=Paper= {{Paper |id=Vol-1815/preface |storemode=property |title=None |pdfUrl=https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-1815/preface.pdf |volume=Vol-1815 }} ==None== https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-1815/preface.pdf
                         ICCBR 2016




Atlanta, Georgia, US                   31 October – 2November 2016




          The Twenty-Forth International Conference on
                        Case-Based Reasoning
                            (ICCBR 2016)




                       Workshop Proceedings


         Alexandra Coman & Stelios Kapetanakis (Editors)
Preface

We are pleased to present the Workshop Proceedings of the Twenty-Fourth
International Conference on Case-Based Reasoning (ICCBR-16), held on October 31st
- November 2nd, 2016 in Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
   Our program this year includes new entries in two ongoing series of workshops
(Synergies Between CBR and Knowledge Discovery and Reasoning About Time in
CBR, with which the workshop on Process-Oriented CBR has merged) as well as a
new workshop on Computational Analogy intended to reaffirm and strengthen the ties
between the CBR and Computational Analogy research communities. This volume also
includes proceedings of two events that have become ICCBR traditions: the Doctoral
Consortium and the Computer Cooking Contest.
   We would like to thank all who have contributed their time and effort to this year’s
workshop program: the workshop and Doctoral Consortium organizers (Kerstin Bach,
Isabelle Bichindaritz, Joseph Blass, Sarah Jane Delany, Tesca Fitzgerald, Katherine Fu,
Odd Erik Gundersen, Cindy Marling, Mirjam Minor, Stefania Montani, Nadia A.
Najjar, Santiago Ontañón, Miltos Petridis, Marc Pickett, Henri Prade, and David C.
Wilson), the workshop program committee members, and all workshop paper authors.
We are also thankful to the organizers of the ICCBR conference: program chair Ashok
Goel, program co-chairs Belen Diaz-Agudo and Thomas Roth-Berghofer, publicity
chairs Santiago Ontañón and Swaroop Vattam, local chairs Stephen Lee-Urban and
Elizabeth Whitaker, and webmaster Jose Delgado. We would also like to express our
gratitude to David Aha for his continuous support.
   We hope that you enjoy this year’s workshop papers and presentations, and find lots
of research inspiration and collaboration opportunities in Atlanta!


Atlanta, GA, USA                                             Alexandra Coman
October 2016                                                 Stelios Kapetanakis
Table of Contents
Workshop on Computational Analogy
Preface…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….10
       Joseph Blass, Tesca Fitzgerald,Katherine Fu, Santiago Ontaňón, Marc Pickett, Henri Prade

Elements of a Data-Driven Approach to Adaptation…………………………………………………………………………12
       Fadi Badra

Natural Language Instruction for Analogical Reasoning: An Initial Report………………………………………..21
        Joseph A. Blass, Kenneth D. Forbus


Scaling up Analogy with Crowdsourcing and Machine Learning………………………………………………………31
        Joel Chan, Tom Hope, Dafna Shahaf, Aniket Kittur


LDA v. LSA: A Comparison of Two Computational Text Analysis Tools for the Functional Categorization
of Patents……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….41
        Toni Cvitanic, Bumsoo Lee, Hyeon Ik Song, Katherine Fu, David Rosen


Morphological Predictability of Unseen Words Using Computational Analogy…………………………………51
      Rashel Fam, Yves Lepage

Abstraction for Analogical Reasoning in Robotic Agents………………………………………………………….………61
        Tesca Fitzgerald, Andrea Thomaz, Ashok Goel

Solving Analogical Equations Between Strings of Symbols Using Neural Networks…………………………67
        Vivatchai Kaveeta, Yves Lepage

Efficient Identification of Formal Analogies……………………………………………………..………………………………77
         Philippe Langlais

Reducing Noise Sensitivity of Formal Analogical Reasoning Applied to Language Transfer………………87
       Vincent Letard, Gabriel Illouz, Sophie Rosset


