- From: Monika Solanki <msolanki.mailings@gmail.com>
- Date: Mon, 5 Jun 2017 18:13:16 +0100
- To: semantic-web@w3.org
The Journal of Web Semantics invites submissions to a special issue on
Semantic Web research and technologies specifically for the Internet of
Things / Web of Things. The goal is to demonstrate how this area can
benefit from specific research contributions and advances of the
Semantic Web.
https://www.journals.elsevier.com/journal-of-web-semantics/call-for-papers/special-issue-web-semantics-internet-web-of-things
The existing global networking infrastructure has facilitated the
widespread development of cyber-physical systems, through networks of
smart objects, pervasively using the internet for connectivity and
communication. These “things” that communicate using Internet protocols
and make the results of their computation available in real-time have
given rise to rapidly evolving, new paradigms of computing that
contribute towards realizing a global, distributed infrastructure with a
lot of similarities to the Web. Many areas such as smart cities, smart
buildings, social networks, wearables, and large-scale sensor
deployments, along with applications in diverse domains such as
e-health, agriculture, environmental monitoring and e-commerce already
demonstrate significant uptake and impact.
However, the exciting and enhanced capabilities of these networks
present several unprecedented and complex challenges that need to be
overcome before data, device and service interoperability on IoT/WoT
networks can deliver all of their predicted potential. Despite being
connected, there are a plethora of isolated islands of heterogeneous
networks that require heavy lifting of protocols and data, and
reconciliation of semantics before they can truly communicate using
Internet standards. Additionally, interconnected networks produce a data
deluge to the order and scale of big data which will present scalability
problems to the network and data analysis and knowledge extraction and
management. Besides the well-known paradigm of the Cloud, new approaches
such as (mobile) edge computing and fog computing have been proposed to
address these problems. The goal is to not transport all data but the
relevant data across the Internet. This requires a fundamental
rethinking of current architectural paradigms and a decentralization of
analysis and knowledge technologies towards the edge and inside the
whole Internet. The end of this process may be the convergence of the so
far traditionally separated research areas of information processing and
communication into a single architectural paradigm. It is clear that
semantic technologies will play a vital and central role in achieving
this vision.
The focus of this special issue is to showcase novel and disrupting
approaches for the semantic Web to aid in this mission. The ability to
analyse, represent and integrate data into higher level artefacts from
very large distributed information sources, the description and
management of the data and technical infrastructure and the mutual
influences and interactions among technical infrastructures, knowledge
creation and use and social aspects are central research questions for
researchers, organizations, and governments.
This special issue wants to bring together cutting-edge research with
particular emphasis on novel and innovative techniques applied to
real-world scenarios that showcase the distinguishing benefits through
the application of Semantic Web approaches, ontologies, and Linked data
principles to the important questions and new challenges raised by IoT/WoT.
Topics of interest with a clear focus on applying or developing novel
approaches in these areas include but are not limited to:
Big data and real-time data processing for IoT/WoT
Communication protocols for IoT/WoT and their implementation
Modeling and analysis of physical components and environment
Distributed knowledge management (creation and integration of
higher-level artefacts in edge / fog computing)
Industrial applications and use cases: lessons learned and success stories
Frameworks, models, methods, techniques and toolkits for building the
IoT/WoT
Smart Infrastructure:
Fault tolerance in critical buildings and infrastructures
Energy efficiency in homes, buildings and infrastructures
Traffic and mobility
Intelligent sensors and actuators for homes, buildings and
infrastructures
Smart solutions for health and medicine
Security and privacy issues for IoT/WoT
Data Analytics for IoT/WoT
Data and service governance for IoT/WoT
Data quality and quality of service for IoT/WoT platforms
IoT/WoT service architectures and platforms
Guest Editors
Monika Solanki, Oxford University, monika.solanki@cs.ox.ac.uk
Manfred Hauswirth, Technische Universität Berlin,
manfred.hauswirth@tu-berlin.de
Important Dates
Submission deadline: 30th September 2017
Author notification: 15th January 2018
Final version: 15th March 2018
Final notification: 15th April 2018
Publication: 1st May 2018
Submission guidelines
We will aim at an efficient publication cycle in order to guarantee
prompt availability of the published results. We will review papers on a
rolling basis as they are submitted and explicitly encourage submissions
well before the submission deadline. Submission of papers will be online
at the journal's Elsevier Web site.
Received on Monday, 5 June 2017 17:13:52 UTC