5th European Event on Evolutionary and Natural Computation in Finance and Economics
As evolutionary computing (EC) becomes a mature area of computer science, researchers and practitioners in other domains including engineering, medicine and finance are adopting evolutionary and related natural computing methodologies in order to solve problems in their own applications area. Although there has always been interaction between the domains of EC and finance/economics, it is noticeable that there has been an increasing volume of research at this interface in recent years. evofin 2011 is the fifth edition of this event, specifically dedicated to the applications of EC (and related natural computing methodologies) to finance and economics.
Interesting synergies exist between the methodological issues faced by researchers in computational finance and economics, and those faced by researchers in other evo* application domains. Applications such as optimisation, model induction, clustering and classification span multiple domains and therefore novel EC methodologies, or novel applications of these, are of common interest to attendees at multiple workshops. Financial environments are typically hard, being dynamic, noisy and co-evolutionary. These environments serve as an excellent test bed for novel evolutionary methodologies. It is anticipated that this workshop will assist in a useful two-way flow of ideas between the finance/economics community and the EC community.
Areas of Interest and Contributions
evofin 2011 focuses primarily on the use of EC and related natural computing techniques in computational finance and economics. High quality paper submissions which demonstrate novelty in terms of methodology, application or both, are strongly encouraged. Applications of interest include (but are not limited to) algorithmic trading, forecasting financial time series, portfolio selection and management, pricing complex financial products, developing risk management systems, and financial engineering. Other applications of interest include artificial stock markets and agent-based models of related social processes. Methodologies of interest include EC methodologies such as genetic programming, genetic algorithms and evolutionary strategies, as well as other natural computing methodologies such as particle swarm, foraging algorithms, artificial immune systems, hybrid systems, and multi-agent systems.
Publication Details
Accepted papers will appear in the proceedings of evo*, published in a volume of the Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science, which will be available at the Conference.
Submission Details
Submissions must be original and not published elsewhere. The submissions will be peer reviewed by at least three members of the program committee. The authors of accepted papers will have to improve their paper on the basis of the reviewers’ comments and will be asked to send a camera ready version of their manuscripts. At least one author of each accepted work has to register for the conference and attend the conference and present the work.
The reviewing process will be double-blind, please omit information about the authors in the submitted paper. Submit your manuscript in Springer LNCS format.
new submission deadline: 13 december 2010
notification to authors: 14 january 2011
camera-ready deadline: 5 february 2011 evo* event: 27-29 april 2011
Programme Chairs
Anthony Brabazon
University College Dublin
anthony.brabazon(at)ucd.ie
Andrea G. B. Tettamanzi Università degli Studi di Milano
andrea.tettamanzi@unimi.it
Programme Committee
Eva Alfaro-Cid, Instituto Tecnológico de Informática Valencia, Spain
Alexandros Agapitos, University College Dublin, Ireland
Antonia Azzini, Universita degli Studi di Milano, Italy
Anthony Brabazon, University College Dublin, Ireland
Robert Bradley, University College Dublin, Ireland
Louis Charbonneau, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada
Gregory Connor, National University of Ireland Maynooth, Ireland
Ian Dempsey, Virtu, Ireland
Manfred Gilli, University of Geneva and Swiss Finance Institute, Switzerland
Philip Hamill, University of Ulster, Ireland
Ronald Hochreiter, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria
Serafin Martinez Jaramillo, Bank of Mexico, Mexico
Dietmar Maringer, University of Basel, Switzerland
Youwei Li, Queen’s University Belfast, Ireland
Piotr Lipinski, University of Wroclaw, Poland
Michael O’Neill, University College Dublin, Ireland
Robert Schafer, AGH University of Science and Technology, Poland
Enrico Schumann, Switzerland
Andrea Tettamanzi, Universita Degli Studi di Milano, Italy
Nikolaos Thomaidis, University of the Aegean, Greece
Ruppa Thulasiram, University of Manitoba, Canada
Garnett Wilson, Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada
5th European Event on Evolutionary and Natural Computation in Finance and Economics
As evolutionary computing (EC) becomes a mature area of computer science, researchers and practitioners in other domains including engineering, medicine and finance are adopting evolutionary and related natural computing methodologies in order to solve problems in their own applications area. Although there has always been interaction between the domains of EC and finance/economics, it is noticeable that there has been an increasing volume of research at this interface in recent years. evofin 2011 is the fifth edition of this event, specifically dedicated to the applications of EC (and related natural computing methodologies) to finance and economics.
