The First Workshop on MIning DAta for financial applicationS @ECML-PKDD 2016

Event Dates

Sep 19, 2016 - Sep 19, 2016

Location

Riva del Garda (Italy)

Submission Deadline

Jul 11, 2016

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MIDAS 2016

The First Workshop on MIning DAta for financial applicationS

September 19, 2016 – Riva del Garda, Italy

http://networks.imtlucca.it/conferences/midas

in conjunction with

ECML-PKDD 2016

The European Conference on Machine Learning and Practice of Knowledge Discovery

September 19-23, 2016 – Riva del Garda, Italy

http://www.ecmlpkdd2016.org

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We invite submissions to the MIDAS Workshop on MIning DAta for financial applicationS,

to be held in conjunction with ECML-PKDD 2016 – European Conference on Machine Learning and

Principles and Practice of Knowledge Discovery.

Like the famous King Midas, popularly remembered in Greek mythology for his ability to turn

everything he touched with his hand into gold, we believe that the wealth of data generated

by modern technologies, with widespread presence of computers, users and media connected by

Internet, is a goldmine for tackling a variety of problems in the financial domain.

Nowadays, people’s interactions with technological systems provide us with gargantuan amounts

of data documenting collective behaviour in a previously unimaginable fashion.

Recent research has shown that by properly modeling and analyzing these massive datasets, or

instance representing them as network structures it is possible to gain useful insights into

the evolution of the systems considered (i.e., trading, disease spreading, political elections).

Investigating the impact of data arising from today’s application domains on financial decisions

may be of paramount importance. Knowledge extracted from data can help gather critical information

for trading decisions, reveal early signs of impactful events (such as stock market moves), or

anticipate catastrophic events (e.g., financial crises) that result from a combination of actions,

and affect humans worldwide.

The importance of data-mining tasks in the financial domain has been long recognized.

Core application scenarios include correlating Web-search data with financial decisions,

forecasting stock market, predicting bank bankruptcies, understanding and managing financial risk,

trading futures, credit rating, loan management, bank customer profiling.

The MIDAS workshop is aimed at discussing challenges, potentialities, and applications of

leveraging data-mining tasks to tackle problems in the financial domain.

The workshop provides a premier forum for sharing findings, knowledge, insights, experience

and lessons learned from mining data generated in various application domains.

The intrinsic interdisciplinary nature of the workshop constitutes an invaluable opportunity

to promote interaction between computer scientists, physicists, mathematicians, economists and

financial analysts, thus paving the way for an exciting and stimulating environment involving

researchers and practitioners from different areas.

TOPICS OF INTEREST

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We encourage submission of papers on the area of data mining for financial applications.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

– Forecasting the stock market

– Trading models

– Discovering market trends

– Predictive analytics for financial services

– Network analytics in finance

– Planning investment strategies

– Portfolio management

– Understanding and managing financial risk

– Customer/investor profiling

– Identifying expert investors

– Financial modeling

– Measures of success in forecasting

– Anomaly detection in financial data

– Fraud detection

– Discovering patterns and correlations in financial data

– Text mining and NLP for financial applications

– Financial network analysis

– Time series analysis

– Pitfalls identification

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

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We invite submissions of either regular papers (long or short), and extended abstracts:

– Long regular papers: up to 12 pages long (in the Springer LNCS style,

https://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-6-793341-0), reporting on novel,

unpublished work that might not be mature enough for a conference or journal submission.

– Short regular papers: up to 6 pages long, presenting work-in-progress.

– Extended abstracts: up to 2 pages long, referring to recently published work on

the workshop topics, position papers, late-breaking results, or emerging research problems.

Contributions should be submitted in PDF format, electronically, using the workshop

submission site at https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=midas2016.

Papers must be written in English and formatted according to the ECML-PKDD 2016

submission guidelines available at http://www.ecmlpkdd2016.org/submission.html.

Submitted papers will be peer-reviewed and selected on the basis of these reviews.

If accepted, at least one of the authors must attend the workshop to present the work.

PROCEEDINGS

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Accepted papers will be part of the workshop proceedings, which will be published online

as a volume of the CEUR Workshop Proceedings publication service (http://ceur-ws.org/).

The CEUR service ensures that the published papers are permanently available and citable.

CEUR Workshop Proceedings are indexed by major digital libraries

(e.g., DBLP, GoogleScholar, CiteSeerX).

Additionally, based on the success of the workshop, extended versions of selected papers

will be published either as a post-proceeding volume of the Springer LNAI series or as a

special issue of a premier journal in the fields of interest of the workshop.

IMPORTANT DATES

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Submission deadline: July 11, 2016

Acceptance notification: July 25, 2016

Camera-ready deadline: August 8, 2016

Workshop date: September 19, 2016

INVITED SPEAKERS

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Prof. Fabrizio Lillo, Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa, Italy

PROGRAM COMMITTEE

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Aris Anagnostopoulos, Sapienza University of Rome

Annalisa Appice, University of Bari

Xiao Bai, Yahoo!

Nicola Barbieri, Tumblr

Paolo Barucca, Scuola Normale Superiore

Michele Berlingerio, IBM Research

Annalina Caputo, University of Bari

Gianbiagio Curato, Scuola Normale Superiore

Carlotta Domeniconi, George Mason University

Debora Donato, StumbleUpon

Andrea Ferretti, UniCredit

Ruth Garcia Gavilanes, Oxford Internet Institute

Sara Hajian, Eurecat

Roberto Interdonato, University of Calabria

Andreas Kaltenbrunner, Eurecat

Dragi Kocev, Jozef Stefan Institute

Nicolas Kourtellis, Telefonica Research

Iordanis Koutsopoulos, Athens University of Economics and Business

Donato Malerba, University of Bari

Yelena Mejova, Qatar Computing Research Institute

Davide Mottin, Hasso Plattner Institute

Giuseppe Nicosia, University of Catania

Marcello Paris, UniCredit

Stefano Pascolutti, UniCredit

Alvin Pastore, University of Sheffield

Giovanni Ponti, ENEA

Aleksandra Rashkovska, Jožef Stefan Institute

Giovanni Stilo, Sapienza University of Rome

Antti Ukkonen, Finnish Institute of Occupational Health

Edoardo Vacchi, UniCredit

Tim Weninger, University of Notre Dame

Giovanni Zappella, UniCredit

ORGANIZERS

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Ilaria Bordino, UniCredit, R&D Dept., Italy

Guido Caldarelli, IMT Institute for Advanced Studies Lucca, Italy

Fabio Fumarola, UniCredit, R&D Dept., Italy

Francesco Gullo, UniCredit, R&D Dept., Italy

Tiziano Squartini, IMT Institute for Advanced Studies Lucca, Italy