- From: Paul Groth <pgroth@gmail.com>
- Date: Mon, 12 Mar 2012 21:21:05 -1100
- To: provenance-challenge@ipaw.info, " \" <semantic-web@w3.org>
Apologies for cross-posting --------------------------- Call for Papers: 4th International Provenance and Annotation Workshop (IPAW'2012) June 19-21, 2012 - Santa Barbara, California Initial Abstracts Due: **March 16, 2012** Paper Deadline March 23, 2012 http://ipaw2012.bren.ucsb.edu/ *Overview* "Provenance of a resource is a record that describes entities and processes involved in producing and delivering or otherwise influencing that resource. Provenance provides a critical foundation for assessing authenticity, enabling trust, and allowing reproducibility. Provenance assertions are a form of contextual metadata and can themselves become important records with their own provenance." --Provenance XG Final Report 2012 will be a watershed year for provenance/annotation research. Under the stewardship of the World Wide Web Consortium, the global community of provenance practitioners is converging on standardized definitions, models, representations, and protocols for provenance. An infrastructure may soon be in place that could potentially support universal access to the provenance of online artifacts. The time is ripe to explore the implications of ubiquitous provenance. Provenance is understood to be a critical component of information trustworthiness; indeed, much provenance research has been motivated by the vision of Tim Berners-Lee's "Oh, yeah?" button for accessing the metadata of a web resource. Provenance is also increasingly understood to be essential to scientific reproducibility—the provenance and annotation of a digital scientific artifact often fulfills the same function that a paper notebook did for earlier laboratory experiments. In many cases provenance offers the only coherent picture of ad-hoc digital workflows. Provenance is also a requirement for long-term preservation of digital information. The spread of automatic systems for provenance capture and management will allow provenance to be associated with digital artifacts whose complexity (e.g., social networks) or volume (e.g., environmental satellite data) would make manual annotation prohibitive. Furthermore, the availability of large corpora provenance records is enabling research into automatic exploration of and reasoning about provenance. This workshop builds on a successful line of provenance and annotation workshops (http://www.ipaw.info/). *Special Features* - Keynote: Philip E. Bourne - Professor in the Department of Pharmacology and Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences at the University of California San Diego - Tutorial on the W3C Provenance Specifications *Topics* The goal of this workshop is to bring together researchers into all aspects of information provenance and annotation. In particular, IPAW 2012 seeks participation from researchers who are developing standards and services for the representation and communication of provenance, and who are implementing provenance in active data analysis and management environments. Topics of interest for IPAW 2012 include: - Standardization of provenance models, services, and representations - Provenance management architectures and techniques - Use cases for provenance - Analytic provenance and the relationship between provenance and visualization - Provenance and the semantic web - Human interpretation of provenance - Security and privacy implications of provenance - Legal applications of provenance - Integration of provenance into existing information management architectures - Provenance and social media - Provenance and its relationship to annotation and metadata - Scalability of provenance architectures - Relationships between provenance and workflow - Machine learning for and from provenance - Provenance and digital curation - Reasoning about provenance - Provenance implications for trust and authenticity - Publishing provenance - Querying provenance - Provenance management system prototypes and commercial solutions *Important Dates* - Abstracts Due: March 16, 2012 - Papers Due: March 23, 2012 - Notification of Acceptance: April 20, 2012 - Conference: June 19-21 2012. *Conference Chairs* James Frew - University of California, Santa Barbara Paul Groth - VU University Amsterdam Program Committee: http://ipaw2012.bren.ucsb.edu/index.php/Program_Committee *Submissions* -Research Papers- Authors are invited to submit original, unpublished research papers that are not under review for publication elsewhere. Papers must be: - no longer than 12 pages, including references and appendices - formatted according to the Springer LNCS guidelines and technical instructions - submitted as PDF files to https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ipaw12 A proceedings volume will be published after the workshop in the Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science series. Submitted research papers will also be automatically considered for poster-only presentation. -Posters and Demonstrations- IPAW 2012 also encourages the presentation of ongoing work as posters or demonstrations. Proposals for posters or demonstrations should be formatted and submitted as described above, with the following additional restrictions: Demonstrations: Using no more than 4 pages, describe the context and highlights of the proposed demonstration, including a brief description of the demonstration scenario. The title of the proposal must begin with "DEMO:". Posters: Submit a 1-page abstract of the poster. The title of the abstract must begin with "POSTER:".
Received on Monday, 12 March 2012 20:21:39 UTC