The society was formed as the IEEE Neural Networks Council on November 17, 1989 with representatives from 12 different IEEE societies. On November 21, 2001, the IEEE Neural Networks Council became the IEEE Neural Networks Society. In November 2003, it changed its name to the IEEE Computational Intelligence Society.
To promote knowledge dissemination in computational intelligence, multimedia tutorials are being developed and provided, as well as courses and summer schools are being supported. To help graduate student research and exchange especially at the international level summer research grants are provided. New initiatives cover the needs from the high school to continuous education in order to serve the computational intelligence community and all people interested in computational intelligence and its applications. Among these planned activities there are: student games-based competitions, pre-college educational programs, development of suggested university curricula, continuing education programs, and creation of the educational archive.
Conferences
The society sponsors and co-sponsors a number of international conferences, such as CIBB and the IEEE Conference on Computational Intelligence and Games, a series of annual conference on computational and artificial intelligence in games.
Awards
The IEEE Computational Intelligence Society's awards recognize excellent achievements and outstanding volunteers in the field. Here is a list of the current awards:
The CIS technical activities cover many exciting technologies in computational intelligence and their applications in a wide variety of areas. CI aims to mimicking nature for effective problem solving and the CIS technical activities promote scientific research, technological development, practical applications, and knowledge dissemination in CI. The CIS currently have 11 Technical Committees, which can be grouped into the following three categories: Technology-oriented TCs promote CI technologies. They are TCs on:
Application-oriented TCs deal with applications of CI technologies. They are TCs on:
Bioinformatics and Bioengineering
Computational Finance and Economics
Data Mining
Games
Incubator TCs identify and nurture new CI technologies and new areas for CI applications. They are TCs on:
Emergent Technologies
Intelligent Systems Applications
In addition, the CIS has the Standards Committee, dealing with standards, data sets, and software of interest to people working in CI, and the Technology Transfer Committee, promoting transfers of CI technologies to the industry. The first IEEE Standard sponsored by IEEE Computational Intelligence Society was IEEE 1855. The second standard was IEEE 1849.
Presidents
The following persons are or have been president of the society: