- If you face particular or unusual problems when 
 taking this course talk to me during my office
 hours or send me an e-mail.
- During the course you will also make 2 more 
 formal presentations.
4General Thoughts and Teaching Philosophy III 
- You will also get some exposure concerning 
 writing abstracts, summaries, introductions,
 white paper, and conclusions.
- Learning to write included to know what people 
 expect concerning what you write and how what you
 write will be judged.
- In this course, we will try it several teaching 
 strategies, some of which will be revised or even
 abandoned as the course progresses.
- Is a by product you will hopefully get a better 
 understanding on how to conduct a scientific
 project and on how to summarize and present its
 results.
- Occasionally, Dr. Eick will present 10-40 minute 
 lectures that provide background knowledge
 concerning the papers that will be discussed
 next.
5Topics Covered
- History of AI thr. 1995  the 1994 Turing Award 
 Lectures
- AI and the Web  how to assess the relevance of 
 webpages?
- Traditional Clustering 
- Shape-based Image Retrieval 
- Spatial and Spatio-Temporal Data Mining 
- Reinforcement Learning and Learning to Lean 
-  Graph Mining 
- Papers allocation to areas I 2 II 2-4 
 III3-4 IV1 V3-5 VI2-3 VII0-1.
6Paper Reading List COSC 7363
- AI through 1995 Edward Feigenbaums and Raj 
 Reddys 1994 Turing Award Lectures in CACM, May
 1996, pages 97-112. Likely, only Feigenbaums
 lecture How the What becomes the How will
 be discussed.
- Page  Brin (Google Publication), The PageRank 
 Citation Ranking Bringing Order to the Web,
 1998 walkthrough paper perhaps this is a better
 source of the work Page  Brin (Google
 Publication), The Anatomy of a Large-Scale
 Hypertextual Web Search Engine,1999.
- CV of Sergey Brin  potcast of 2005 Interview 
 with Sergey Brin (http//www.itconversations.com/s
 hows/detail795.html)
- Hanghang Tong, Christos Faloutsos, and Jia-Yu 
 Pan, Fast Random Walk with Restart and Its
 Applications, Proc. ICDM Conference, Hong Kong,
 China, Dec. 2006 best research paper award 2
 student- supervised walkthrough
- Langville  Meyer, Deeper Inside Page Rank, 
 Internet Mathematics, Vol. 1, No. 3, 335-380,
 2004 potential student presentation paper
- Original DBSCAN Paper 2-student-supervised 
 walkthough
- Rousseaux Original Silhouette Paper walkthrough 
 learn how to write an introduction and an
 abstract
- Likely, Original EM Paper McLachlan, G. and 
 Peel, D. (2000). Finite Mixture Models. J. Wiley,
 New York. teams of 2 read the paper, learn how to
 write a conclusion
- Clustering with Bregman Divergences by A. 
 Banerjee, S. Merugu, I. S. Dhillon, and J. Ghosh,
 in Journal of Machine Learning Research, vol. 6,
 pages 1705-1749, October 2005
7Paper Reading List COSC 7363
- Cyrus Shahabi, Maytham Safar, An experimental 
 study of alternative shape-based image retrieval
 techniques, Multimedia Tools and Applications,
 Springer Netherlands, November 2006.
- S. Shekhar, P. Zhang, Y. Huang, R. Vatsavai, 
 Trends in Spatial Data Mining, book chapter in
 Data Mining Next Generation Challenges and
 Future Directions, H. Kargupta, A. Joshi, K.
 Sivakumar, and Y. Yesha(eds.), AAAI/MIT Press,
 2003.
-  Some Spatial Statistics Paper 
- Co-location Mining with Rare Spatial Features by 
 Yan Huang, Jian Pei, and Hui Xiong published in
 Journal of GeoInformatica, vol. 10, issue 3,
 2006.
- Mirco Nanni, Dino Pedreschi. Time-focused 
 density-based clustering of trajectories of
 moving objects. in Journal of Intelligent
 Information Systems (JIIS), 27(3)267-289,
 Special Issue on "Mining Spatio-Temporal Data",
 2006.
- H. Cao, N. Mamoulis, and D. W. Cheung,  
 "Discovery of Periodic Patterns in Spatiotemporal
 Sequences," IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and
 Data Engineering (TKDE), to appear.
- Reinforcement Learning A Survey by Kaelbling, L. 
 P. and Littman, M. L. in JAIR, 1996
 (http//www.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs/project/jair/pub/vol
 ume4/kaelbling96a-html/rl-survey.html )
-  Very Likely Something from the Thrun book 
 Learning to Learn, 1998.
- If enough time left Yan, X. and Han, J. 2002. 
 gSpan Graph-Based Substructure Pattern Mining,
 in Proceedings of the 2002 IEEE International
 Conference on Data Mining (ICDM '02) Washington,
 DC.
8 Teaching Plan Next 5 Weeks
- Janurary 16 Course Overview (see also 
 http//www2.cs.uh.edu/ceick/7363/7363.html)
- January 18 (Read) Feigenbaum Paper ? How to read 
 a paper
- January 23 Prepare Slow PaperWalkThrough 
 Page/Brin Paper
- January 25 Mostly Lecture 
- January 30 Prepare Slow PaperWalk Through ICDM06 
 Best Research Paper Award
- Feb. 1 TBDL --- Brin/Page Background?!? 
