News

New IP Logo

We are proud to present our new IP logo. It depicts the stylised acronym for Inductive Programming, with the letters I and P overlay on their stems. Circles emerging from the bottom to the top of the stem symbolise the induction from examples. The bowl of the P is an arrow pointing backwards to the first emerging circle representing recursion and loops.

We also adjusted the whole appearence of our site. Thanks to Sanne helping with the layout and especially for designing this fantastic logo.

19.03.2008


Publications updated

The list of publications has been updated. Thanks to Ute Schmid for providing the ip-related part of her bibliography. If you want to contribute or you think papers are missing then please send a message with the BibTex entries to the admin.

21.11.2007


People Section finished

The 'People' section has been finished. There an overview of researchers working in the fieled of IP can be found.

30.10.2007


AAIP Mailing List transferred

The old AAIP mailing list has now been transferred to ip [HYPHEN] list [AT] inductive [HYPHEN] programming [DOT] org. If you registered to the the old AAIP list, you should have recieved a mail from listserv.uni-bamberg.de's postmaster (postmaster [AT] listserv [DOT] uni [HYPHEN] bamberg [DOT] de). If not, please have a look in your spam folder or use the subscription form to subscribe manually.

29.10.2007


Mailing List installed

The mailing list of this site is now working. Everybody interested in the latest news of the IP community can sign in here. To post to the list send a message to ip [HYPHEN] list [AT] inductive [HYPHEN] programming [DOT] org.

24.10.2007


Homepage online

This site is now online as the web portal of the IP community.

16.10.2007


Events

Workshops

AAIP

The biennial held workshop "Approaches and Applications of Inductive Programming" (AAIP), aims at bringing together researchers working on different approaches to inductive programming with the goal of discussing and evaluating the relative strengths and limitations of the different approaches (class of learnable programs, quality of learned programs, amount of background knowledge needed for synthesis, efficiency of synthesis, etc.). Furthermore, we are interested in presenting current applications and discussing possible further application domains.

Past Workshops:

Conference Tutorials

ICML 2006

Tutorial at the International Conference on Machine Learning, 2006. Carnegie Mellon, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.A. on Automatic Inductive Programming held by Ricardo Aler Mur.

 

This file was last modified on Thursday March 20, 2008