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I-CARE

IBM-IRL Collaborative Academia Research


Exchange

October 22, 2010


Venue: IBM India Pvt. Ltd. D3, 6th Floor, Manyata
Embassy, Nagawara Outer Ring Road, Bangalore - 560045

Workshop Program
Time Agenda Venue
08:00 am - 09:00 am Registration D3 601
09:00 am – 09:20 am Welcome and Opening Remarks D3 602-603, D3 605-
Dr. Gopal Pingali, General Chair, I-CARE 606
Dr. Karthik Visweswariah , Program Committee Co-Chair, I-CARE
09:20 am – 10:00 am Overview of IBM Research and Opportunities for Academic Collaboration D3 602-603, D3 605-
Dr. Manish Gupta, Director, IBM Research – India 606
Dr. Raghuram Krishnapuram, Associate Director-Solutions, IBM Research – India
10:00 am – 10:15 am Tea Break
10:15 am – 12:15 pm Invited talks in 4 Parallel Sessions
Track –I Services: Service Science, Management, and Engineering
Track chairs: Dr. Alan Hartman, Dr. Krishna Kummamuru D3 602
Dr. Shailabh Nagar, IBM Demand-supply management in service delivery
Prof. Jayanta Chatterjee, Quality Assessment issues and models for rural digital
IIT Kanpur services
Prof. Y. Narahari, IISc Mechanism Design for Incentive Compatible Crowdsourcing

Track –II Information Management and Analytics: Database systems, data mining,
machine learning, text analytics, translation
Track chairs: Dr. Prasan Roy, Dr. Prasad Deshpande
Prof. Chiranjib A Linear time algorithm for SVM classification D3 603
Bhattacharya, IISc
Prof. Srinath Srinivasa, Semantics Latent within Co-occurrence Patterns
IIIT-Bangalore
Vishal Chahal, IBM Journey of Data to Information and Smarter Decisions

Track –III Software Engineering and Programming Languages


Track chairs: Dr. Mangala Gowri, Renuka Sindhghatta
Prof. Aditya Kanade, IISc Formal Methods for Software Testing and Analysis
Suparna Bhattacharya, Java Runtime Bloat: The Price of Flexibility? D3 605
IBM
Prof. Uday Khedkar, IIT Pointer Analyses: Approximations or Abstractions?
Mumbai

Track –IV Distributed, High-Performance, Network & Cyber-physical Systems


Track chairs: Dr. Biplav Srivatsava, Deva Seetharam D3 606
Prof. Amarjeet Singh, IIIT Challenges and opportunities in real world sensing
Delhi deployments
Dr. Rahul Tongia, CSTEP Power to the People? The Energy Challenge Ahead
Reji Pillai, IBM TBD
12:15 pm – 1:15 pm Lunch Break D3 602, 603, 605,
606
1:15 pm – 03:30 pm Research Poster and Demo Session D3 607
02:45 pm – 03:30 pm Wattzup - Whats up with your watts? – An Interactive Session on Smarter Energy for interested D3 601
participants conducted by Deva Seetharam and Yedendra Shrinivasan, IBM
03:30 pm – 04:00pm Break to walk over to IBM Cafeteria and settle down (tea provided in cafeteria)
04:00 pm – 05:30 pm Panel Discussion: Is India Geared up to have Smarter Cities? IBM Cafeteria
Panelists:
Sri Siddiah, Commissioner, BBMP, Bangalore
Mr. Vidyashankar, Secretary, eGovernance, Karnataka State Government
Ms. Susan Jain, IBM
Prof. P.G. Sitharam, Head of CiSTUP, IISc
Prof. Ashwin Mahesh, IIM Bangalore
Moderator:
Dr. Raghuram Krishnapuram, Associate Director-Solutions, IBM Research, India
05:30 pm – 06:30 pm IT Quiz (Start with Deep QA video) – DeveloperWorks Led IBM Cafetaria
06:30 pm – 07:00 pm Awards & Closing remarks -- Gopal Pingali IBM Cafetaria
07:00 pm – 08:30 pm Dinner IBM Cafetaria
Track –I Services: Service Science, Management, and Engineering
Track Chairs: Dr. Alan Hartman, Dr. Krishna Kummamuru
Speakers: Dr. Shailabh Nagar, Prof. Jayanta Chatterjee, Prof. Y. Narahari

