- From: RoSOC-M 2009 Workshop <moso2007@gmail.com>
- Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2008 08:17:20 -0800 (PST)
- To: public-bpwg@w3.org
***Apologies for multiple postings*** CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS ROSOC-M 2009 in Taipei, Taiwan Submission deadline: February 1, 2009 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Workshop on the Role of Services, Ontologies, and Context in Mobile Environments (RoSOC-M'09) http://events.sti2.at/RoSOC-M/ May 19, 2009 in conjunction with the 10th International Conference on Mobile Data Management (MDM'09) http://adslab.cs.nctu.edu.tw/mdm2009/ May 18-21, 2009, Taipei, Taiwan -------------------------------------------------------- THEME OF THE WORKSHOP The theme of the workshop is the intersection of three major trends in today’s computing: * mobile computing becomes more and more important. Mobile portable devices have outnumbered already traditional desktop computers and will mould the view of computers future generations will have. * service-oriented computing is viewed by many analysts as the computing paradigm of the near future. It allows for the dynamic integration of functionality provided by different parties. * research on ontologies, in particular in connection with work on the semantic web and semantic web services allows for machine understandable description of functionality and for automatic interaction of devices without the need for human involvement. The proposed workshop investigates how mobile computing can benefit from service-orientation and ontologies and vice versa. The vision is to extend the typically rather limited capabilities of mobile devices by using services offered by other devices, network providers or third parties. Adding ontologies to this scenario allows this extension to be transparent to the human user. Further, some high-end mobile telecom terminals can be called already multimedia computers due their programmability,processor speed, and gigabytes of memory. Already in the near future these devices could also utilize ontologies locally during service provisioning. GENERAL OVERVIEW Today, computers are changing from big, grey, and noisy things on our desks to small, portable, and ever-networked devices most of us are carrying around. This new form of mobility imposes a shift in how we view computers and the way we work with them. Services offer the possibility to overcome the limitations of individual mobile devices by making functionality offered by others available to them on an “as-needed” basis. Thus, using the service-oriented computing paradigm in mobile environments will considerably enlarge the variety of accessible applications and will enable new business opportunities in the mobile space by delivering integrated functionalities across wireless networks. Network hosted mobile services will allow mobile operators and third party mobile services provider to extend their businesses by making their network services available to a broader audience (e.g. developers, service providers, etc.); device hosted service will allow great potential for big innovations for applications and services that can be provided by individual mobile device owners. These mobile service-oriented systems offer functionalities and behaviors that can be described, advertised, discovered, and composed by others. Eventually, they will be able to interoperate even though they have not been designed to work together. This type of interoperability is based on the ability to understand other services and reason about their functionalities and behaviors when necessary. In this respect, mobile service-oriented systems can benefit from marrying the Semantic Web, which provides the infrastructure for the extensive usage of distributed knowledge, to be deployed for modeling services and add meaning, through ontologies, enabling lightweight discovery and composition of mobile services. The ability to appropriately combine mobility and semantic grounded data sharing has generated and is continuously triggering challenging questions in several areas of computer science, engineering and networking. A third dimension is added when taking context information into account: Now, we are no longer dealing with the information system any more, but the real world is intermingled with the computing and will immediately affect and interact with the processing of data and communication. Real-world context information can help to more efficiently exploit the limited resources in mobile environments by supporting better ways to provide data relevant to the user, to enable improved interoperability with the environment and with other mobile users, and to decide when and how to process data. So far, the contextual and semantic aspects of mobile environments have received insufficient attention from the research community as the specific intricacies and resource issues of mobile environments have not been considered and in mobile data management only limited attention has been paid to context and semantics. In this workshop we plan to address the interdisciplinary issues of the domain and bring together researchers and industry attendees from mobile data management, knowledge management/semantics, distributed systems, service-oriented computing, and software engineering to discuss the common interests, share and exchange expertise and results, appreciate each other's results and contributions. The long-term goal is to provide application developers with facilities (middleware, infrastructures, agent systems, service platforms, etc.) that enable the development and deployment of context-aware applications in mobile and pervasive environments. The RoSOC-M '09 workshop