UCL and BCS Academy presented the 15th London Hopper Colloquium on Tuesday 14 December 2021. London Hopper is for academic researchers across the UK who are building a career in computing.
Featuring women speakers talking about their research, a spotlight competition open to postgraduate students, and opportunities to network with other new researchers in computing, this year’s event will be held online, via Zoom. We will hear from women about their work on innovations that will change the world, fact checking, verification, and natural language generation.
Spotlight Competition Eligibility: Women* research masters students and PhD students, with a Computer Science focus, enrolled at UK universities.
Audience attendance is open to all.
*Please note that London Hopper uses an inclusive definition of “woman” and “female”, which means all individuals who identify fully or partly as women. We also welcome non-binary people to attend and present, and everyone is welcome to attend as an audience member.
Research Spotlight competition
The Research Spotlight competition sponsored by IBM focuses on female research Masters and PhD students, providing them with a friendly forum for communicating the essence of their work. This will be via 3-5 minutes (depending on the number of accepted submissions) recorded presentations, broadcast during Hopper 2021. Presentation topics may be from any research area within the field of computing, and may encompass interdisciplinary studies connected to computing. There will be 10-12 spotlight presentations, split between two thirty-minute sessions. Prizes will be awarded for the best research spotlight presentations and each entrant will also receive a prize.
If you would like to apply for the research spotlight competition, please first register for London Hopper 2021. You will receive an Eventbrite confirmation email, containing a link to a form to submit your abstract.
Submission deadline is midnight 15th November 2021.
If you have any questions about the event, please email us: hopper@ucl.ac.uk
Programme
09:50 - 10:00: Online Registration
10:00 - 10:05: Welcome, Mehrnoosh Sadrzadeh (UCL)
10:05 - 10:10: London Hopper History, Caroline Wardle (UCL)
10:10 - 10:40: First Speaker: Andrea Martin (IBM)
10:45 - 11:15: Research Spotlight 1, Student Recorded Presentations
11:15 - 11:25: Coffee Break
11:25 - 11:55: Second Speaker: Neema Kotonya (Imperial, Winner of Hopper's Spotlight 2020)
12:00 - 12:30: Research Spotlight 2, Student Recorded Presentations
12:30 - 13:45: Lunch break (Judges meet privately to choose the Spotlight winner)
13:45 - 14:15 - Third Speaker: Professor Alexandra Silva (Cornell)
14:20 - 14:50: Fourth Speaker: Maria Liakata (QMUL)
14:50 - 15:00: Spotlight Prize
Prizes
The following three prizes will be awarded:
Speaker prize (chosen by the judges):
• £150
• Invitation to be a speaker in the following year's London Hopper.
• 1-year membership of BCS
Runner up Prize (chosen by the judges)
• £150
People's Choice Prize (chosen by popular vote of the attendees)
• £150
Finalist Prizes: The following finalist prize* will be given to each finalist who makes a presentation but who does not win one of the 3 speaker prizes.
• £30
*The cash prizes and awards are provided by IBM; the 1-year membership of BCS is provided by BCSWomen.
How to enter the competition
When you register for London Hopper you will be asked to send in an abstract describing your proposed research topic. Submission deadline is midnight on 15th November 2021.
These abstracts will be evaluated and the top 10-12 will be selected and placed on a finalist list. Other strong abstracts will be placed on a reserve list in rank order. You will receive notification of your acceptance by 22nd November 2021.
All finalists are then required to submit an acceptable set of four Powerpoint slides (no dynamic Powerpoint slides allowed) and a recording of their presentation, on their research topic. When you register for the competition, you will be sent a Powerpoint presentation template and an example set of slides to guide you in preparing your own slides. We recommend that members of the reserve list also prepare their talks and slides in case they are invited to participate in the Research Spotlight at short notice. At London Hopper itself, the finalists’ recorded presentations and slides will be broadcasted by the person in charge.
Preparing your Spotlight slides
When you register for the Research Spotlight competition, we will provide you with a Powerpoint presentation template and an example set of slides to guide you in preparing your own slides. All finalists must submit an acceptable set of 4 slides (no dynamic Powerpoint slides allowed) for their presentation and a recording of it.
Due to timing constraints, the number of spotlight entries is limited to 10-12 and a reserve list will be maintained. Finalists will be disqualified if they have not submitted an acceptable set of slides and a recording of their presentation by the specified timescale. If a presentation time slot becomes available, the top-ranked member of the reserve list will be invited to join the finalists and participate in the Research Spotlight.
Spotlight Presentations
Your recording will be stopped at the specified minute mark., you will not be allowed to over-run. You may not use props during your presentation; you are being judged on the quality of your recorded presentation, slides and written abstract.
Judging Criteria
For the Spotlight and Runner Up prizes, the judges will have read the abstracts beforehand but will also judge the competition on the quality of the presentations and slides. The criteria the judges will use in selecting winners are:
- Communication – How successful overall were you in explaining your research topic through the presentation, slides and abstract?
- Presentation – Did you present a clear story with the right amount of scientific and/or technical content?
- Slides – Were your slides well designed in terms of images, graphics and text?
- Abstract – Did your abstract clearly describe the research topic?
