- From: Olaf Hartig <hartig@informatik.hu-berlin.de>
- Date: Thu, 11 Aug 2011 22:02:51 +0200
- To: semantic-web@w3.org
============================== CALL FOR PAPERS ============================== The paper deadline for the 2nd International Workshop on Consuming Linked Data (COLD 2011) http://km.aifb.kit.edu/ws/cold2011/ at the 10th International Semantic Web Conference http://iswc2011.semanticweb.org has been extended to *Friday, August 19*, 2011, 23:59 (11:59pm) Hawaii time HOWEVER, an Abstract for each submission must be submitted by the original deadline August 15, 2011, 23:59 (11:59pm) Hawaii time! ============================== ABSTRACT ============================== The quantity of published Linked Data is increasing dramatically. However, applications that consume this data are not yet endemic. Reasons for this may include one or more of a number of open issues including, lack of methods for seamless integration of Linked Data from multiple sources, dynamic discovery of available data and data sources, provenance and information quality assessment, application development environments, and appropriate end user interfaces. Addressing these issues requires well-founded research, including the development and investigation of concepts that can be applied in systems which consume Linked Data from the Web. Following the success of the 1st International Workshop on Consuming Linked Data (COLD 2010), we organize the second edition of this workshop in order to provide a platform for discussion and work on these open research problems. The main objective is to provide a venue for scientific discourse -including systematic analysis and rigorous evaluation- of concepts, algorithms and approaches for consuming Linked Data. IMPORTANT DATES ============================== Abstract Submission Deadline August 15, 2011, 23.59 Hawaii time Paper Submission Deadline August 19, 2011, 23.59 Hawaii time Acceptance Notification September 6, 2011 Camera Ready September 14, 2011 COLD Workshop October 23, 2011 WORKSHOP INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES ============================== The term Linked Data refers to a practice to publish and interlink structured data on the Web. Since the practice has been proposed in 2006, a grass-roots movement started to publish and to interlink multiple open databases on the Web following the Linked Data principles. Due to conference workshops, tutorials, and general evangelism an increasing number of data publishers such as the BBC, Thomson Reuters, The New York Times, the Library of Congress, and the UK and US governments adopt this practice. This ongoing effort resulted in bootstrapping the Web of Linked Data which, today, comprises billions of RDF triples including millions of RDF links. The published datasets include data about books, movies, music, radio and television programs, reviews, scientific publications, genes, proteins, medicine, and clinical trials, geographic locations, people, companies, statistical and census data, etc. Access to this data presents exciting opportunities for the next generation of Web-based applications: Data from different providers can be aggregated; fragmentary information from multiple sources can be integrated to achieve a more complete view. While a few applications, such as the BBC music guide have used Linked Data to significant benefit, the deployment methodology has been to harvest the data of interest from the Web to create a private, disconnected repository for each specific application. This approach can only be the beginning; new concepts to consume Linked Data are required in order to exploit the Web of Linked Data to its full potential. The concepts, patterns, and tools necessary are very different from situations when resource identifiers are known a priori, local, whole-repository queries are possible, access to the repository is reliable, and relevant data sources are known to be trustworthy. Several open issues that make the development of Linked Data based applications a challenging or still impossible task. These issues include the lack of approaches for seamless integration of Linked Data from multiple sources, for dynamic, on-the-fly discovery of available data, for information quality assessment, and for appropriate end user interfaces. These open issues can only be addressed appropriately when they are conceived as research problems that require the development and systematic investigation of novel approaches. The International Workshop on Consuming Linked Data aims to provide a platform for the presentation and discussion of such approaches. Our main objective is to receive submissions that present scientific discussion (including systematic evaluation) of concepts and approaches, instead of exposition of features implemented in Linked Data based applications. For practical systems without formalization or evaluation we refer interested participants to other offerings at ISWC, such as the Semantic Web Challenge or the Demo Track. As such, we see our workshop as orthogonal to these events. TOPICS ============================== Relevant topics for COLD 2011 include but are not limited to: * Web scale data management (indexing, crawling, etc.) * Query processing over multiple linked datasets * Search in the Web of Linked Data * Auto-discovery - of URIs, - of additional data that is not from the authoritative source of a URI, - of relevant linked datasets in general * Caching and replication * Dataset dynamics - processing change notifications, - keeping consistency, - temporal tracking of linked datasets * Reasoning on Linked Data from multiple sources * Knowledge discovery deriving insights from the Web of Linked Data * Information quality of Linked Data - information quality assessment, - trustworthiness, - provenance * UI research for the interaction with the Web of Linked Data - user interaction and usability, - visualizing Linked Data, - natural language interfaces SUBMISSION AND PROCEEDINGS ============================== We seek full technical research papers with a length of up to 12 pages. In addition to these full papers, researchers are invited to submit short vision papers and short systems/demo papers with a length of up to up to 6 pages, respectively; vision and systems/demo papers must be clearly marked as such. Paper submissions must be formatted in the style of the Springer Publications format for Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS), please see http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-6-793341-0 Please submit your paper via EasyChair at http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=cold2011 Submissions that do not comply with the formatting of LNCS or that exceed the aforementioned page limit will be rejected without review. We note that the author list does not need to be anonymized, as we do not have a double-blind review process in place. Submissions will be peer reviewed by three independent reviewers. Accepted papers have to be presented at the workshop and they will be included in the workshop proceedings that are published online at CEUR-WS. ORGANIZATION COMMITTEE ============================== Olaf Hartig Database and Information Systems Research Group Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany Juan F. Sequeda Department of Computer Sciences University of Texas at Austin, USA Andreas Harth Institut AIFB Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany CONTACT ============================== Web: http://km.aifb.kit.edu/ws/cold2011/ Email: cold.org.ws@googlemail.com Phone: +49 30 2093-3022 Fax: +49 30 2093-3010
Received on Thursday, 11 August 2011 20:03:40 UTC