- From: sercomp 2007 <sercomp2007@gmail.com>
- Date: Sat, 16 Jun 2007 10:33:48 -0700 (PDT)
- To: semantic-web@w3.org
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- International Workshop on Service Composition & SWS Challenge (SerComp & SWS Challenge '07) http://events.deri.at/sercomp2007/ at the 2007 IEEE/WIC/ACM International Conference on Web Intelligence (WI 2007) http://www.cs.sjsu.edu/wi07/wi/ November 5, 2007, Silicon Valley, USA -------------------------------------------------------- GENERAL OVERVIEW Composition of services in dynamic environments has received much interest for its potential to support Business-to-Business (B2B) or Enterprise Application Integration (EAI). One of such dynamic environments is the World Wide Web, which makes available a huge and rapidly growing number of heterogeneous services. Recent efforts to develop ontology languages for the Web and ways of describing web services semantically in this environment have resulted in a number of prototype systems that can dynamically combine services and interact with them. There are many different types of architectures that have been developed around the concept of “services" - parties providing dynamic functionality to other parties. As the number of services increases so does the need for service reuse and service 'composability' - creation and provision of complex value-added services resulting in composite services. Additional infrastructure may well need to be defined to support composition in these open architectures. This workshop is composed of two initiatives: the third edition of the Workshop on Service Composition and the fifthSemantic Web Services Challenge. This workshop aims to tackle the research problems around methods, concepts, models, languages and technology that enable composition of services in the context of the WWW. Of particular interest are the methodologies that enable automatic or semiautomatic composition of services, semantic web service, web services, and e-services. The workshop especially welcomes contributions that exploit rich semantic descriptions of web services for semi-automatic and automatic composition using web intelligence and autonomous agents technology. This workshop aims to bring together researchers and industry attendees (e.g. leading modelers, architects, system vendors, open-source projects, developers, and end-users) addressing many of these issues, and promote and foster a greater understanding of how the composition of services in the context of WWW can assist business to business and enterprise application integration. TOPICS * requirements on service composition * applications of WWW service composition * web languages for describing services and their relevance to composition * web-based composition languages * choreography and orchestration languages * workflow models and languages and their relevance to WWW service composition * conversation models and languages for composed services * applicability of agent technologies to WWW service composition * formal models for service composition * reasoning about service composition * service composition engines and tools * dynamic composition methods and algorithms * discovery and matchmaking based dynamic composition * execution and lifecycle management of composed services * monitoring and recovery strategies for composed services * security and privacy for composed services * policies for composed services * mediation in composed services * reuse and versioning of services and compositions * semantic approaches to composition * composition modeling language standards * composition with Web services, eServices, Semantic Web Services, GRID services * relation between WWW service composition and GRID service composition * service composition and Service Oriented Architectures (SOA) These topics indicate the general focus of the workshop, however, related contributions are welcome also. Papers for the SWS Challenge will describe how they solve the problems in the Challenge scenarios, which involve various composition problems, and actually solving them by calling the web services. SUBMISSIONS All submissions should be formatted in IEEE Computer Society style with a page limit of 4 + 1 extra, and should be submitted in electronic format using the link: http://wi-consortium.org/wiiat07/scripts/ws_submit.php. All contributions will be peer reviewed by a program committee that will incorporate well recognized experts in the area of service composition. The Workshop proceedings will be published by IEEE Computer Society Press, to be indexed by EI. IMPORTANT DATES Submissions: July 10, 2007 Acceptance: August 6, 2007 Final copy: August 17, 2007 Workshop day: November 5, 2007 Code review day (optional): November 6, 2007 (for SWS Challenge papers) ORGANIZING COMMITTEE - M. Brian Blake, Georgetown University, USA - Charles Petrie, Stanford University, USA - Dumitru Roman, DERI Innsbruck, AUstria PROGRAM COMMITTEE (to be confirmed and extended) - Michael Altenhofen, SAP, Germany - Anupriya Ankolekar, AIFB, University of Karlsruhe, Germany - Luciano Baresi, Politecnico di Milano, Italy - Boualem Benatallah, UNSW, Australia - Christoph Bussler, CISCO, USA - Siobh?n Clarke, Trinity College, Ireland - Liliana Cabral, Open University, UK - Stefano Ceri, Politecnico di Milano, Italy - Dario Cerizza, CEFRIEL, Italy - Jos De Bruijn, DERI Innsbruck, Austria - Marin Dimitrov, Onto Text, Bulgaria - John Domingue, Open University, UK - Kuropka Dominik, Potsdam University, Germany - Paul Downey, BT, UK - Christian Drumm, SAP, Germany - Alistair Duke, BT, UK - Schahram Dustdar, TU Wien, Austria - Marie-Christine Fauvet, University of Grenoble, France - Aditya K. Ghose, University of Wollongong, Australia - Laurent Henocque, LISIS, France - Martin Hepp, DERI Innsbruck, Austria - Michael Huhns, University of South Carolina, USA - Rick Hull, Lucent, USA - Raman Kazhamiakin, University of Trento, Italy - Ryszard Kowalczyk, SWIN, Australia - Holger Lausen, DERI Innsbruck, Austria - Silvestre Losada, ISOCO, Spain - Tiziana Margaria, Universit?t Potsdam, Germany - E. M. Maximilien, IBM Almaden Research Center, USA - Jan Mendling, WU Wien, Austria - Nanjangud C. Narendra, IBM India Research Lab, Bangalore, India - Jeff Pan, University of Aberdeen, UK - Axel Polleres, DERI Galway, Ireland - Marc Richardson, BT, UK - Thomas Risse, Fraunhofer IPSI, Germany - Marta Sabou, Knowledge Media Institute, Open University - Shazia Sadiq, University of Queensland, Australia - Michael Sheng, CSIRO, Australia - Munindar P. Singh, North Carolina State University, USA - Ioan Toma, DERI Innsbruck, Austria - Emanuele Della Valle, CEFRIEL, Italy - Tomas Vitvar, DERI Galway, Ireland - Richard Waldinger, SRI, USA - Holger Wache, Vrije University, Netherlands - Alexander Wahler, NIWA WEB Solutions, Austria - Sam Watkins, BT, UK - Mathias Weske, HPI, Germany - Johannes M. Zaha, QUT, Australia - Liangzhao Zeng, IBM Research, USA - Michal Zaremba, DERI Innsbruck, Austria -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/cfp%3A-SerComp---SWS-Challenge-%2707-tf3933619.html#a11156349 Sent from the w3.org - semantic-web mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
Received on Monday, 18 June 2007 00:31:52 UTC