Talk – I Duration: 40 mins

Title: Demand-supply management in service delivery


Abstract: Service delivery presents several opportunities for basic and applied research using one or
more of computer/management/cognitive sciences. This talk looks at one problem domain
and the application of traditional computer/mathematical sciences to address some of the
challenges. Managing the demand and supply of human and non-human resources is a
critical aspect for smooth operations and competitiveness of a global service delivery centre.
The talk will begin with an overview of the components of a real global delivery centre,
discuss the abstracted problem statement of demand supply management and outline an
approach taken to optimize one aspect of the demand-supply which attempted to retain as
many of the real world constraints as tractability permitted.
Speaker’s Bio: Dr. Shailabh Nagar is currently CTO/Services Innovation Leader for IBM India's Global
Delivery Centre for remote infrastructure management, driving initiatives in quality &
productivity improvement, service delivery innovation and technical vitality in a rapid
growth environment. Prior to this, he was in IBM Research India, creating & leading a group
in business process management. In the early 2000's, Shailabh worked at IBM's T.J.Watson
Research Centre in New York on operating systems, systems management, multithreaded
processors and security. He was part of a core team of IBM that made several contributions to
the Linux kernel's ability to scale on symmetrics multiprocessors and support more efficient
workload management. Shailabh has a PhD in computer science from Pennsylvania State
University and an undergraduate from the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi.

Talk II Duration: 40 mins

Title: Quality Assessment issues and models for rural digital services
Abstract: Efficient, effective and un-hindered, asymmetric access to Governmental information is a
fundamental goal of India’s National E-governance Project (NeGP). The plans for this project
recognize that citizens’ Information needs are for both generic and specific purposes. Post-
deployment research on earlier experiments with rural telecentres (Chatterjee and Sarkar,
2009) has shown that successful deployment of ICT platforms for development needs both
dynamic updates to local data and knowledge that can aid decision-making process for
personal and economic well-being of rural citizens. While access to relevant information may
be key to rural development, mere availability of information is not enough. Information is a
necessary but not a sufficient condition for citizen-empowerment. This paper studies the
over-arching needs of architecting the front end delivery system of Government to Citizen (
G2C) services through an one-stop ‘Common Service Centre’ ( CSC) in an Indian village
through a case study in the action research mode. An analysis utilizing AHP (Saaty, 1987)
rank orders and prioritizes the critical to quality and critical success factors for this integrated
approach.

Speaker’s Bio: Dr. Jayanta Chatterjee has seamlessly moved between Industrial and Academic assignments
as Innovation consultant, hands-on practitioner and a rigorous teacher-researcher. He has 15
years of Management teaching and research experience and 25 years of top management
experience in different countries. He worked with Siemens as a Project Engineer in India
(1971-77) and then at Allen-Bradley’s Indian operation (1977-95), where he became the CEO
in 1989. He has subsequently worked for Rockwell USA as Executive Director and then
venture funded start-ups across several countries. He developed his skills for Service
Innovation Management, Entrepreneurship and International Business Development during
this period. He did his graduation in Electrical Engineering from Jadavpur University and
his M. Tech. as well as Ph. D. in Management Systems from IIT Delhi. He has authored
several books, book chapters and papers and his latest work on Services Marketing has
become a best seller. His abiding research interests are Knowledge, Networks and Socio-
Technical Innovations in business as well as social sectors.
Dr. Chatterjee is a Professor at the Management Engineering Department of Indian
Institute of Technology, Kanpur and a visiting Professor at Design Factory, Aalto University,
Finland. He is on the Advisory Board of the Service Science Factory at Maastricht University,
Netherlands and Knowledge Management laboratory at NUS, Singapore. He has been an
Adjunct Professor at Hong Kong Polytechnic University and Visiting Professor at
Mazandaran University of Science and Technology, Iran.
He is a Consultant and Lead Researcher for several multi-disciplinary social
informatics and innovation related research projects funded by Indian and Multilateral
agencies.

