- From: Christophe Debruyne <chrdebru@vub.ac.be>
- Date: Mon, 20 Jul 2015 21:27:10 +0200
- To: dbworld@cs.wisc.edu, public-lod@w3.org, semantic-web@w3.org, PlanetKR@kr.org
=============================================================================== 4th International Workshop on Methods, Evaluation, Tools and Applications for the Creation and Consumption of Structured Data for the e-Society (META4eS’15) Part of the OnTheMove Conferences & Workshops, Rhodes, Greece, 26-30 October 2015 Website: http://www.onthemove-conferences.org/index.php/meta4es-2015 =============================================================================== Supported by IFIP TC 12 WG 12.7 – Social Networking Semantics and Collective Intelligence and The Big data roadmap and cross-disciplinarY community for addressing socieTal Externalities (BYTE, http://byte-project.eu/) Project SCOPE The future e-Society is an e-inclusive society based on the extensive use of digital technologies at all levels of interaction between its members. It is a society that evolves based on knowledge and that empowers individuals by creating virtual communities that benefit from social inclusion, access to information, enhanced participation, interaction and freedom of expression, among other. This leads to radical changes in the dynamics and the interaction between its members, determining new economic scenarios. In this context, the role of the World Wide Web and the information and communication technologies (ICTs) in the way people and organizations exchange information and interact in the social cyberspace is crucial. Large amounts of structured data – Big (Open) Data – are being generated, published and shared and a growing number of services and applications emerge from it. The structured data that are being published – e.g., as RDF on the Web of Data – is the result of current popular initiatives adopted by a growing number of actors from transversal domains (e.g. governments, city municipalities, etc.). Managing such data in order to make sense of it by producing services and applications for end-user consumption from government and public body data is presently a huge challenge for the research community, going towards a Value Web. From a business perspective, the (dynamic) composition of services using Big Structured Data stimulates the market. These initiatives take into account methods for the creation, storage and consumption of increasing amounts of structured data and tools that make possible their application by end-users to real-life situations, as well as their evaluation. The final aim is to lower the barrier between end-users and ICT through contributions to the e-Society such as multilingual information, information visualization, privacy and trust, rich multimedia retrieval, etc. The applications must be designed in such a way to help people use their knowledge at best and generate new knowledge in return, while keeping intact their privacy and confidentiality, whether it is in e-Culture, e-Government, e-Democracy, e-Health, or in other areas of the e-Society. The fourth edition of the Meta4eS workshop aims at bringing together researchers, professionals and experts interested to discuss, demonstrate and share best practices, ideas and results around the creation, management and, particularly, consumption of structured data for the e-Society. The focus will be both on scientific and technological research and on industrial use cases from various application domains. TOPICS OF INTEREST This year, Meta4eS has a special focus on cross-disciplinary communities and applications associated with Big Data in any possible domain (e.g., Culture, Tourism, Smart Manufacturing and Production, Smart City and Digital City, Health, Government and Public Sector, Environmental and Geo-Spatial, Ambient Assisted Living, Energy, Communications, Social Media) and their impact on the e-Society. Topics related to methods, tools and applications for the Big Data Value Chain for the e-Society and their evaluation are of interest. These include (but are not limited to) best practices, case studies and tendencies related to: - Big Data for Cross-disciplinary Communities - Societal Impacts of Big Data - Research Roadmapping based on Societal Externalities of Big Data - Big Data Value Chain in e-Society - Smart Data - Data Visualization Tools for e-Society - Knowledge Creation, Sharing and Retrieval for e-Society - Knowledge Evolution from Social Processes - Use of Natural Language Resources in the Creation and Consumption of Structured Data - Exploiting Multilingual Terminology for Structured Data Consumption - Best Practices in Consuming Big Structured Data for e-Society - Lightweight Ontology Creation Methodologies for e-Society - Ontology in Use for e-Society Applications across Communities and Disciplines - Semantic Information Processing for better understanding our society - Service composition for e-Society - Security, Privacy and Trust in Consuming Big Structured Data - Evaluation Methodologies - Usability Testing applied to Big Structured Data in e-Society - End-user experience with Big (Open) Data - Research Projects and Live Demos regarding Applications of Big Structured Data for e-Society IMPORTANT DATES - Abstract Submission: 24 July 2015 (Deadline extended) - Full Paper Submission: 24 July 2015 (Deadline extended) - Demo & Poster Abstract Submission: 24 July 2015 (Deadline extended) - Acceptance Notification: 16 August 2015 - Camera Ready Due: 1st September 2015 - Registration Due: 1st September 2015 - OTM Conferences and Workshops: 26-30 October 2015 SUBMISSION GUIDELINES Submitted papers will be refereed by at least three members of the workshop Program Committee, based on originality, significance, technical soundness and clarity of expression. Submissions must be in English and are of two types:regular papers and short papers. Papers should not exceed 5,000 words (excluding references), and should not exceed 10 pages in the final camera-ready format. Short papers, of at most 5 pages in the final camera-ready format, may relate to a software tool demonstration, describe a small case study, or explore preliminary ideas about a relevant topic. Papers should be formatted according to the Springer Verlag LNCS style and submitted in PDF format. Author instructions can be found at: http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html. Paper submission site: http://submissions.onthemove-conferences.org/2015/meta4es Papers, demos and posters presenting ongoing studies relevant to the workshop’s topics are encouraged for submission. All accepted workshop papers (regular papers or short papers) will be published by Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) and indexed by ISI, ACM Digital Library and DBLP. Failure to commit to presentation at the workshop automatically excludes a paper from the Conference Proceedings. WORKSHOP CO-CHAIRS Anna Fensel STI Innsbruck, University of Innsbruck, Austria Christophe Debruyne ADAPT Centre, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland Ioana Ciuciu Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj, Romania PROGRAM COMMITTEE See http://www.onthemove-conferences.org/index.php/meta4es-2015
Received on Monday, 20 July 2015 19:27:36 UTC