Interesting synergies exist between the methodological issues faced by researchers in computational finance and economics, and those faced by researchers in other evo* application domains. Applications such as optimisation, model induction, clustering and classification span multiple domains and therefore novel EC methodologies, or novel applications of these, are of common interest to attendees at multiple workshops. Financial environments are typically hard, being dynamic, noisy and co-evolutionary. These environments serve as an excellent test bed for novel evolutionary methodologies. It is anticipated that this workshop will assist in a useful two-way flow of ideas between the finance/economics community and the EC community.
Areas of Interest and Contributions
evofin 2011 focuses primarily on the use of EC and related natural computing techniques in computational finance and economics. High quality paper submissions which demonstrate novelty in terms of methodology, application or both, are strongly encouraged. Applications of interest include (but are not limited to) algorithmic trading, forecasting financial time series, portfolio selection and management, pricing complex financial products, developing risk management systems, and financial engineering. Other applications of interest include artificial stock markets and agent-based models of related social processes. Methodologies of interest include EC methodologies such as genetic programming, genetic algorithms and evolutionary strategies, as well as other natural computing methodologies such as particle swarm, foraging algorithms, artificial immune systems, hybrid systems, and multi-agent systems.
Publication Details
Accepted papers will appear in the proceedings of evo*, published in a volume of the Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science, which will be available at the Conference.
Submission Details
Submissions must be original and not published elsewhere. The submissions will be peer reviewed by at least three members of the program committee. The authors of accepted papers will have to improve their paper on the basis of the reviewers’ comments and will be asked to send a camera ready version of their manuscripts. At least one author of each accepted work has to register for the conference and attend the conference and present the work.
The reviewing process will be double-blind, please omit information about the authors in the submitted paper. Submit your manuscript in Springer LNCS format.
submission link: http://myreview.csregistry.org/evoapps11/
page limit: 10 pages
Important Dates
new submission deadline: 13 december 2010
notification to authors: 14 january 2011
camera-ready deadline: 5 february 2011
evo* event: 27-29 april 2011
Programme Chairs
Anthony Brabazon
University College Dublin
anthony.brabazon(at)ucd.ie
Andrea G. B. Tettamanzi
Università degli Studi di Milano
andrea.tettamanzi@unimi.it
Programme Committee
Eva Alfaro-Cid, Instituto Tecnológico de Informática Valencia, Spain
Alexandros Agapitos, University College Dublin, Ireland
Antonia Azzini, Universita degli Studi di Milano, Italy
Anthony Brabazon, University College Dublin, Ireland
Robert Bradley, University College Dublin, Ireland
Louis Charbonneau, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada
Gregory Connor, National University of Ireland Maynooth, Ireland
Ian Dempsey, Virtu, Ireland
Manfred Gilli, University of Geneva and Swiss Finance Institute, Switzerland
Philip Hamill, University of Ulster, Ireland
Ronald Hochreiter, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria
Serafin Martinez Jaramillo, Bank of Mexico, Mexico
Dietmar Maringer, University of Basel, Switzerland
Youwei Li, Queen’s University Belfast, Ireland
Piotr Lipinski, University of Wroclaw, Poland
Michael O’Neill, University College Dublin, Ireland
Robert Schafer, AGH University of Science and Technology, Poland
Enrico Schumann, Switzerland
Andrea Tettamanzi, Universita Degli Studi di Milano, Italy
Nikolaos Thomaidis, University of the Aegean, Greece
Ruppa Thulasiram, University of Manitoba, Canada
Garnett Wilson, Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada