Events

Explore upcoming seminars, guest lectures, workshops, and other events hosted by the School of Computing Science.
Our events bring together students, researchers, industry partners, and the wider community to share ideas, showcase research, and foster collaboration.
This Week’s EventsAll Upcoming EventsPast EventsWebapp
This Week’s Events
There are no events scheduled for this week
Upcoming events
10th Summer School and Symposium on Computational Interaction (S³CIX)
Group: Inference, Dynamics and Interaction (IDI)
Speaker: multiple
Date: 20 June, 2026
Time: 09:00 - 16:00
Location: Sir Alwyn Williams Building, 422 Seminar Room
Welcome to the Symposium and Summer School on Computational Interaction! This year we are expanding from a Summer School format to also include a 4 day long academic Symposium. We anticipate about 30 students and 40 academics and invited speakers to attend. There will also be two workshops.
Adaptive and Reliability aware Retrieval-Augmented Generation
Group: Information Retrieval (IR)
Speaker: Payel Santra, Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science (IACS)
Date: 22 June, 2026
Time: 15:00 - 16:00
Location: Sir Alwyn Williams Building, 422 Seminar Room
Abstract:
Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) systems are often built around a single retriever, a single knowledge source, and a fixed processing pipeline applied uniformly to every query. While simple, these assumptions can restrict their effectiveness and efficiency in practice. In this talk, I will present a sequence of contributions that progressively challenge these limitations. First, I will introduce a framework for estimating retrieval quality on a per-query, per-ranker basis, and demonstrate how these estimates can be used as principled fusion weights when combining multiple retrievers. I will then show that quality-aware retriever fusion leads to improved performance at both the retrieval and generation stages, benefiting applications such as retrieval fusion and faithful fact correction. Moving further, I will discuss how combining heterogeneous knowledge sources provides complementary evidence through hierarchical fusion. Finally, I will present DRAG, a dynamic RAG framework that adapts retrieval and generation components to individual queries, assigning lightweight pipelines to simpler queries and more powerful configurations to more challenging ones. The broader message is that effective RAG requires principled decisions about what to retrieve, from where, with which models, and how much effort to spend — all conditioned on the query at hand.
Bio:
Payel Santra is a PhD candidate in Computer Science at the Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science (IACS), Kolkata, advised by Partha Basuchowdhuri from IACS and Debasis Ganguly from UoG. Her research focuses mainly on Information Retrieval and Natural Language Processing. She is particularly interested in query performance prediction, adaptive retrieval systems, and trustworthy AI. Her work investigates how large language models can make effective retrieval and generation decisions on a per-query basis to improve reliability, factuality, and efficiency. She has published in venues including ACL, CIKM, ECIR, and WILEY.
[FATA Internal] Section Meeting
Group: Formal Analysis, Theory and Algorithms (FATA)
Speaker: David Manlove
Date: 23 June, 2026
Time: 15:00 - 16:00
Location: Sir Alwyn Williams Building, 422 Seminar Room
Internal section meeting -- see emails.
Predicting Lakehouse Performance in Clouds AND Augur: Pre-Execution Energy Prediction for Workflow Tasks in Heterogeneous Clusters
Group: Systems Seminars
Speaker: James Nurdin & Kathleen West, University of Glasgow
Date: 30 June, 2026
Time: 14:00 - 15:00
Location: Room 422, Sir Alwyn Williams Building and Zoom
This paper addresses this gap by investigating the runtime variance observed for distributed lakehouse analytical queries and its impact on QPP. First, we quantify the run-to-run variance using Kubernetes deployments across three public clouds and one private cloud, spanning multiple database scales and three analytical benchmarks. Our results demonstrate that repeated executions of the same query can vary in runtime by nearly twofold. Second, we conduct a factor analysis study assessing key sources of this runtime variance such as data locality, co-tenant load, and caching effects. Third, we examine how variance influences state-of-the-art QPP models, revealing that addressing key sources of variance can reduce prediction error up to 80%. Finally, we demonstrate the downstream implications for low-carbon scheduling as an example of a workload management technique that relies on performance prediction, showing that accounting for runtime variance can lead to a significant reduction in carbon costs.
[FATA Seminar] TBA
Group: Formal Analysis, Theory and Algorithms (FATA)
Speaker: Huan Luo, FATA
Date: 30 June, 2026
Time: 15:00 - 16:00
Location: Sir Alwyn Williams Building, 422 Seminar Room
TBA
SPLV’26: Scottish Programming Languages and Verification Summer School 2026
Group: Scottish Informatics and Computer Science Alliance (SICSA)
Speaker: SICSA Event, SICSA
Date: 03 August, 2026
Time: 01:00 - 01:00
Location: TBA
The 2026 edition of SPLV will be held at the University of Glasgow, with the main courses running from within the Gilbert Scott Building. The school is aimed at PhD students in programming languages, verification and related areas. Researchers and practitioners are welcome, as are strong undergraduate and masters students with the support of a supervisor. Participants should have a background in computer science, mathematics or a related discipline. Prospective students may contact the organisers if they have any concerns about background knowledge. Registration will open March 2026. View full programme at SPLV 2026 | SPLV
Past events
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