Analogies from Function, Flow and Performance Metrics……………………………………………………..…………98
       Cameron J. Turner, Julie Linsey

Automatic Generation of Analogous Problems to Help Resolving Misconceptions in an Intelligent Tutor
System for Written Subtraction………………………………………………………………………………………………………108
       Christina Zeller, Ute Schmid




Workshop on Reasoning about Time in CBR
Preface…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..120
       Odd Erik Gundersen, Kerstin Bach
Evaluating Distributed Methods for CBR Systems for Monitoring Business Process Workflows……….122
        Ioannis Agorgianitis, Miltos Petridis, Stelios Kapetanakis, Andrew Fish


Exploiting Time Series Data for Task Prediction and Diagnosis in an Intelligent Guidance System….132
        Hayley Borck, Steven Johnston, Mary Southern, Mark Boddy

Case Representation and Adaptation for Short-Term Load Forecasting at a Container Terminal……142
       Norman Ihle


Case-Based Comparison of Career Trajectories………………………………………………………………………………152
       Kedma Duarte, Rosina O. Weber, Roberto C. S. Pacheco


Diagnosing Root Causes and Generating Graphical Explanations by Integrating Temporal Causal
Reasoning and CBR…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………162
       Hoda Nikpour, Agnar Aamodt, Pål.Skalle


Challenges for the Similarity-Based Comparison of Human Physical Activities Using Time Series
Data……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….173
        Tomasz Szczepanski, Kerstin Bach, Agnar Aamodt




Workshop on Synergies between CBR and Knowledge Discovery
Preface…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..180
       Isabelle Bichindaritz, Cindy Marling, Stefania Montani


Evaluating Case-Based Reasoning Knowledge Discovery in Fraud Detection………………………………….182
        Adeyinka Adedoyin, Stelios Kapetanakis, Miltos Petridis, Emmanouil Panaousis


A Context-aware Miner for Medical Processes………………………………………………………………………………192
       L. Canensi, G. Leonardi, S. Montani, P. Terenziani


Goal Trajectories for Knowledge Investigations………………………………………………………………………..…202
       Vahid B. Eyorokon, Benjamin Bengfort2, Uday S. Panjala, Michael T. Cox


Learning a Region of User’s Preference for Product Recommendation…………………………….……………212
        Anbarasu Sekar, Sutanu Chakraborti

Case-Base Maintenance: A Streaming Approach……………………………………………………………………………222
       Yang Zhang, Su Zhang, and David Leake
Computer Cooking Contest
Preface…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..234
       Nadia A Najjar, David C Wilson

Meal Planning from an Abstraction Hierarchy of Menus and Recipes- Adapting Research from AI
Categorization and Problem Solving………………………………………………………………………………………………235
       Douglas H. Fisher




The Doctoral Consortium
Preface…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..245
       Sarah Jane Delany, Stefania Montani

Distributed Case-based Support for the Architectural Conceptualization Phase…………………………….246
        Viktor Ayzenshtadt

A Framework for Interactive Mining and Retrieval from Process Traces…………………………………….……252
       L. Canensi

Short-Term Load Forecasting Methods for Maritime Container Terminals…………………………………….257
        Norman Ihle

Knowledge Modelling and Comparison of Cyanide-free Gold Leaching Processes………………………….262
      Maria Leikola

Episodic Memory in a Cognitive Model…………………………………………………………………………………………267
        David Ménager

Workflow Modelling Assistance by Means of Process-oriented Case-based Reasoning…………………272
       Gilbert Müller

Prediction and Explanation by Combined Model-Based and Case-Based Reasoning…………………..…277
        Hoda Nikpour

Similarity-based Approaches to Learning from Demonstration…………………………………………………..…282
         Brandon Packard

Feature-Centric Approaches to Case-Base Maintenance………………………………………………………………287
       Brian Schack

Automated Similarity Modeling for Real-World Applications……………………………………….………………292
      Rotem Stram