3rd CFP: The Future of the Web for Collaborative Science (FWCS 2010) at WWW'10

Dear all,

This is a quick reminder that the deadline for submissions to FWCS [1],
the Future of the Web for Collaborative Science, to be co-located in 
WWW'10, is coming up.

We have opened submission access to EasyChair [2] and we are going to 
publish our workshop proceedings in Nature Precedings [3].

To make this event most exciting we are organizing a panel session, 
namely "Collaboration Science on the Web in 2020".  We are looking 
forward to receiving your submissions to FWCS2010, and hope to see many 
of you in Raleigh.

[1] http://esw.w3.org/topic/HCLS/WWW2010/Workshop
[2] http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=fwcs2010
[3] http://precedings.nature.com/

Cheers,

Jun Zhao
Kei Cheung
M. Scott Marshall
Eric Prud'hommeaux
Susie Stephens

===========================================================================
3rd CALL FOR PAPERS - International Workshop on The Future of the Web
for Collaborative Science 2010
===========================================================================

The First International Workshop on The Future of the Web for
Collaborative Science co-located with WWW'10, April 26 2010, Raleigh, 
NC, USA

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INTRODUCTION

The Web was originally invented with the physics community in mind, but
rapidly expanded to include other scientific disciplines, in particular
the health care and life sciences. By the mid 1990s the Web was already
being used to share data by biomedical professionals and
bioinformaticians. The Web continues to be immensely important to these
fields, however use cases have expanded considerably. Researchers are
now looking to share extremely large data sets on the Web, extract
insights from vast numbers of papers cross sub-disciplines, and use
social networking tools to aggregate data and engage in scientific
discussion. Furthermore, individuals are beginning to store their
medical records online, and some are sharing their genetic makeup in a
bid to find others with a similar profile. These use cases are pushing
the boundaries of what is currently possible with the Web. This half-day
workshop will present how scientists are currently using the Web, and
discuss the functionality that is required to make the Web an ideal
platform for both cutting edge scientific collaboration and for managing
health care related data.

The goals of this workshop are the following:
* Foster innovation in applying the latest web technologies to
collaborative HCLS
* Explore HCLS specific requirements for collaborating on the web, e.g.
trust, privacy, intellectual property, knowledge management, and the
scale and diversity of data
* Learn about the latest developments in data modeling, tools and
technologies for web-based collaborative science
* Bridge communication and knowledge transfer between the HCLS and web
communities

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TOPICS FOR PAPER SUBMISSION

We would encourage submission of papers covering the following topics:
* Web 2.0 applications for large, heterogeneous and complex data sets
* Models for collaborative scientific annotations
* Tools and applications for aggregating information across web sites
* Provenance, attribution, trust, and intellectual property
* Policy for data access, sharing, and anonymization

We seek three kinds of submissions:
* Full technical papers: up to 10 pages
* Short technical and position papers: up to 5 pages
* Demo description: up to 2 pages

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SUBMISSIONS

Submitted papers will be refereed by at least three members the Program
Committee. Accepted papers will be published on the workshop web site.
All submissions must be formatted using the WWW2010 templates
(http://www2010.org/www/authors/submissions/formatting-guidelines/) and 
can be submitted at EasyChair 
http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=fwcs2010.

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IMPORTANT DATES:

* Submission deadline- February 15, 2010
* Notification of acceptance - March 8, 2010
* Camera-ready version - March 22, 2010
* Workshop date - April 27 or 28, 2010

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Workshop Chairs

* Jun Zhao, Oxford University
* Kei Cheung, Yale University
* M. Scott Marshall, Leiden University Medical Center / University of
Amsterdam
* Eric Prud'hommeaux, W3C
* Susie Stephens, Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research & Development

---------------------------------------------------
Programme Committee

# Bosse Andersson, AstraZeneca
# Christopher Baker, University of New Brunswick
# Colin Batchelor, Royal Society of Chemistry
# Olivier Bodenreider, National Library of Medicine
# John Breslin, GUI Galway
# Simon Buckingham Shum, Open University
# Annamaria Carusi, Oxford University
# Helen Chen, Agfa Healthcare
# Paolo Ciccarese, Harvard University
# Tim Clark, Harvard Medical School
# Anita de Waard, Elsevier
# Don Doherty, Brainstage
# Michel Dumontier, Carleton University
# Lee Feigenbaum, Cambridge Semantics
# Timo Hannay, Nature
# William Hayes, BiogenIdec
# Ivan Herman, W3C
# Vipul Kashyap, Cigna
# Nikesh Kotecha, Stanford University
# Phil Lord, University of Newcastle
# Robin McEntire, Merck
# Parsa Mirhaji, University of Texas
# Mark Musen, Stanford University
# Vit Novacek, DERI
# Alex Passant, DERI
# Elgar Pichler, AstraZeneca
# Rosalind Reid, Harvard University
# Patrick Ruch, University of Applied Sciences Geneva
# Daniel Rubin, Stanford
# Satya Sahoo, Wright State University
# Matthias Samwald, DERI, Ireland // Konrad Lorenz Institute for
Evolution and Cognition Research, Austria
# Susanna Sansone, EBI
# Nigam Shah, Stanford University
# Amit Sheth, Wright State University
# Katy Wolstencroft, University of Manchester

Received on Monday, 1 February 2010 15:01:11 UTC