During the CCC, teams are required to develop a software system that can compete with professional chefs in planning a menu that combines a pre-determined set of ingredients in a live contest. The initial input is a collection of cooking recipes. In a live show, the systems are challenged with previously unknown tasks and ingredients, the goal: make menu suggestions. The menus are evaluated and judged in the "live" event by an international jury, including professional chefs.
The final and decisive task in the 2009 competition was to provide a recipie for “pizza with leeks” and CookIIS faced the challenge successfully. In the database of 1,500 recipes, there was no recipe that fit this description completely. CookIIS selected the “No Meat Bean Burn Pizza.” It proposed to adapt this recipe by replacing onions with leeks. This choice convinced the jury that the system’s advanced technical capabilities could be used to make wise culinary choices, a winning outcome!
“Based on Empolis software, our team was able to develop CookIIS, an intelligent application that led us to win the Computer Cooking Contest. Empolis Research & Discovery is an unrivaled solution for the extraction and analysis of unstructured information”, explains Prof. Dr. Klaus-Dieter Althoff, head of the research group “Intelligent Information Systems”, which belongs to the institute of computer science of the University of Hildesheim.
The cooking example clearly depicts how computers are capable of transforming unstructured data into valuable information when powered by the right software. The achievements in the area of intelligently finding the answers to even indirect questions in cooking are transferrable to countless other application areas where users are attempting to sift through mountains of unstructured data for insights.
The Empolis Research and Discovery application is uniquely able to do this through it’s advanced semantic features including Case Based Reasoning (CBR.) CBRis a machine learning method for problem resolution based on examples and analogy. In a database, previously solved problems are stored as cases. The system draws these examples to develop new solutions to new problems. Successfully solved problems and their solutions are then stored in the database for future reference.
To learn more about the Empolis Research & Disovery solution visit us at: http://www.empolis.de/...
For further information about the Computer Cooking Contest: http://www.computercookingcontest.net
Test the CookIIS system here: http://cookiis.iis.uni-hildesheim.de
About ICCBR
The 8th International Conference on Case-Based Reasoning (ICCBR) was held in Seattle, Washington from 20 July to 23 July 2009. Since 1993, this bi-annual conference has been held in alternation with its sister conference in Europe 17 times in a row. The conference strengthens the connections between CBR and other related scientific areas and explores new problems and industrial solutions. Empolis is an ICCBR sponsor..
For further information: http://www.iccbr.org/