Talk III Duration: 40 mins

Title: Mechanism Design for Incentive Compatible Crowdsourcing


Abstract: We first provide a brief overview of mechanism design which can be viewed as the art of
designing the rules of a game to achieve a specified desired outcome. Next we examine
several situations in ticket allocation problems in the context of crowdsourcing where
mechanism design can play a key role in eliciting truthful information from the crowd. We
address both individual ticket allocation and group ticket allocation problems.
Speaker’s Bio: Y. Narahari is currently Professor and Chair at the Department of Computer Science and
Automation, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore. The focus of his current research is to
apply Game Theory and Mechanism Design to Internet and Network Economics, and
Electronic Commerce Problems. He is the lead author of a research monograph entitled
Game Theoretic Problems in Network Economics and Mechanism Design Solutions"
published by Springer, London in 2009.
He is an elected Fellow of the following Institutions and Academies: Institution of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers, New York (FIEEE); Indian Academy of Sciences (FASc),
Bangalore; Indian National Academy of Engineering (FNAE), New Delhi; and the National
Academy of Sciences (FNASc), Allahabad. He is a Senior Editor of the IEEE Transactions on
Automation Science and Engineering.
Track – II Information Management and Analytics: Database systems, data mining,
machine learning, text analytics, translation
Track Chairs: Dr. Prasan Roy, Dr. Prasad Deshpande
Speakers: Prof. Chiranjib Bhattacharya, Prof. Srinath Srinivasa, Vishal Chahal

Talk – I Duration: 40 mins

Title: A Linear time algorithm for SVM classification


Abstract: Building classifiers on large datasets is an important problem frequently encountered in
Industry. Using fast clustering algorithms and Second order cone programming solvers we
propose a linear time algorithm for training SVMs on large datasets.
Speaker’s Bio: Chiranjib Bhattacharyya is an Associate Prof. in the Dept of Computer Science and
Automation, Indian Institute of Science.
For more information please see http://drona.csa.iisc.ernet.in/~chiru

Talk – II Duration: 40 mins

Title: Semantics Latent within Co-occurrence Patterns


Abstract: Most web-scale data sets like web pages, wikis, blogs, etc. represent some form of social
spaces where several users have actively participated by contributing content and linking
content elements based on some underlying rationale. A rich source of explicit as well as tacit
semantics in such data sets are the patterns of co-occurrence of different logical entities.
While several analytical efforts over such data sets have concentrated on citation patterns,
analysis of co-occurrence patterns have received relatively less attention.
This talk introduces the concept of co-occurrence analysis, and explores its roots from
cognitive science. A foundational data structure based on a co-occurrence graph, augmented
with a concept hierarchy is then introduced. This is then used as the underlying data
structure over which a set of algorithms are proposed for different kinds of semantics
extraction tasks.
Speaker’s Bio Srinath Srinivasa is an Associate Professor at the International Institute for Information
Technology, Bangalore (IIIT-B). His research interests include multi-agent systems and
analysis of co-occurrence patterns in different data-sets. Srinath holds a PhD in information
systems from the Berlin-Brandenburg Graduate School for Distributed Information Systems,
Germany and an MS from IIT-Madras. He has also worked in Wipro Infotech at Bangalore as
an R&D Engineer.
Currently, he heads the Open Systems Lab at IIIT-B and serves on the technical and
organizational committees for various international conferences. He has served and
continues to serve as a technical reviewer for many journals like IEEE TKDE and the VLDB
Journal. He is a member if CSI, IEEE and ACM and has been active in the COMAD series of
conferences by the Computer Society of India. He has joined the IEEE CS Executive
Committee for the Bangalore Chapter from June 2010.

Talk - III Duration: 40 mins

Title: Journey of Data to Information and Smarter Decisions


Abstract: The talk will cover the journey that is undertaken by Data to be transformed into Information
leading to Smarter Decisions. The talk will cover the Infrastructure (HW) and Middleware
(SW) layers that the data touches and how each of those transforms the data into information.
Further an insight will be provided into usage of date derived information to make smarter
decision with technology like Predictive Analytics.
Speaker’s Bio: Vishal Chahal works as a Business Intelligence Evangelist in the Software Labs and his work
currently focuses on building Customer Oriented solutions on IBM Analytics technology
using Cognos & SPSS.
He has spent close to 11+ years with IBM doing various roles starting with writing
File System drivers to being Product Manager for DB2 Server portfolio. He has worked
extensively with IBM present and prospective customer in India and Asia Pacific on
Database, Datawarehouse, Data mining and Business Intelligence.
Track –III Software Engineering & Programming Languages
Track Chairs: Dr. Mangala Gowri, Renuka Sindhghatta
Speakers: Prof. Aditya Kanade, Suparna Bhattacharya, Prof. Uday P. Khedkar

Talk – I Duration: 40 mins

Title: Formal Methods for Software Testing and Analysis


Abstract: With ever growing critical nature of software systems, correctness of software has become as
important as efficiency of underlying algorithms. Formal methods is the discipline of
logically reasoning about correctness of computational systems. In this talk, we will motivate
the role of formal methods in computer science and its impact on real-world software
development practices.
We will also present a concrete research problem. In particular, we will discuss an
automated testing technique to find representation dependence bugs. A program is said to
have representation dependence on a datatype if it behaves differently for different
representations of the same data. We will present the case study of TIFF Images and
demonstrate effectiveness of our technique in finding bugs in many popular imaging
software including Open Office, GIMP, and Picasa.
Speaker’s Bio: Aditya Kanade is Assistant Professor of Computer Science and Automation at Indian
Institute of Science. He obtained his bachelor's degree in computer engineering from
Government College of Engineering Pune in 2002 and PhD in computer science from Indian
Institute of Technology Bombay in 2007. Before joining IISc in 2009, he was a postdoctoral
research associate at University of Pennsylvania. His areas of research include program
analysis and verification, formal methods, and modeling and analysis of embedded systems.
He has received ACM SIGBED best paper award in Embedded Software (EMSOFT)
Conference in 2008.

Talk – II Duration: 40 mins

Title: Java Runtime Bloat: The Price of Flexibility?


Abstract:
Speaker’s Bio: Suparna is a Senior Technical Staff Member at the IBM India Systems and Technology Lab,
where she works with IBM's worldwide Linux Technology Center. An Electronics and
Communication Engineer from the Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, she has been
with IBM since 1993, specializing in in operating systems and file system internals on various
platforms. It is about 10+ years since she made her foray into the Linux kernel and got
introduced to the joys of working on open source. Her contributions span various areas
including Linux block I/O, asynchronous I/O, kernel dynamic probes, first failure data
capture and the ext4 file system. Over the years she has chaired several sessions at the
international Linux Kernel summit, which is a by-invitation only event where key
contributors of the Linux Kernel get together to decide the future roadmap of the Kernel.
Suparna started her career working on a micro-kernel operating system based on
CMU Mach. She was one of the core contributors to the file system aspects and
productization of DB2-Datalinks, a technology invented at the IBM Almaden Research Center
for linking database and file system data with referential integrity and consistency
guarantees.
Suparna is an elected member of the IBM Academy of Technology and a senior
member of IEEE. She is currently pursuing her PhD at Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore.
These days’ research interest lies in exploring new angles in making large scale server
systems energy efficient.

Talk – III Duration: 40 mins

Title: Pointer Analyses: Approximations or Abstractions?


Abstract: The world of programming is divided in religious camps with opposing views on the use
of pointers. Compiler writers love the convenience that pointers provide to build fancy
data structures but hate the difficulties that arise in trying to optimize a program
containing pointers.
There has been a lot of work on analyzing programs containing pointers. The
mathematics of pointer analysis has been studied in great details and the findings
conclusively say that like many other interesting problems, the analysis of pointers in its
full glory is undecidable and remains intractable even if some imprecision were to be
tolerated. Since this sounds pessimistic, the engineering aspects of pointer analysis have
dominated most explorations resulting in efficient solutions with questionable utility. Apart
from the inherent difficulty of analysis of pointer usage, the fact that such an analysis is not
much useful unless carried out at interprocedural level has also added to the confusion. All
this has resulted in a belief that compromising on precision is necessary for scalability and
efficiency.
This talk takes a bird's eye view of the state of art in pointer analysis and argues
that the need of the hour is to build analyses that explore a science than the engineering of
pointer analysis. We believe that the focus of pointer analysis should be on building
clean abstractions rather than hasty approximations. This does not undermine the
engineering efforts but emphasizes that a search for approximations should begin only after
building clean abstractions and not before it. The talk presents some preliminary ideas in
that direction.
Speaker’s Bio: Uday P. Khedker (http://www.cse.iitb.ac.in/~uday) finished B.E. (Electronics & Telecom.)
from GEC Jabalpur in 1986, M.Tech. (Computer Science) from Pune University in 1989, and
Ph.D. (Computer Science & Engg.) From IIT Bombay in 1995. He taught at the Department of
Computer Science at Pune University from 1994 to 2001 and since then is with IIT Bombay
where he is currently a Professor of Computer Science & Engg.
His areas of interest are Programming Languages and Compilers and he specializes
in data flow analysis and its applications to code optimization. He has also been
spearheading GCC work at IIT Bombay and has established the GCC Resource Center at IIT
Bombay.
He has published papers in leading journals and conferences, has contributed
chapters in Compiler Design Handbook and has authored a book titled “Data Flow Analysis:
Theory and Practice” published by CRC Press, USA. He has also worked very closely with
the industry.
Track –IV Distributed, High-Performance, Network & Cyber-physical Systems
Track Chairs: Dr. Biplav Srivastava, Deva Seetharam
Speakers: Prof. Amarjeet Singh, Dr. Rahul Tongia, Regi Pillai

Talk – I Duration: 40 mins

Title: Challenges and opportunities in real world sensing deployments


Abstract: Recent advancements in sensing technologies and mobile phone ubiquity have resulted in
sensors becoming an integral part of our lives. In spite of large-scale proliferation of sensors,
very few system level control decisions are taken based on sensory inputs, primarily due to
lack of good quality data that can be made sense of and that can be used for making such
decisions. Complexity in the sensory data can be partially attributed to non-structured data
streams resulting from unsupervised environments in which the data is generated. However,
even for explicitly planned sensor deployments, several challenges arise that contribute to the
complexity of collecting good quality data on which critical control decisions can be made. In
this talk, I will first describe the idea of iterative experimental design methodology
developed by us to optimally plan the deployment of mobile and static sensor networks for
several environmental sensing applications. I will then follow it up with my experiences in
applications of traffic monitoring and water flow monitoring in Los Angeles. With each of
these example deployments, I will highlight typical challenges associated with collecting
good quality sensory data and how some of them can be overcome with optimal
experimental design and appropriate pre-planning of the deployment. Finally, I will
conclude with our plans for instrumenting the new campus of IIIT-D, New Delhi with several
sensors and base some of the system level control decisions based on the sensor output.
Speaker’s Bio: Amarjeet Singh is currently Asst. Professor in Mobile and Ubiquitous Computing Group at
Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology, Delhi (IIIT-Delhi). At IIIT-Delhi, he is
involved in using mobile phones for performing preliminary healthcare diagnosis in rural
areas; using voice based services for farmers; and low power system development for
monitoring energy consumption. He completed his MS and Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering
from University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in 2007 and 2009 respectively. He was
awarded 2009 Chorea’s Foundation Award for applied research with long-range
implications. He was also a recipient of 2007 Edward K. Rice outstanding MS student in
School of Engineering at UCLA. From 2002 – 2004, he worked as Senior Research and
Development Engineer at Teas Networks, Bangalore, India. His undergraduate education
was in Electrical Engineering from Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi in 2002.

