SMBM 2014 submission extension June 30

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Sixth International Symposium on Semantic Mining in Biomedicine (SMBM 2014)
http://www.smbm.org/  

Important Dates

• Full paper submission deadline: June 30th 2014
• Poster and system demonstration paper submission deadline: July 4th 2014
• Notification of acceptance for full papers: July 21st 2014
• Notification of poster and system demonstration papers: July 28th 2014
• Symposium dates: October 6-7th 2014


Venue: October 6th and 7th, University of Aveiro, Portugal

SMBM 2014 aims to bring together researchers from text and data mining in biomedicine, medical, bio- and chemoinformatics, and researchers active in biomedical ontology design and engineering, and the Semantic Web. The combined research helps to promote full integration of data and factual content from large text collections, biological databases, ontological and terminological resources, and from the Web.

We are inviting papers from a full range of topics (see below), emphasizing in particular work on methods deployed in a production-like research environment, user-facing applications of text mining technology, the integration of text with domain resources such as content from reference databases (e.g., UniProt, EntrezGene, OMIM) and semantic resources such as GO, UMLS etc. We also welcome contributions from across the biomedical domains, including genomics, translational medicine, clinical practice, and public health.

Topics of interest include (but are not limited to):

• Development and use of biomedical semantic resources
• Terminology and ontology development for biomedical information systems including terminology evolution
• Integration of text and data mining in the biomedical domain
• (Semantic) Web mining of biomedical information
• Text mining, information extraction, and information retrieval for the biomedical domain
• Evaluation techniques and standards for text mining solutions
• Annotation schemes for biomedical corpora
• Text mining for resource building, e.g. ontologies, and resource enrichment, e.g., biomedical databases
• Representation and discovery of biomedical domain knowledge
• Image/caption processing in relation to content extraction
• Domain-specific reasoning processes, e.g., to infer non-explicit information, validation (trust-worthiness, believability, safety) of extracted information
• Integration of text mining in biological database curation workflows

All accepted papers will be published in the conference proceedings that will be available online. We invite three categories of papers: full research papers, short papers and system papers. Research papers will be given an oral presentation, short papers a poster presentation, and systems papers will be presented in systems demonstration sessions. System papers should describe an implemented system related to a topic of interest that the authors will demonstrate live during the symposium. The final modality of presentation will be decided by the organizing committee.

Authors of selected papers will be invited to submit an extended version for publication in a special issue of the Journal of Biomedical Semantics (JBMS), an open-access journal published by BioMed Central (BMC).

Submissions should follow the ACL instructions for authors, with a maximal limit of 8 pages. The recommended length for system papers and poster submissions is four (4) pages. Manuscripts will be submitted electronically as PDF files. Reviewing will be double-blind, and submissions should therefore NOT contain author names or other obviously identifying information.

Authors of selected papers will be invited to submit an extended version for publication in a special issue of the Journal of Biomedical Semantics (JBMS), an open-access journal published by BioMed Central (BMC).




Scientific chairs
Fabio Rinaldi, University of Zurich, Switzerland
Olivier Bodenreider, National Library of Medicine, USA
 
Program chair
José Luis Oliveira, University of Aveiro, Portugal
 
Local organization committee
Andreia Davide, University of Aveiro, Portugal
David Campos, BMD Software, Portugal
Pedro Lopes, University of Aveiro, Portugal

Program committee
Adrian Shepherd, Birkbeck University of London, UK
David McClosky, Stanford University, USA
Dietrich Rebholz-Schuhmann, University of Zurich, Switzerland
Dina Demner-Fushman, National Library of Medicine, USA
Florian Leitner, CNIO, Spain
Francisco Couto, University of Lisbon, Portugal
Gerold Schneider, University of Zurich, Switzerland
Goran Nenadic, University of Manchester, UK
Gwan-Su Yi, KAIST, South Korea
Hongfang Liu, Georgetown University Medical Center, USA
Hyunju Lee, GIST, South Korea
Jin-Dong Kim, Database Center for Life Science, Japan
Jong C. Park, KAIST, South Korea
Jung-Jae Kim, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
Karin Verspoor, NICTA, Australia
Kevin Cohen, University of Colorado, USA
Makoto Miwa, NaCTeM and University of Manchester, UK
Mariana Neves, Hasso-Plattner Institut, Germany
Martin Krallinger, CNIO, Spain
Michael Krauthammer, Yale University School of Medicine, USA
Mike Conway, University of Pittsburgh, USA
Naoaki Okazaki, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan
Nigel Collier, National Institute of Informatics, Japan
Patrick Lambrix, Linköping University, Sweden
Patrick Ruch, University of Applied Sciences, Geneva
Pierre Zweigenbaum, LIMSI-CNRS, France
Rune Sćtre, University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway
Sampo Pyysalo, NaCTeM and University of Manchester, UK
Sérgio Matos, University of Aveiro, Portugal
Sophia Ananiadou, NaCTeM and University of Manchester, UK
Stefan Schulz, Medical University Graz, Austria
Tomoko Ohta, NaCTeM and University of Manchester, UK
Udo Hahn, University of Jena, Germany
Wendy Chapman, University of Pittsburgh, USA
Yutaka Sasaki, Toyota Technological Institute, Nagoya, Japan

Received on Wednesday, 25 June 2014 08:28:02 UTC