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November 23rd, 2022
Daniela Lopez de Luise
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November 22nd, 2022
Daniela Lopez de Luise Bridge Session on AI and Robotics
https://www.istc.cnr.it/en/content/aaai-23-bridge-session-artificial-intelligence-and-robotics
Part of the
Thirty-Seventh AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence
February 7 – 14 2023 Washington, DC, USA.
CONTEXT
Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Robotics are strongly connected areas since the early days of AI. On the one hand, AI principles and methods play a crucial role in several areas of Robotics research and are pervasively exploited at various levels of robot architectures. On the other hand, Robotics provides several relevant challenges for the AI community where different AI methods and tools requires to be deeply integrated to obtain an embodied agent capable of an autonomous, adaptive and interactive behavior. In this direction, the scientific relevance of this proposal is related to how diverse areas of AI and Robotics research can be integrated to enable robots to face complex challenges in real-world tasks.
Notwithstanding the shared challenges and the widespread of learning and statistical methods in robotics, the AI and Robotics communities still need to further interact to integrate methods that are still not fully exploited. In particular, the integration of symbolic and sub-symbolic models and methods with different levels of abstraction are needed to face many relevant issues (e.g., combined task and motion planning, neuro-symbolic learning, task teaching, collaborative task execution, etc.) that require a strict collaboration between the two communities.
Some initiatives have already been started to create a stable, long-term forum where researchers from both AI and Robotics communities can openly discuss relevant issues such as research and development progress, future directions and open challenges related to AI methods in Robotics. A notable venue is the International Conference on Automated Planning and Scheduling (ICAPS) workshop series on Planning and Robotics (PlanRob [1]). Started during ICAPS 2013, in Rome (Italy), and followed by editions at every ICAPS from 2014 to 2021, the PlanRob Workshop series has gathered excellent feedback from the P&S community, as also confirmed by the organisation of a Special Track on Robotics starting with ICAPS 2014. On the Robotics side, a version of the PlanRob series was held at ICRA 2017 in Singapore (top conference for the IEEE Robotics and Automation Society). Some related events were also organized at the European Robotic Forum [2] (promoted by the European Commission) to present results and challenges in EU-funded projects.
After such time, technological developments allow embedded devices to run complex algorithms and be more effective, a wide diffusion of data is enabling opportunities for ground-breaking impact from learning techniques when applied to robots and an increasing number of AI & Robotics results are being collected facilitating the deployment of intelligent robots in many applicative fields.
AIM OF THE BRIDGE SESSION
The goal of this Bridge Session is to keep fostering the interactions already ongoing within PlanRob and further stabilize such common ground where researchers can confront and broaden research frontiers, identify most crucial challenges and pave the way towards a shared research agenda. Gathering notable representatives from both communities in a unique venue contributes in achieving such objective and allow them to share their knowledge and expertise as well as take advantage of different perspectives.
EXPECTED CONTRIBUTIONS AND SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS
We look for position papers to discuss ideas and concepts, e.g., via critiques or new perspectives in AI and Robotics, historical perspectives and analysis. Some relevant areas are, e.g., long-term autonomy and robot learning, neural symbolic approach, task teaching, cognitive robotics, human-robot interaction, open world planning and acting, explainable AI in robotics, reliable and safe AI methods for robotics, technological and integration challenges. The list is no limited to the above areas and additional topics may be proposed by contributors.
We are also looking for tutorial, a survey presentation or an integrated application showcase proposals on (new) cross-disciplinary AI & Robotics topics, with a shared focus, and to engage and educate new researchers, as well as established researchers. The goal is also to set common grand challenges while discussing fundamental problems and educating each other about respective tools.
Both position papers and proposals for tutorial, survey presentation or application showcase can be (max) 4 pages in AAAI style (plus up to one page of references).
ENVISAGED STRUCTURE
This session will be a one-day long event and it will be structured as a sequence discussion sessions, tutorials and interactive discussions to confront ideas and synthesize common views. A poster session will be organized to allow the presentation of open contributions and further stimulate the general discussion. A final panel session will aim to select the most crucial elements and identify a possible common research agenda for future steps.
