- From: Martin Hepp \(DERI\) <martin.hepp@deri.org>
- Date: Wed, 15 Mar 2006 12:26:38 +0100
- To: <public-sws-ig@w3.org>
[Apologies if you receive multiple copies of this message] ++ Proceedings as Springer LNCS ++ Abstracts May 1 ++ Submissions May 15 ++ Call for Papers --------------- First International Workshop on Ontologizing Industrial Standards - OIS 2006 http://events.deri.at/ois2006/ in conjunction with the 25th International Conference on Conceptual Modeling (ER2006) November 6-9, 2006, Tucson, Arizona, USA ============================================================================ Important Dates: ---------------- Abstracts: May 1, 2006 Full papers: May 15, 2006 Notification: June 14, 2006 Camera-ready: July 5, 2006 Workshop: Nov 6, 2006 (to be confirmed) ============================================================================ Theme and Objectives: ---------------------------------- A major bottleneck towards business applications of Semantic Web technology and machine reasoning is the lack of industry-strength ontologies that go beyond academic prototypes. The design of such ontologies from scratch in a textbook-style ontology engineering process is in many cases unattractive, for (1) it would require significant effort, and (2) because the resulting ontologies could not build on top of existing community commitment. Also, real-world problems of data and systems interoperability can only be overcome using Semantic Web technology if ontologies exist that represent the very standards currently in use in systems and databases. There exist at least four major categories of such standards: 1. XML schema definitions for message exchange (OAGIS, BMEcat, ebXML, RosettaNet, OASIS UBL, .) 2. Non-XML message format standards (UN/EDIFACT, X12, SWIFT, VDA, SEDAS, EANCOM, CIF,.) 3. Taxonomies and thesauri (eCl@ss, UNSPSC, RosettaNet technical dictionary, .) 4. Numbering schemes and other shallow vocabularies (EAN, UPC, DUNS, ILN, ISO 639,.) These specifications, though mostly informal in nature, are likely the most valuable asset on the way to real business ontologies that can help solve real business interoperability problems, since they reflect some degree of community consensus and contain, readily available, a wealth of concept definitions. However, the transformation of such standards into useful ontologies is not as straightforward as it appears, because of the following reasons: 1. The specifications come in a variety of formats, e.g. XML, CSV, Microsoft Access, PDF, or plain text, and mostly lack a formal meta-model. 2. The specification and the documentation can be very voluminous, rendering manual translation unfeasible. 3. The same standard can be used in different ways with incompatible semantics in different contexts. In this workshop we want to advance the state of the art in mechanized and semi-automated transformation of existing industrial standards into useful ontologies. Possible topics include, but are not limited to - Conceptual approaches and algorithms for deriving ontologies from thesauri and inconsistent taxonomies and XML Schema definitions - Axiomatization of resulting ontologies using Human-Language Technologies on textual descriptions and other HL elements - Work-arounds and modeling patterns in RDF-S and OWL and other popular ontology languages - Semi-automated and fully mechanized extraction of standards from human- readable specifications (e.g. PDF) - Correct interpretation and representation of the original semantics of existing standards - Ontology Grounding and Upper Ontologies - Standards alignment (e.g. mapping, matching, merging, mediation, and reconciliation) - Intellectual Property Rights issues - Optimal degree of mechanization Submissions: ------------------ We invite submissions of short or full papers reflecting both research in progress and validated results that address any relevant dimension of the problem. Especially welcome will be papers covering successful examples, lessons learned, and best practices of such transformations, e.g. in the Web Services domain so that existing Web Services specifications can be used for Semantic Web services frameworks like WSMO and OWL-S. All papers will be peer-reviewed by at least two members of the Program Committee. Papers should be formatted in Springer LNCS format (http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html) and submitted as PDF documents. Full papers should be 14 pages (maximum: 16), short papers should be up to 8 pages. Accepted papers will be published as part of the ER2006 Workshop volume, planned for publication by Springer in their LNCS series. Camera-ready versions must not be longer than 14 pages. The submission system for the workshop will be available by April 15 at http://events.deri.at/ois2006/ If you have any questions, please contact Martin Hepp at mhepp(AT)computer(DOT)org. For accepted submissions, at least one author must register for the workshop in order for the paper to appear in the proceedings and to be scheduled in the workshop program. More information on the venue, registration, hotels, and related events will be available at http://adrg.eller.arizona.edu/ER2006/ In addition, we will provide more detailed information on the workshop Web site http://events.deri.at/ois2006/. Organizing Committee: --------------------- Martin Hepp Digital Enterprise Research Institute (DERI), University of Innsbruck E-Mail: mhepp[AT]computer[DOT]org Web site: http://www.heppnetz.de / http://www.deri.at Miltiadis Lystras Athens University of Economics & Business, Athens, Greece E-Mail: mdl[AT]aueb[DOT]gr Web site: http://www.eltrun.aueb.gr/content/members/m_mdl.html Richard Benjamins iSOCO - Intelligent Software for the networked economy, Madrid, Spain E-Mail: rbenjamins[AT]isoco[DOT]com Web site: http://www.isoco.com/ Program Committee: ------------------ Chris Bizer, Free University of Berlin Chris Bussler, Cisco Jorge Cardoso, University of Madeira Oscar Corcho, University of Manchester Jos de Bruijn, DERI Innsbruck Doug Foxvog, DERI Galway Fausto Giunchiglia, University of Trento Karthik Gomadam, LSDIS Lab, University of Georgia Michel Klein, Free University of Amsterdam York Sure, University of Karlsruhe Administrative Contact: ----------------------- Martin Hepp Digital Enterprise Research Institute (DERI) University of Innsbruck, Technikerstrasse 21a, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria Phone: +43 512 507 6465, Fax: +43 512 507 9872 E-mail: mhepp[AT]deri[DOT]org http://www.heppnetz.de http://events.deri.at/ois2006/ --------------------------- martin.hepp[AT]deri[DOT]org, phone: +43 512 507 6465 http://www.heppnetz.de / http://www.deri.org
Received on Wednesday, 15 March 2006 11:26:49 UTC