9-13 September 2024

2nd Workshop on Advancements in Federated Learning

AI-based systems, especially those based on machine learning technologies, have become central in modern societies. In the meanwhile, users and legislators are becoming aware of privacy issues. Users are increasingly reluctant to share their sensitive information, and new laws have been enacted to regulate how private data is handled (e.g., the GDPR).

Federated Learning (FL) has been proposed to develop better AI systems without compromising users’ privacy and the legitimate interests of private companies. Although still in its infancy, FL has already shown significant theoretical and practical results making FL one of the hottest topics in the machine learning community.

Given the considerable potential in overcoming the challenges of protecting users’ privacy while making the most of available data, we propose WAFL (Workshop on Advancements in Federated Learning Technologies) at ECML-PKDD 2024.

This workshop aims to focus the attention of the ECML-PKDD research community on addressing the open questions and challenges in this thriving research area. Given the broad range of competencies in the ECML-PKDD community, the workshop will welcome foundational contributions and contributions expanding the scope of these techniques, such as improvements in the interpretability and fairness of the learned models.

WORKSHOP SCHEDULE (13/09/2024)

Opening [14:00 - 14:05]

Speakers: Mirko Polato, Prof. Roberto Esposito (University of Torino)

Keynote [14:05 - 14:50]

Speaker: Yan Gao, PhD (Flower Labs). Federated Self-Supervised Learning.

Presentations [14:50 - 15:50]

Coffee Break [15:50 - 16:20]

Keynote [16:20 - 17:00]

Remote keynote [17:00 - 18:00]

Speaker: Brendan McMahan, PhD (Google). Provably private learning on federated data for Large Language Models and more

Closing

TOPICS AND THEMES

The WAFL workshop will be centered on the theme of improving and studying the Federated Learning setting. It will welcome applicative and theoretical contributions as well as contributions about specific settings and benchmarking tools. 

The topics include (but are not limited to):

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

We invite submissions of original research on all aspects of Federated Learning (see the not complete list of topics above). Each accepted paper will be included in the workshop proceedings (published by Springer Communications in Computer and Information Science) and presented in the talk session. Authors will have the faculty to opt-in or opt-out. 

Workshop paper submissions should not exceed 12 pages (excluding references) shorter papers are also welcome. Papers must be self-contained, written in English, and formatted according to the Springer LNCS guidelines. 

All papers need to be "best-effort" anonymized. We strongly encourage making code and data available anonymously (e.g., in an anonymous GitHub repository via Anonymous GitHub or in a Dropbox folder). The authors may have a (non-anonymous) pre-print published online, but it should not be cited in the submitted paper to preserve anonymity. Reviewers will be asked not to search for them.

Submissions will be evaluated by at least two reviewers on the basis of relevance, technical quality, potential impact, and clarity. The reviewing process is double-blind (reviewers and area chairs are not aware of the identities of the authors; reviewers can see each other’s names). Papers must not include identifying information of the authors (names, affiliations, etc.), self-references, or links (e.g., GitHub, YouTube) that reveal the authors’ identities (e.g., references to own work should be given neutrally like other references, not mentioning ‘our previous work’ or similar). However, we recognize there are limits to what is feasible with respect to anonymization. For example, if you use data from your own organization and it is relevant to the paper to name this organization, you may do so.

Important dates are reported here.


Workshop's organizers

Assistant Professor
Department of Computer Science
University of Torino
Torino, Italy

Associate Professor
Department of Computer Science
University of Torino
Torino, Italy