One scholarship of 555 € will be awarded to a student author (please mark student submissions on the title page) of an excellent paper.
The E. M. Gold Award Winners for ALT 2014 are:
for their paper
co-authored by Nader H. Bshouty
Previous E.M. Gold Award Winners
- ALT 2013:
Azadeh Khaleghi
for her paper
“Nonparametric Multiple Change Point Estimation in Highly Dependent Time Series” co-authored by Daniil Ryabko
- ALT 2012: Ziyuan Gao for his paper
“Confident and Consistent Partial Learning
of Recursive Functions”co-authored by Frank Stephan
-
ALT 2011: Malte Darnstädt
for his paper
“Supervised Learning and Co-training” co-authored by Hans Ulrich Simon and Balázs Szörényi.
- ALT 2010: Gábor Bartók
for his paper
“Toward a Classification of Finite Partial-Monitoring Games” co-authored by Dávid Pál and Csaba Szepesvári.
- ALT 2009: Hanna Mazzawi
for his paper
“Reconstructing Weighted Graphs with Minimal Query Complexity” co-authored by Nader Bshouty
- ALT 2008:
Mikhail Dashevskiy for his paper
“Aggregating Algorithm for a Space of Analytic Functions” - ALT 2007:
Markus Maier for his paper
“Cluster Identification in Nearest-Neighbor Graphs” co-authored by Matthias Hein and Ulrike von Luxburg
- ALT 2006:
Alp Atıcı for his paper
“Learning Unions of ω(1)-Dimensional Rectangles” co-authored by Rocco A. Servedio
- ALT 2005:
Rotem Bennet for his paper
“Learning Attribute-Efficiently with Corrupt Oracles” co-authored by Nader Bshouty
- ALT 2004:
Hubie Chen
for his paper
“Learnability of Relatively Quantified Generalized Formulas.” co-authored by Andrei Bulatov and Víctor Dalmau
- ALT 2003:
Sandra Zilles for her paper
“Intrinsic Complexity of Uniform Learning.” - ALT 2002:
Daniel Reidenbach
for his paper
“A Negative Result on Inductive Inference of Extended Pattern Languages” - ALT 2001: Ke Yang
for his paper
“On Learning Correlated Boolean Functions Using Statistical Queries.” - ALT 2000: Gunter Grieser for the paper
“Learning of recursive concepts with anomalies.” co-authored by Steffen Lange and Thomas Zeugmann
- ALT 1999: Yuri Kalnishkan for his paper
“General Linear Relations among Different Types of Predictive Complexity.”