Projects

PASCAL

project name: Pattern Analysis, Statistical Modelling and Computational Learning

initiating country: The European Union

Framework Programme: FP6       programme area: IST – Information Society Technologies       contract type: NoE – Network of Excellence

contract/proposal/call number: 506778

status: active

start date: December 2003       duration: 48 months       projected finish date: December 2007

Keywords

Fields of Research:
  Knowledge Representation and Machine Learning

keywords: modelling; learning; statistics

Project Budget

total budget: € 5,440,000

Participants

Note that the follow people may not represent the full extent of the consortium. FEAST has tried to identify the Australian participants, and their collaborators (or coordinator), within the project. Also note that Australian participation may not necessarily be on a formal level. Further details about the partners in this project can be found at the website listed below.

nameorganisationstate or country
Mr James GallowayNICTA ACT, Australia
Dr Steve GunnUniversity of Southampton United Kingdom

Further information

WWW: www.pascal-network.org

summary:

The objective is to build a Europe-wide Distributed Institute, which will pioneer principled methods of pattern analysis, statistical modelling, and computational learning as core enabling technologies for multimodal interfaces that are capable of natural and seamless interaction with and among individual human users. At each stage in the process, machine learning has a crucial role to play. It is proving an increasingly important tool in Machine Vision, Speech, Haptics, Brain Computer Interfaces, Information Extraction and Natural Language Processing; it provides a uniform methodology for multimodal integration; it is an invaluable tool in information extraction; while on-line learning provides the techniques needed for adaptively modelling the requirements of individual users. Though machine learning has such potential to improve the quality of multimodal interfaces, significant advances are needed, in both the fundamental techniques and their tailoring to the various aspects of the applications, before this vision can become a reality.

We therefore propose to establish an inter-disciplinary Europe-wide Distributed Institute of Pattern Analysis, Statistical Modelling, and Computational Learning. The Institute will foster interaction between groups working on fundamental analysis including statisticians and learning theorists; algorithms groups including members of the non-linear programming community; and groups in machine vision, speech, haptics, brain-computer interfaces, natural language processing, information-retrieval, textual information processing and user modelling for computer-human interaction, groups that will act as bridges to the application domains and end users.

Source: European Commission