For the People’s Choice Prize, each attendee at London Hopper will be provided with an entry to a voting system and will be invited to cast a single vote for the prize winner.
Points to note
1. In the event of a "tie" for the People’s Choice prize, the judges will choose a single winner from the tied entrants.
2. If you have already won a prize in an earlier London Hopper Colloquium Spotlight or Poster competition, you are not eligible to enter this year’s Research Spotlight competition.
3. The organisers reserve the right to reject a Hopper Research Spotlight submission if the content of the abstract or slides are deemed inappropriate.
Speakers
Andrea Martin is Leader of the IBM Watson Center in Munich and responsible for its scope and market relevance. Before taking over this role in July 2019, she was Chief Technology Officer (CTO) for IBM Germany, Austria and Switzerland and President, IBM Academy of Technology. Andrea Martin has started her career at IBM in 1992 after earning her Master’s degree (diploma) in Applied Mathematics from the University in Karlsruhe, Germany.
In her role, Andrea Martin uses her experience and global network from more than 25 years in the international services business, which also provides valuable input for her activities as an expert in the Commission for AI of the German Parliament (initiated in September 2018).
Title: 5 in 5 Innovations That Will Change Our Lives Within Five Years. Abstract: Every year IBM Research publishes the "5 in 5", five innovations that will most likely change our lives within the next five years. In 2020, the vision behind the "5 in 5" is to radically accelerate the process of discovery for a sustainable future. The "5 in 5" are all about:
- Capturing and transforming CO2 to mitigate climate change;
- Modelling Mother Nature to feed a growing citizenry while reducing carbon emissions;
- Rethinking batteries before we have to rethink our world;
- Sustainable materials, sustainable products, sustainable planet;
- Learning from our past for a healthier future.
This presentation will discuss each of the five innovations, encourage the participants to think "outside the box", and envision a more sustainable, healthy and safe future worth living in.
Neema Kotonya is a fourth year PhD student in the Department of Computing at Imperial College London. The main topic of her research is explainable methods for automated fact verification.
Her broader research interests include interpretable NLP, question answering, argumentation mining, and natural language generation. In 2021, she was a recipient of the J.P. Morgan PhD Fellowship. Before starting her PhD at Imperial College London, Neema was a student at University College London where she earned an MEng in Computer Science.
Neema was also the Judge’s Choice awardee for the Spotlight Competition at the 2020 London Hopper Colloquium.
Title: Explainable Automated Fact Checking. Abstract: Fact checking has an important role to play in addressing misinformation. In recent times, fact checking has caught the interest of researchers in machine learning and natural language processing (NLP). Since then, numerous exciting advancements have been made in automated fact checking, thanks to new deep learning models for NLP and novel datasets for the fact checking task.
However, one area which is still largely unexplored is that of explanations for automated fact checking. Explanations are particularly important for automated fact checking. Not only can they help to elucidate a system’s predictions, but as fake news often surrounds contentious subject matter, these explanations could help to gain a user’s trust in the fact-checking system.
I will give an overview of the state of the art in automated fact verification, before discussing explainable AI in this context. I will focus on the types of explanations which can be extracted from these systems, how we can assess the usefulness and quality of these explanations, and other explainability related tasks such as factual error correction and generating adversarial claims.
Professor Alexandra Silva is a theoretical computer scientist whose main research focuses on semantics of programming languages and modular development of algorithms for computational models.
A lot of her work uses the unifying perspective offered by coalgebra, a mathematical framework established in the last decades. Alexandra is currently a Professor at Cornell University, and she was up to recently a Professor of Algebra, Semantics, and Computation at University College London, where part of her research group is still based.
She was the recipient of an ERC consolidator grant in 2021, a Royal Society Wolfson Award 2019, Needham Award 2018, the Presburger Award 2017, the Leverhulme prize 2016, and an ERC starting Grant in 2015.
Title: Opening the black-box: verification via model learning. Abstract: In this short talk, Alexandra will give a glimpse of a verification technique called model learning that enables analysis of software even when the source code is not available.
Maria Liakata is a Turing AI fellow and Professor in Natural Language Processing (NLP) at the School of Electronic Engineering and Computer Science, Queen Mary University of London.
She is also honorary Professor at the Department of Computer Science, University of Warwick. At the Turing she founded and co-leads the NLP and data science for mental health special interest groups and supervises PhD students. Maria is in receipt of a five year EPSRC/UKRI Turing AI Fellowship which involves developing new methods for NLP and multi-modal data to allow the creation of longitudinal personalized language monitoring.
She is also the co-PI of projects on Mobile Sensing of Altered Every Day Function in Early Alzheimer’s Disease (MEDEA), “Language sensing for dementia monitoring & diagnosis”, “Opinion summarization from social media", "PANACEA: An AI-enabled evidence-driven framework for claim veracity assessment during pandemics". She leads a team of 5 postdocs and 7 PhD students.
Title: Towards creating time sensitive sensors from language and heterogeneous user generated content. Abstract: There has been increasing interest in processing user generated content such as language in social media posts collected over time to make predictions about individuals' state of mind. I will describe the challenges involved and present work in progress on developing sensors for capturing digital biomarkers from language and heterogeneous user generated content to understand the evolution of an individual over time.