Talk – II Duration: 40 mins

Title: Power to the People? The Energy Challenge Ahead


Abstract: Energy, and more specifically, electricity has been strongly correlated with human
development. The sustainability challenge (economic, environment, and equity; also termed
triple bottom line: profits, people, planet) has come to the fore, and in this talk, I show how
doing everything “right” by today’s system (which is supply-centric) will not work; even
renewable as envisaged as today are insufficient. Energy challenges are less about supply
and more about distribution and usage. A new model of services is required, and this links
to more use of life cycle analyses, a dynamic (“smart”) system, more incentives to reduce
consumption, and even a re-think of the social contract for electricity (provision for the poor,
environment, etc.).
Speaker’s Bio: Dr. Rahul Tongia is Principal Research Scientist at the Center for Study of Science,
Technology, and Policy (CSTEP), a Bangalore-based not-for-profit research center. His areas
of research are broad and interdisciplinary, spanning technology and policy, with domain
expertise in energy/power and IT/telecom. He has been a faculty member at Carnegie
Mellon University for a dozen years with appointments in the Dept. of Engineering & Public
Policy and the School of Computer Science (presently on leave).
His energy work has spanned seminal studies on India’s nuclear power program,
importing natural gas, and on power pricing, and his current area of focus is on Smart Grids,
harnessing ICT to improve the power grid. He was on the Technology Advisory Board for
Southern California Edison's (a leading US utility's) project on advanced (“smart”) metering.
At CSTEP, he has worked on a major report on IT for the Power Sector for the Min. of Power
(2008), and has been advising state power utilities, the state government, and the Ministry of
Power on IT roadmaps and smart grid deployments. CSTEP was selected as Knowledge
Partner and Advisor for the India Smart Grid Forum, established by the Ministry of Power,
and Dr. Tongia is also Advisor to the India Smart Grid Task Force.
He has been active in the community of scholars engaged information and
communications technology (ICT) and Development (ICTD), helping initiate and organize
interdisciplinary, scholarly conferences on ICTD. Recently, he was Program Co-chair of
ICTD2009. He is active on issues of “digital divide”, and his work on Network Exclusion has
been cited by the US Government in their thinking on broadband policy; for this he was an
expert witness testifying before the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC). He was
also previously Vice-Chair of the UN ICT Task Force Working Group on Enabling
Environment (formerly, Low-Cost Connectivity Access).
Dr. Tongia has taught courses spanning telecommunications, networking, wireless
technologies, and the role of ICT for Human Development, and broader ethical and policy
issues of computing. His doctorate was from Carnegie Mellon (1998) in Engineering and
Public Policy, and Sc.B. was in Electrical Engineering (with Honors, Magna cum Laude) from
Brown University (1995).

