Feb 9th, 2011| 06:03 pm | Posted by chasc
Kirk Borne has compiled a list of interesting workshops and conferences coming up in the near future:
The Future of Scientific Knowledge Discovery in Open Networked Environments
http://sites.nationalacademies.org/PGA/brdi/PGA_060422
New York Workshop on Computer, Earth, and Space Sciences 2011
http://www.giss.nasa.gov/meetings/cess2011/
Innovations in Data-Intensive Astronomy
http://www.nrao.edu/meetings/bigdata/
Astrostatistics and Data Mining in Large Astronomical Databases
http://www.iwinac.uned.es/Astrostatistics/
Statistical Challenges in Modern Astronomy V (including summer school & tutorials)
http://astrostatistics.psu.edu/su11scma5/
Very Wide Field Surveys in the Light of Astro2010
http://widefield2011.pha.jhu.edu/
Statistical Methods for Very Large Datasets
http://www.regonline.com/builder/site/Default.aspx?eventid=757633
23rd Scientific and Statistical Database Management Conference
http://ssdbm2011.ssdbm.org/
International Statistical Institute (ISI) World Congress
http://www.isi2011.ie/
NASA Conference on Intelligent Data Understanding
https://c3.ndc.nasa.gov/dashlink/projects/43/
Aug 22nd, 2009| 10:11 pm | Posted by chasc
This is a special session at the January 2010 meeting of the AAS. It is scheduled for the afternoon of Thursday, Jan 7, 2-3:30pm.
Abstracts are due Sep 17.
Meeting Justification
We propose to highlight the growing use of ‘non-parametric’ techniques to distill meaningful science from today’s astronomical data. Challenges range from Kuiper objects to cosmology. We have chosen just a few ‘teaching’ examples from this lively interdisciplinary area.
Continue reading ‘Beyond simple models-New methods for complex data’ »
Tags:
2010,
215,
AAS,
AAS 215,
astroinformatics,
astrostatistics,
complex data,
January,
Methods,
special session,
Washington Category:
Astro,
News,
Stat |
Comment
Jul 12th, 2009| 07:21 pm | Posted by hlee
Approximately for a decade, there have been journals dedicated to bioinformatics. On the other hand, there is none in astronomy although astronomers have a long history of comprising a huge volume of catalogs and data archives. Prof. Bickel’s comment during his plenary lecture at the IMS-APRM particularly on sparse matrix and philosophical issues on choosing principal components led me to wonder why astronomers do not discuss astroinformatics. Continue reading ‘Astroinformatics’ »
Tags:
astroinformatics,
bioinformatics,
catalog,
dimension reduction,
journals,
penalize,
regularization,
sparse matrix,
variable selection Category:
Astro,
Cross-Cultural,
Data Processing,
Imaging,
Jargon,
Stat |
1 Comment