Title: A preliminary analysis of AAAI-99 submissions
1A preliminary analysis of AAAI-99 submissions
- Devika Subramanian
- Rice University
2Distribution of 400 submitted papers by area
3Trends in submissions
- Multi-agent/agents, KR, reasoning/UAI, planning,
learning are the largest constituencies. - Robotics papers are coming into AAAI however
these are mobile robot papers. - Neural computation papers are not a large part
of the submissions.
4Overall acceptance statistics
- Before SPC meeting
- Accepts (105)
- Undecided (50)
- Rejects (255)
- After SPC meeting
- Accepts (104)
- Conditional accepts (5)
- Rejects (290)
- 15 papers accepted with 1 A/2M or R.
- 3 papers rejected with 2 A/1 strong R.
- Every other accepted paper had two As.
- 32 accepted papers had 3 As! (just under 30)
5Distribution of 109 accepted papers by area
6Trends in accepted papers
- Search, planning, neural computation, and
information extraction/information retrieval have
higher than average acceptance rates. - Data on information extraction/information
retrieval and neural computation unreliable
because of small sample size.
7Other trends in papers
- AAAI still attracts the best work in planning,
constraint satisfaction, search, multi-agent
systems and KR.
8Other trends in papers
- The best work in machine learning, uncertainty,
KDD, neural computation, natural language and Web
agents (not including multi-agent systems) is not
being submitted to the conference. - The work in mobile robotics submitted to the
conference is not competitive with the work
represented at the top vision/robotics
conferences..
9Any new ideas in the papers?
- Proverb a system that solves NY Times
crosswords. A tour-de-force integration of ideas
in AI. - Hybrid approaches to collaborative filtering.
- New extensions to Graphplan and Satplan.
- Active learning analysis and implementation.
- Integrating the fields of constraint satisfaction
and classical planning.
10 Remarks gathered from SPC
- Number of NLP papers submitted to AAAI is
increasing they are of much better quality than
in years past. Still not the very best papers
(which tend to go to ACL), but solid work at the
intersection of statistics/machine learning and
NLP. - Neural computation papers should be reviewed on a
special track as they were this year (with two
special SPC members Giles and Sun) even though
the actual number of submissions from that
community was small this year.
11More remarks from the SPC
- Need to develop mechanisms to get the best work
in machine learning, UAI, agents, KDD, robotics
and neural computation to be submitted to
conference. - Many were concerned about the fact that most
accepted papers were incremental advances. - signs of a maturing field? Or self-selection
among submissions because of reputation as
archival conference? - Mechanisms to detect and encourage revolutionary
work among the submissions not working well. - reflects fundamental split in community on what a
significant result is, and about the extent of
evaluation needed to prove that an idea works.
12Some SPC statistics
Acceptance rates vary widely among
SPC. Partially explains variation in acceptance
rates across sub-areas. Mean26.37 stdev10.22
13110 PC members
14SPC statistics for AAAI-98
Acceptance rates vary widely. Mean30.95 stdev12
.33
15204 PC members
16Issues to consider for AAAI-2000 and beyond
- Size of SPC and PC to get consistent reviewing
standards. - Ways of attracting work-in-progress to AAAI and
to set good evaluation guidelines for them. - Reconsider need for an SPC meeting.
- Paper assignment to reviewers benefits from a
manual component. Consider providing electronic
access to paper abstracts and to assignment
software so chairs can teleconference and do
reviewer assignment. - Consider accepting few papers for plenary
presentation (say 20) and have all papers
presented at poster sessions. - How to exist and cooperate/compete with
speciality conferences.