Talk – III Duration: 40 mins


Title: TBD
Abstract:
Speaker’s Bio
Poster presentations

Poster
ID Authors Presenter Institute Poster Title
Aneesh
Sreevallabh
Chivukula,
Sreerama Prabhu Aneesh
Chivukula, Sreevallabh IIIT- Eucalyptus cloud to remotely provision e-
103 Rajasekhar Krovvidi Chivukula Hyderabad governance applications
Anurag Bhagat,
Ridhi Chaudhary,
Suraj Sheth, Om D
Deshmukh, Ashish
106 Verma Om D Deshmukh IBM Disabilities: Detection and Intervention
Prashant Baliga,
Debapriya
Chakravarti, Prof.
Sudhir Voleti, Debapriya Outsourcing growth for the service
107 Nithya Rajamani Chakravarti ISB provider – Role of client firm financials
Making Power Distribution Smarter for
108 Moonmi Kalita Moonmi Kalita IBM Smarter Cities
A SOA-BASED INEGRATED
Pushpalatha.M.N , MEDICATION REMAINDER AND
Hariprasad.N.R , RECORD REFERRING USING
111 Janardhar.C Hariprasad. N.R. MSRIT ANDRIOD CLIENT
Nithya Rajamani,
Tarun Jain, Tonisha Impact of incentives in driving individual
113 Chadha Tonisha Chadha ISB and team performance
SmartStats – A simple and efficient
Hari Prasad Reddy Hari Prasad Reddy mobile-enabled solution to provide quick
114 Nalasani Nalasani IBM and accurate statistics
Suneel Chatla,
Nandita Banerjee,
Amit Nandkeolyar, Behavioral drivers of individual and team
115 Nithya Rajamani Suneel Chatla ISB performance
Kamlesh Kumar
Yadav, Dr. Anita
Goel, Lal Gulab,
Puneet Sardana, University of
117 Neelam rani Kamlesh Yadav Delhi SOCIAL NETWORK ANALYSIS
Mydhili K Nair,
Manjunath
Amaresh, Anil
Kumar, Lalit Kumar, Mobile Telemedicine A Redeemer in
118 Dheeraj Pai Mydhili K Nair MSRIT Disaster Relief
Himanshu Gupta,
Rajeev Gupta, Ullas
Nambiar and
206 Mukesh Mo Ullas Nambiar IBM Active Archive using Hadoop
Bhanukiran
Vinzamuri, Vikram Bhanukiran IIIT- Embedding robust data mining models in
208 Pudi Vinzamuri Hyderabad active learning
Swati Agarwal,
209 Dinu John Swati Agarwal IBM Advanced Health Care Analytics
Prasad Deshpande,
Karin Murthy,
Deepak S
213 Padmanabhan Karin Murthy IBM Content-aware Master Data Management
Framework for Ontology based Decision
Arnab support system for E-Learning modules,
Bhattacharya, M.K Business modeling and Manufacturing
215 Tiwari, J.A Harding Arnab Bhattacharya IIT Kharagpur Systems
FACISME: Fuzzy Associative
Aashish M and IIIT- Classification using Iterative Scaling and
216 Vikram Pudi Aashish M Hyderabad Maximum Entropy
Period-3 based Gene Prediction using
218 Ajith Singh Ajith Singh IBM Digital Filters
219 Rakshit S. Trivedi Rakshit S. Trivedi IISc CODD: Constructing Dataless Databases
220 Bruhathi H S Bruhathi H S IISc Picasso on DB2_XML
Rohit M Lotlikar,
Ajay Gupta, Angshu
228 Rai Rohit Lotlikar IBM MULTICHANNEL NEXT-BEST-ACTION
Himabindu Himabindu Extracting Aspects and Sentiments from
231 Lakkaraju Lakkaraju IBM Unstructured Text Documents
R. Uday Kiran, Towards Efficient Mining of Periodic-
Akshat Surana, P. R. Uday Kiran, IIIT- Frequent Patterns in Transactional
232 Krishna Reddy Akashat Surana Hyderabad Databases
Sreekanth L
Kakaraparthy, Sreekanth L Audience Segmentation for better health
234 Sandeep Vedula Kakaraparthy IBM behavior
Chandra Sekhar
Seelamantula, Robust k-means
Adithya Kumar Chandra Sekhar clustering algorithm using a modified
235 Pediredla Seelamantula IISc Huber loss function
J. Deepika and Anna Author Quality Assessment of Open
236 G.S. Mahalakshmi Deepika J University Source Research Publications
Training and Evaluating a German Named