- Feb. 6 Likely Reddy Turing Award Paper 
- Feb. 8 Student Guided Discussion DBSCAN paper 
- Feb. 13 Student Guided Discussion Silhouette 
 Paper
- Feb. 15 Student Presentation Langville/Mayer 
 Paper (optional)
- Feb. 20 On Writing Abstracts, Introductions, 
 Conclusions
- Feb. 22 Bregman Divergences Paper
9Course Activities
- A lot of informal presentations and discussions 
- 1 formal presentation about a paper covered in 
 the course
- Writing abstracts, introductions, conclusions and 
 paper reviews --- learning by doing
- 2 Quizes that ask questions about papers we have 
 read
- Discussions 
- Learning how to read, summarize, present, and 
 review papers.
- Background knowledge on how to perform a 
 research project and on how to be successful in
 your research / career.
- Discussing many other, entertaining things---such 
 as the Giant Squid, life of Sergey Brin--- most
 of which are still related to one of the above
 activities.
10Forms of Covering Papers in the Course 
- Papers will be discussed, presented in many 
 different forms in this course
- Slow Walk Through (I only plan to have 3 of 
 those!!)
- Guided Walk Through 
- Other Walk Throughs (I did not consider yet!) 
- By answering a given set of quesitons. 
- Just Discussion 
- 1-Page (5-page) Summary of a Paper 
- Professional Powerpoint Presentation 
- Profession Paper Review (? April 2007) 
11Slow Walk Throughs
- Used for the first two AI and the web papers 
- Paper will be discussed paragraph by paragraph 
- Very slow!! Therefore, there will be only 2-4 of 
 those
- Course participants are responsible for sections 
 of the paper. Responsibilities include
- Lead discussion 
- Present short summaries for boring sections to 
 speed up things
- Ask questions about things they do not understand 
- Prepare review questions for the other students 
 that will be discussed either immediately or
 after a delay.
- Everybody should read the paper carefully 
 including the sections you are not responsible
 for. It might be a good idea to create brief
 summaries for the read sections and to capture,
 what you do not understand, in form of questions.
 
- If you finished reading the paper try to come up 
 with your own evaluation of the paper
- We will not only discuss the contents of the 
 paper, but also address the question why an
 author writes a paper in a particular way and
 how the presentation of the discussed paper
 could be improved / made more convincing.
- Additionally, issues on how to write a paper will 
 be discussed during slow walk throughs --- these
 matters are Dr. Eicks responsibility..
12Sergey Brin CV (?????? ?????????? ????) (see 
also http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sergey_Brin ) 
- Sergey Brin is co-founder and President, 
 Technology at Google. Originally a native of
 Moscow, he received a bachelor of science degree
 with honors in mathematics and computer science
 from the University of Maryland at College Park.
 He is currently on leave from the Ph.D. program
 in computer science at Stanford University, where
 he received his master's degree. Sergey is a
 recipient of a National Science Foundation
 Graduate Fellowship as well as an honorary MBA
 from Instituto de Empresa. It was at Stanford
 that he met Larry Page and worked on the project
 that became Google. Together they founded Google
 Inc. in 1998, and Sergey continues to share
 responsibility for day-to-day operations with
 Larry Page and Eric Schmidt.
- Sergey's research interests include search 
 engines, information extraction from unstructured
 sources, and data mining of large text
 collections and scientific data. He has published
 more than a dozen academic papers and has been a
 featured speaker at several international
 academic, business and technology forums,
 including the World Economic Forum and the
 Technology, Entertainment and Design Conference.
 He has shared his views on the technology
 industry and the future of search on the Charlie
 Rose Show, CNBC, and CNNfn. In 2004, he and Larry
 Page were named "Persons of the Week" by ABC
 World News Tonight.
- See also http//money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fo
 rtune_archive/2006/10/02/8387489/index.htm?postver
 sion2006100210 for more about Googles work
 philosophy.
Sergey 
 13Assignments Tong Slow Walk Through
- .Remark scheduled for Tu., January 30, 2007 
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14On Exploring Boundaries
- There is always a limit on what you can still do 
 / cannot do.
- However, these boundaries are dynamic and can be 
 changed through training
- Analogy Training for an Olympic Marathon 
- Several of the papers we will read will be not 
 easy to understand
- If you read the papers we discuss in the course 
 now you will understand 25 of the contents
 hopefully, on May 1, 2007 you will understand 70
 of the papers discussed
- You should believe into yourself that you can 
 extend and challenge these boundaries. A
 statement like I will never understand this
 paper is not practical is not productive
- Being not afraid of boundaries is particularly 
 important for personal growth and research.
15Analogy Training to win a Medal at an Olympic 
Marathon
- You need to have some basic talent to have a 
 chance --- but a lot of people have talent
- You have to be committed and have to believe that 
 you have a chance
- You have to have some luck 
- At least 50 depends on the training you do. 
 Dilemma
- If you train too hard you get injured 
- If you train a little you have no chance 
- Marathon training is about extending your 
 boundaries without getting hurt...
- To be successful you need a coach (or even a team 
 of coaches)
What you can do in a year
What you can do today 
 16Some Ingredients for Success
Time, Money, Food, Friends, Place to live, 
 Talent
Training
Self Confidence and Commitment
Persistance
Luck 
 17Another Example Finding the Giant Squid
10 meters
18 meters
Kubodera said catching the squid on film was the 
result of 10 years of sleuthing. 
We knew that sperm whales fed on the squid, and 
 we knew when and how deep they dived, Kubodera 
said. So we used them to lead us to the squid. 
Giant Squid Sperm Whale
Story http//www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9503272/ On 
sperm whales http//www.oceanicresearch.org/sperm
whales.htm Another Sperm Whale Photo 
http//nmml.afsc.noaa.gov/gallery/cetaceans/pm-13_
sperm.htm