Link to submission: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=aaaiairob23
Link to style files: https://www.aaai.org/Publications/Templates/AnonymousSubmission23.zip
IMPORTANT DATES
Contribution submission due: November 25, 2022
AAAI early registration deadline: December 12, 2022
Bridge Sessions at AAAI-23: 7 February, 2023
Organizers
Arthur Bit-Monnot, LAAS-CNRS, France
Alberto Finzi, University of Naples Federico II, Italy
AndreA Orlandini, National Research Council of Italy
November 22nd, 2022
Daniela Lopez de Luise Title: Face Presentation Attack Detection
Speaker: Prof. Sébastien Marcel, University de Lausanne/IDIAP, Switzerland
When: 7 December 2022, at 10am CET (5 pm CST, 4am ET)
Where: Online (Zoom)
Registration: (free, but required):
https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_qEuvpABRQt-f15358CeMuA
*** Talk Summary ***
In biometrics, Presentation Attacks (PA also referred to as spoofing)
are performed by falsifying the biometric trait and then presenting this
falsified information to the biometric system, one such example is to
fool a fingerprint system by copying the fingerprint of another person
and creating an artificial or gummy finger which can then be presented
to the biometric system to falsely gain access. This is an issue that
needs to be addressed because it has recently been shown that
conventional biometric techniques are vulnerable to presentation
attacks. One of the main challenges in Presentation Attack Detection
(PAD also referred to as anti-spoofing) is to find a set of features and
models (mostly classifiers) that allows systems to effectively
distinguish signals that were directly emitted by a human from those
reproduced by an attacker. This talk will present an overview of typical
face PAs and PAD techniques.
*** About the Speaker ***
Sébastien Marcel (IEEE Senior member – H-index 63) is Professor at the
University de Lausanne (UNIL) at the School of Criminal Justice and
lecturer at the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) where he
is teaching on “Biometrics” and “Fundamentals in Statistical Pattern
Recognition” respectively. He serves on the Program Committee of several
scientific journals and international conferences in pattern recognition
and computer vision. He is a senior researcher at the Idiap Research
Institute (Switzerland), he heads the Biometrics Security and Privacy
group and conducts research on face recognition, speaker recognition,
vein recognition, attack detection (presentation attacks, morphing
attacks, deepfakes) and template protection. He received his Ph.D.
degree in signal processing from Université de Rennes I in France (2000)
at CNET, the research center of France Telecom (now Orange Labs). He is
also the Director of the Swiss Center for Biometrics Research and
Testing, which conducts certifications of biometric products. He is
Associate Editor of IEEE Transactions on Biometrics and Identity
Science. He was Associate Editor of IEEE Signal Processing Letters,
Associate Editor of IEEE Transactions on Information Forensics and
Security, a Co-editor of the “Handbook of Biometric Anti-Spoofing”, a
Guest Editor of the IEEE Transactions on Information Forensics and
Security Special Issue on “Biometric Spoofing and Countermeasures”, and
Co-editor of the IEEE Signal Processing Magazine Special Issue on
“Biometric Security and Privacy”. He is also the lead Editor of the
Springer Handbook of Biometrics Anti-Spoofing (Editions 1, 2 and 3).
For more information, visit:
https://ieee-biometrics.org/index.php/activities/webinars
November 22nd, 2022
Daniela Lopez de Luise *** About ***
The 2023 IEEE International Workshop on Biometrics and Forensics
(IWBF'23) is an
international forum devoted to facilitating synergies in research and
development among
the areas of multimedia forensics, forensic biometrics, and forensic
science. State-of-the-art
research in areas such as biometrics, forensic science, surveillance,
and multimedia
forensics will be presented. The 11th edition of IWBF will be held in
Barcelona, Spain and will
represent a meeting place for those concerned with the use of advanced
biometric technologies in
forensic applications, attracting participants from industry, research,
academia, and end-users.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
+ Biometrics
+ Attacks to biometric recognition systems
+ Multimodal biometrics
+ Soft biometrics
+ Mobile biometrics
+ Biometric analysis of crime scenes
+ Forensic Science
+ Multimedia forensics
+ Integrity verification
+ Anonymization & Data Privacy
+ Data de-identification
+ Surveillance
+ Ethical and societal implications
+ Information Theoretic Security
+ Adversarial Signal Processing
+ Case studies on the aforementioned topics
*** Paper Submission ***
Prospective authors are invited to submit original and unpublished work,
in English, with up
to 6 pages including results, figures and references (overlength
submissions will not be reviewed).
Paper submissions will be reviewed by at least three members of the
Technical Program Committee using a
single blind reviewing procedure. All accepted papers will be published
in the IEEE Xplore® digital library.
IWBF 2023 CMT: https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/IWBF2023
*** Important Dates ***
Paper submission 13 January 2023
Decisions to authors 17 February 2023
Camera-ready papers due 3 March 2023
November 22nd, 2022
Daniela Lopez de Luise
To join the webinar, please register to receive more details on how to connect.
The registration form can be found at: https://forms.gle/9JCc6NBgM1x2kZK6A
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