AAIA'16 Data Mining Challenge Winning

AAIA’16 Data Mining Challenge Winning

deepsense.io tops global competition for predicting dangerous seismic events in active coal mines.

deepsense.io machine learning team members captured the first two places in the world-wide Advances in Artificial Intelligence and Applications (AAIA’16) Data Mining Challenge. The winning entries provided the most accurate solutions for predicting seismic events which endanger the lives of coal miners and may result in the destruction of highly specialized coal-mining equipment.

Protecting the lives of miners working in underground coal mines is one of the industry’s highest priorities around the world. Mining companies are required to measure a variety of environmental factors in mines where their employees work below ground. Unfortunately, even top of the line monitoring systems can fail to predict periods of dangerous seismic movements which, in extreme circumstances, may result in mining disasters. This year’s AAIA Competition addressed this issue and called on data scientists to develop algorithms which could predict periods of intense seismic activity by analyzing seismic energy flow measurements taken within coal mines.

203 teams from around the world participated in this year’s competition, submitting more than 3,000 solutions for the challenge. The two best solutions came from members of the deepsense.io team. The top entries will be presented at the Federated Conference on Computer Science and Information Systems to be held in September 2016 in Gdansk, Poland.

Robert Bogucki, deepsense.io’s Chief Science Officer said today:
“In the last few years there has been significant progress in machine learning. This allows us to tackle and solve increasingly challenging problems. It is essential that this knowledge and skills find applications outside the IT sphere: in industrial, medical or ecological domains. Here at deepsense.io we enjoy such projects immensely. By providing solutions to real-life, tangible problems, you can clearly see the value added by machine learning. That’s why I’m very happy with yet another victory by our team, and hope that our work will encourage mining companies to invest in and develop solutions based on machine learning.”

Links to additional information:
1. ​Blog post “Machine Learning Models Predicting Dangerous Seismic Events”
2. Press-release about deepsense.io win in previous edition of the AAIA’15 competition

###

deepsense.io descripion

Brand Manager at deepsense.io

deepsense.io trademarks at boilerplate

Contact us

The administrator of the personal data provided by you in the registration form is deepsense.ai sp. z o.o., headquartered at al. Jerozolimskie 44, 00-024 Warsaw, Poland. Your personal data will be processed for the purpose of directing marketing content to you.
Detailed information about the processing of your personal data, including your rights, can be found in our privacy policy.
* This consent is required to receive email communication from deepsense.ai sp. z o.o. regarding the company and its offerings.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Locations
  • deepsense.ai, Inc.
  • 2100 Geng Road, Suite 210
  • Palo Alto, CA 94303
  • United States of America
  • deepsense.ai Sp. z o.o.
  • al. Jerozolimskie 44
  • 00-024 Warsaw
  • Poland
  • ul. Łęczycka 59
  • 85-737 Bydgoszcz
  • Poland
Let us know how we can help