is a follow-up edition of the RoSOC-M '08 workshop, which in turn was a joint event of the previous MoSO and MCISME workshop series: MoSO'07, MCISME'07, MoSO'06, MCISME'06. TOPICS The following indicates the general focus of the workshop. However, related contributions are welcome as well. - service-oriented architectures for mobile internet services - languages and methodologies for describing mobile Service-oriented systems - discovery and matchmaking of ontology based services in the context of mobile service-oriented architectures - adaptive selection of services in mobile service-oriented architectures - ontology management in mobile environments - contracting and negotiation with ontology-based mobile services (service level agreements) - approaches to composition of ontology based services in the context of mobile service-oriented systems - invocation, adaptive execution, monitoring, and management of mobile services - interaction protocols and conversation models for mobile services-oriented architectures - ontology-based security and privacy issues in mobile service-oriented systems - applications of mobile service-oriented architectures - analysis and design approaches for mobile service-oriented architectures and services - reasoning with mobile services - ontology-based policies for mobile service-oriented architectures - tools for discovery, matchmaking, selection, mediation, composition, management, and monitoring of services in a mobile world in particular tools that take context into account - mobile service development - acquiring and disseminating context information from physical and logical sensors - semantic sensor networks - exploiting new types of context information such as network context, social context, and system context, and enabling infrastructures to support management of context information and semantics in mobile environments - community-based semantics in mobile environments - activity-based computing and its relation to context-aware mobile computing - context-aware mobile database transactions and query processing - semantic indexing, caching, and replication techniques for mobile environments - context-adaptive applications and algorithms - case studies WORKSHOP FORMAT AND ATTENDANCE The program will occupy a full day, and will include presentations of papers selected from the full papers category (see 'submissions' below). Please note that at least one author of each accepted submission must attend the workshop. The MDM 2009 conference formalities are applied for fees and respective organizational aspects. Submission of a paper is not required for attendance at the workshop. However, in the event that the workshop cannot accommodate all who would like to participate, those who have submitted a paper (in any category) will be given priority for registration. SUBMISSIONS Two categories of submissions are solicited: (1) Full papers (up to 6 pages). (2) Position papers (up to 3 pages). All submissions should be formatted in the IEEE style. Formatting instructions and LaTeX macros are available on the IEEE computer society site: LaTex macros: * ftp://pubftp.computer.org/Press/Outgoing/proceedings/IEEE_CS_Latex.zip Formatting instructions: * ftp://pubftp.computer.org/Press/Outgoing/proceedings/instruct.doc * ftp://pubftp.computer.org/Press/Outgoing/proceedings/instruct.pdf * ftp://pubftp.computer.org/Press/Outgoing/proceedings/instruct.ps All the papers should be submitted in electronic format (pdf version) using the link: http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=rosocm08. All accepted full papers as well as all short/position papers of attendees will be archieved in IEEE Xplore and IEEE Computer Society (CSDL) digital libraries. IMPORTANT DATES Submissions: February 1, 2009 Acceptance: March 1, 2009 Final copy: March 15, 2009 Workshop day: May 19, 2009 ORGANIZING COMMITTEE Birgitta König-Ries, University of Jena, Germany Wathiq Mansoor, American University in Dubai, United Arab Emirates Dumitru Roman, University of Innsbruck / STI Innsbruck, Austria Jari Veijalainen, University of Jyväskylä, Finland PROGRAM COMMITTEE (confirmed; to be extended) Klemens Böhm, University of Karlsruhe, Germany Erik Buchmann, Universität Karlsruhe, Germany Philippe Cudré-Mauroux, MIT, USA Nikolaos Georgantas, INRIA, France Takahiro Hara, Osaka University, Japan Hagen Höpfner, International University, Germany Nafaâ Jabeur, Dhofar University, Oman Qun Jin, Waseda University, Japan Vana Kalogeraki, University of CA, Riverside, USA Takahiro Kawamura, Toshiba Corp, Japan Manolis Koubarakis, University of Athens, Greece Antonio Liotta, Univ. of Essex, UK Andreas Nauerz, IBM Research and Development, Germany Vladimir Oleshchuk, University of Agder, Norway Davy Preuveneers, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium Gerald Reif, University of Zürich, Switzerland Thomas Risse, L3S, Germany Brahmananda Sapkota, DERI Galway, Ireland Kai-Uwe Sattler, TU Ilmenau, Germany Michael Sheng, University of Adelaide, Australia Vlad Tanasescu, Open University, UK Vagan Terziyan, University of Jyvaskyla, Finland Ioan Toma, STI Innsbruck, Austria Kristian Torp, University of Aalborg, Denmark Aphrodite Tsalgatidou, University of Athens, Greece Can Türker, ETHZ, Switzerland Ouri E. Wolfson, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA Andreas Wormbacher, University of Twente, Netherlands -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/cfp%3A-Workshop-on-the-Role-of-Services%2C-Ontologies%2C-and-Context-in-Mobile-Environments-%28RoSOC-M%2709%29-tp21130416p21130416.html Sent from the w3.org - public-bpwg mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
Received on Monday, 22 December 2008 16:18:02 UTC