- From: Pasquale Lops <lops@di.uniba.it>
- Date: Thu, 25 Aug 2011 09:12:14 +0200
- To: semantic-web@w3.org
[We apologize for multiple copies]
============================ CALL FOR PAPERS ============================
ACM Transactions on Intelligent Systems and Technology
Special Issue on Semantic Adaptive Social Web
http://tist.acm.org/CFPs/TIST-SI-SASWeb.html
=========================================================================
1. OVERVIEW
===========
Social Web is growing daily, together with the number of users and
applications.
Users generate a significant part of Web content and traffic: they
create, connect,
comment, tag, rate, remix, upload/download, new or existing resources in an
architecture of participation, where user contribution and interaction
add value.
Users are also involved in a broad range of social activities like
creating friendship
relationships, recommending and sharing resources, suggesting friends,
creating groups
and communities, commenting friends activities and profiles and so on.
At the same time, Semantic Web, whose main goal is to describe Web
resources in a way
that allows machines to understand and process them, has started to go
out from academies
and begins to be massively exploited in many web sites, incorporating
high-quality user
contributed content and semantic annotations using Internet-based
services as an enabling
platform.
The recent advances in the Semantic Web area, and specifically the
widespread use of weak
semantic techniques (the so-called 'lowercase' semantic web), such as
the use of microformats
(e.g. eRDF, RDFa) to attach semantics to content, also provide new
standardized ways to process
and share information. This approach allows information intended for
end-users (such as contact
information, geographic coordinates, calendar events, ...) to also be
automatically processed by
machines, and this obviates other more complicated methods of
processing, such as natural language
processing or screen scraping.
The primary goal of this special issue is to showcase cutting edge
research on the intersection of
Social Web and Semantic Web, in order to analyze the benefits adaptation
and personalization have
to offer in the Web of the future, the so-called Social Semantic Web.
We are particularly interested in system-oriented papers, in which the
approaches are accompanied by
an in-depth experimental evaluation.
2. TOPICS
=========
Topics of interests include, but are not limited to:
- The impact of Social Web on Semantic Web, and viceversa
- Applications and tools using Social Semantic Web technologies
- Emerging semantic platforms for the Social Semantic Web
- Enriching Social Web with semantic data: weak semantic techniques,
microformats and other approaches
- Folksonomies vs Ontologies
- Novel approaches and/or systems combining semantic, social and
adaptive aspects
- Adaptation, personalization, recommendation models and goals in the
Social Semantic Web
- Reasoning in the Social Semantic Web
- Novel trust and reputation models
- Social navigation support, social search and semantic browsing
- Semantic Mashups
- User studies and novel metrics for evaluating Social Semantic Web
applications
- Querying and mining Social Semantic Web data
3. TENTATIVE SCHEDULE
=====================
Full paper submission: September 30, 2011
Review decision notification: December, 22 2011
Final manuscript: February 6, 2012
4. SUBMISSIONS GUIDELINES
=========================
Manuscripts submitted to the special issue should contain original
material not published
in nor submitted to other journals. Each paper will be reviewed by at
least three expert
reviewers.
Papers which do not meet publication quality standards, or does not pass
the editorial
assessment of suitability of this special issue will be rejected before
the review process.
Full papers should be sent via on-line submission system at
http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/tist
(please select "Special Issue: Semantic Adaptive Social Web" as the
manuscript type).
Details of the journal and manuscript preparation are available on the
ACM TIST
Website at http://tist.acm.org/
5. GUEST EDITORS
================
Federica Cena
Department of Computer Science - University of Turin, Italy
Web site: http://www.di.unito.it/~cena/
E-mail: cena@di.unito.it
Antonina Dattolo
Dipartimento di Matematica e Informatica - University of Udine, Italy
Web site: http://www.dimi.uniud.it/antonina.dattolo/
E-mail: antonina.dattolo@uniud.it
Pasquale Lops
Department of Computer Science - University of Bari Aldo Moro, Italy
Web site: http://www.di.uniba.it/~swap/lops.html
E-mail: lops@di.uniba.it
Julita Vassileva
Department of Computer Science - University of Saskatchewan, Canada
Web site: http://julita.usask.ca/homepage/j1.htm
E-mail: jiv@cs.usask.ca
Received on Thursday, 25 August 2011 16:13:40 UTC