Manaal Faruqui, Entity Recognizer
238 Sebastian Pad´o Manaal Faruqui IIT Kharagpur with Semantic Generalization
Shikhar Agarwal,
Sruthi Bandhakavi SIFEX - Tool for Static Analysis of
& Marianne Browser Extensions for Security
301 Winslett Shikhar Agarwal IIT Delhi Vulnerabilities
Vishal Nirula, Programming Language Grammar
306 Diptikalyan Saha Vishal Nirula IIT Delhi Inference
Soumya Prasad
Ukil, Uday P Soumya Prasad
308 Khedker Ukil IIT Bombay Extending Generic Data Flow Analyzer
Hari S. Gupta,
Deepak D'Souza,
Raghavan
309 Komondoor Hari S. Gupta IBM Service Mining in Legacy Software
K Vasanta Lakshmi Verification of Requirement Specification
311 and K V Raghavan K Vasanta Lakshmi IISc Using Partitioning
Lucknow
Institute of Novel Mobile Payment Architecture with
402 Subhashish Roy Subhashish Roy Technology Intelligent Risk Modeling
Thapar
403 Aseem Agarwal Aseem Agarwal University NoteBox, Word Processing on Mobile
Sourav Bansal, Shadowing - A virtualization based
404 Mehul Chadha Mehul Chadha IIT Delhi approach to provide security to systems
Boudhayan
Bhattacharya,
Subhadip Nag, Brainware
Dwijesh Dutta Boudhayan Group of Analysis of Signaling Cost for Filter-based
406 Majumder Bhattacharya Institutions Data Fusion Management Scheme
A Novel Burstiness Aware Two Level
407 Ritesh Kalle Ritesh Kalle IIIT Bangalore Scheduler for VBR Video in VoD Scenario
Anton Beloglazov, University of Energy-Efficient Consolidation of Virtual
408 Rajkumar Buyya Anton Beloglazov Melbourne Machines in Cloud Data Centers
Saideep
Annadatha, Nabila Continuous Wi-Fi connectivity for trains in
410 Kazmi Nabila Kazmi IBM India
Santhosh Jayanthi, A NOVEL TECHNIQUE FOR
Dileep Varanasi, IMPROVING HUMAN COMPUTER
Tata INTERACTION THROUGH
Raghavendran, EYE TRACKING SYSTEM USING
416 Naveen Gali Tata Raghavendran GMRIT ELECTRO OCULOGRAPHY
Let only the Right one to view the data:
Shashank L, IIIT privacy management scheme for social
417 Kannan Srinathan Shashank L Hyderabad networks
Kiran Kumar
Matam, Kishore IIIT
418 Kothapalli Kiran Kumar Matam Hyderabad GPGPU Based Spectral Graph Bisection
CERTAIN EXTENSIONS TO FAIRSHARE
Dr G Sudha PSG College SCHEDULING IN HADOOP
421 Sadasivam, Priya N Priya of Technology FRAMEWORK
G Sudha MapReduce Model for Genomic
Sadasivam, PSG College Clustering in Biological Data Mining using
422 Radhika Kumaran Radhika Kumaran of Technology Differential Evolutionary Algorithm
Event Pattern based Framework for
Problem Determination in Distributed
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Demo Presentations

Demo
ID Authors Presenter Institute Demo Title
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Manjunath
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Kumar, Lalit Kumar, Mobile Telemedicine A Redeemer in
101 Dheeraj Pai Mydhili K Nair MSRIT Disaster Relief
Shyam Prakash,
Prashanth Bhat,
Vivek M Vivek M SmartChunaav : A Smart E-governance
401 Anandaramu Anandaramu IBM solution for Indian Elections

Sreekanth L Sreekanth L Solving Real Content Intelligence


204 Kakaraparthy Kakaraparthy IBM Challenges - IBM Master Content Bridge

205 Rakshit S. Trivedi Rakshit S. Trivedi IISc CODD: Constructing Dataless Databases
206 Bruhathi H S Bruhathi H S IISc Picasso on DB2_XML
A SOA-BASED INEGRATED
Pushpalatha.M.N , MEDICATION REMAINDER AND
Hariprasad.N.R , RECORD REFERRING USING
102 Janardhar.C Hariprasad. N.R. MSRIT ANDRIOD CLIENT

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