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November 06, 2006

Information Security Summit 2006 Hong Kong

Theme : IT FRAUD, FORENSICS AND SECURITY CONTROLS - LOOKING TO 2007 AND BEYOND
Date : 28 Nov 2006 (TUESDAY)
Venue : Renaissance Kowloon Hotel, Kowloon, Hong Kong
Pre-Summit Workshop : 27 Nov 2006
Post Summit Workshop : 29-30 Nov 2006
Homepage : http://www.issummit.org
Participation Fee : Supporting Organization member discount rate

Highlight of IS Summit 2006:

The Information Security Summit is a regional event with the aim to
provide IT professional with practical and advanced insights into
information security. Following the success of the event organized in
the previous three years , this year's Summit will include a one-day
conference and a number of workshops demonstrating management and
technical theory , applications and practical experiences on various
aspects of information security, IT fraud and forensics topics .
Experts, local and overseas, in the subject areas are invited to share
their experience and knowledge. The following is this year's programme
highlight:

* Keynote Speech: Emerging Cybercrime Trends and Enforcement Approaches
Mr. Raul O. Roldan, Acting Deputy Assistant Director,
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Cyber Division (USA)

* A CISO's Guide to Ethical Hacking
Mr. David Rhoades, Maven Security Consulting Inc.

* Evolving Trends In Online Fraud
Mr. Jean-Francois Legault, Senior Manager, Analytic & Forensic
Technology, Deloitte & Touche LLP.

* Forensic Investigations Across the Network – Challenging Existing
Forensic Principles
Mr. Frank Butler, Director of Business Development Training
Division, Guidance Software.

* Mobile Device Forensic Tools
Mr. Kevin Mansell, Course Manager, Centre for National High Tech
Crime Training, Centrex (UK).

* Why Organisations Fail To Leverage From Their Investment In IT
Infrastructure
Mr. Ken Doughty, Risk Management Corporate and Finance, ING
Australia. IS Summit Secretariat

Posted by ymlam at 11:26 AM | Comments (0)

November 01, 2006

Seminar - Feature Selection for Pairwise Scoring Kernels with Applications to Protein Subcellular Localization

Speaker:
Prof. S.Y. Kung, PhD, FIEEE
Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering
Princeton University, U.S.A.

Date:
2 Nov. 2006 (Thur.)

Time:
5:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.

Venue:
CYC603, 6/F, Chow Yei Ching Building,
Dept. of Electrical and Electronic Engineering,
The University of Hong Kong

Abstract:
Pairwise scoring kernels have been used extensively in biological sequence classification because of their effectiveness in converting variable-length sequences into fixed-length vectors. However, the pairwise approach can result in feature vectors with dimension equal to the training set size, causing the curse of dimensionality. This difficulty calls for feature selection methods that can weed out irrelevant features to reduce training and recognition time. To this end, we propose to use the full-feature column vectors of a pairwise scoring matrix to train an SVM and select the feature dimensions (rows) based on its support vectors. The idea is based on the notion that support vectors are important for classification and pairwise scoring matrices are symmetric. As a result, the transpose of support vectors can be considered as important features for classification. We refer to this approach as vector-index-adaptive SVM (VIA-SVM) and compare its performance with other feature selection schemes---including SVM-RFE, R-SVM, and a Fisher-based method---in protein subcellular localization. It was found that VIA-SVM is insensitive to the penalty factor in SVM training and can avoid the need to set a cutoff point for stopping the feature selection process.

About the Speaker:
Sun-Yuan Kung was born in Taiwan on January 2, 1950. He received the B.S. in Electrical Engineering from the National Taiwan University in 1971; M.S. in Electrical Engineering from the University of Rochester in 1974; and Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from Stanford University in 1977. From 1977 to 1987, he was on the faculty of Electrical Engineering-Systems at the University of Southern California. In 1984, he was a Visiting Professor at Stanford University and later in the same year, a visiting professor at the Delft University of Technology. Since September 1987, he has been a Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering, Princeton University. He currently serves on the IEEE Technical Committees on VLSI Signal Processing and Neural Networks and an Editor-in-Chief of Journal of VLSI Signal Processing.


Enquiries:
Please contact Dr. C.Q. Chang, Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, The University of Hong Kong (Email: cqchang@eee.hku.hk)

Posted by ymlam at 11:45 AM | Comments (0)