- From: Mauro Dragoni <dragoni@fbk.eu>
- Date: Mon, 22 Jun 2015 11:27:33 +0200
- To: info@iaoa.org, Semantic Web <semantic-web@w3.org>, public-lod@w3.org, public-ontolex@w3.org, CHI-ANNOUNCEMENTS@listserv.acm.org, confs-submit@hri.org, aisworld@lists.aisnet.org, planetkr@kr.org, Community@sti2.org, semanticweb@yahoogroups.com, events_calendar@acm.org, linguist@linguistlist.org, dbpedia-discussion@lists.sourceforge.net, dbpedia-developers@lists.sourceforge.net, public-ldp@w3.org, semantic_web_doktorandennetzwerk@lists.spline.inf.fu-berlin.de, lod2@lists.okfn.org, public-vocabs@w3.org, dl@dl.kr.org
- Message-ID: <CAFvSjQtCtQXneHUOaZ91O4WXD80UR+rACy-pR5GD6K92jKtQdw@mail.gmail.com>
CALL FOR PAPER: 12th OWL: Experiences and Directions Workshop (OWLED) Bethlehem, Pennsylvania (USA), October 9th - 10th, 2015 co-located with ISWC 2015 http://www.w3.org/community/owled/workshop-2015 Important Dates (All deadlines are Hawaii time) * Paper submission due: July 22, 2015 * Acceptance notifications: September 4, 2015 * Final papers due: September 18, 2015 * OWLED workshop: 9-10 October, 2015 OWLED is now also a Community Group at the W3C. Everyone is invited to participate: http://www.w3.org/community/owled/ ———————————————————————————————————— The aim of the OWL: Experiences and Directions Workshop (OWLED) is to establish an international forum for the OWL community, where practitioners in industry and academia, tool developers, and others interested in OWL can describe real and potential applications, share experiences and discuss requirements for language extensions/modifications. OWL has become the representational model of choice for supporting interoperability in many industries. With its rise in popularity, as well as the number of publicly available ontologies, it becomes important to focus on the processes by which ontologies can be engineered through reuse. In this edition of OWLED we aim to bridge the gap between ontology engineering practices and software engineering, where reuse is common practice, and we welcome submissions of papers describing reuse methods employed throughout the ontology development cycle; modeling / terminological decisions, alignment and comparison between ontologies, how ontologies are stored, versioned, distributed, and consumed over the Web. As with previous editions, we also welcome proposals for improving the OWL standard. This year we also have a special ontology track, with submissions of ontologies that present interesting modelling problems or that can generate challenging tasks with respect to OWLED topics (e.g., ontologies that are challenging for reasoners to handle). We invite submissions of the following types of papers: Technical papers: All submissions must be in English and be no longer than 12 pages (including references). Papers that exceed this limit will be rejected without review. These papers should present research, implementation experience, and reports on the above and related topics. Space will be reserved for authors to present their work at the workshop. Short papers (4-6 pages, including references): These papers should present work that is in an early stage and/or include publishable (novel) implemented systems that are of interest to the OWLED community; and (in case of an implemented system), can be demonstrated at the workshop. Ontology papers (4-6 pages, including references): These papers should describe ontologies that present interesting modelling and other challenges with respect to OWLED topics (e.g., ontologies that are challenging for reasoners to handle or that demand features that are outside the standard OWL profiles). Papers are expected to include the URL of the ontology described. All submissions must be in PDF, and must adhere to the Springer LNCS style. For more details, see Springer’s Author Instructions: http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-6-793341-0. Papers can be submitted online using the Easychair Conference system: https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=owled2015 (tbc) Papers related to any aspects of OWL and extensions, applications, theory, methods and tools, are welcome. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to: * Application driven requirements for (extensions of) OWL * Applications of OWL, particularly - from industry or - for data integration - for service interoperability - for sophisticated/non-obvious inference - for knowledge discovery * and within specific domains such as - law - biology and biomedicine - eLearning * Experience of using OWL: notably, highly expressive ontologies or the OWL 2 Profiles * Evaluation of OWL tools (e.g., ontology editors, versioning tools, reasoners) * Benchmarks for OWL tools * Performance and scalability issues and improvements * Extensions to OWL * OWL and Rules * Ontology engineering techniques and experience reports * Non-standard reasoning services (implementation and requirements for) * Explanation * Translating natural language into OWL (and vice-versa, i.e., verbalisation) * Ontology comprehension and visualisation * Multilingual OWL * Modelling issues * Reuse of OWL ontologies * Tool descriptions and experience reports, including editors, visualisation, parsers and syntax checkers * Collaborative editing of ontologies * Comparison of OWL ontologies (diff) * Versioning of OWL ontologies * Alignment of OWL ontologies * Ontology modularity and views * Query answering with OWL * SPARQL and OWL * Linked Data and OWL * Ontology-based data access (e.g., ontologies for big data, data integration, data fusion) * Cognitive aspects of ontology engineering Programme committee to be confirmed. -- Dr. Mauro Dragoni Post-Doc Researcher at Fondazione Bruno Kessler (FBK-IRST) Via Sommarive 18, 38123, Povo, Trento, Italy Tel. 0461-314053
Received on Monday, 22 June 2015 09:28:23 UTC