- From: Marianna Nicolosi Asmundo <marianna.nicolosiasmundo@unict.it>
- Date: Fri, 27 Sep 2024 13:42:33 +0000
- To: "semantic-web@w3.org" <semantic-web@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <DU0PR02MB86661AD6DED8E963FF85C01EE86B2@DU0PR02MB8666.eurprd02.prod.outlook.com>
Semantic Web and Ontology Design for Cultural Heritage This special issue follows the 4th International Workshop on Semantic Web and Ontology Design for Cultural Heritage (https://swodch2024.sciencesconf.org/), SWODCH 2024, held on October 30-31, 2024, in Tours, France. Starting from the assumption that transdisciplinarity is a key characteristic of research in Digital Cultural Heritage and that knowledge representation models and associated computational techniques are mature enough to provide full-fledged virtual environments to Humanities for a new era of digitally enabled research and teaching, the aim of the SWODCH workshop series is to create a fruitful dialogue among the communities of ontology designers, knowledge representation specialists, and Semantic Web scholars and practitioners focusing on digital Cultural Heritage. Similarly, the scope of the present special issue includes philosophical and social analyses of Cultural Heritage data and knowledge, covering already existing community modelling practices, as well as the historical and social dimensions of data and the explicit formal representation of these dimensions in a way that is transparent and accessible to both humans and machines. We also welcome studies of principled methodologies and technologies to semantically characterise, integrate, and automatically reason on data and domain knowledge models. Finally, we invite the submission of contributions discussing recent experiences in developing and deploying Semantic Web solutions to expose, link and access Cultural Heritage data in a harmonised way, and to support the exploitation of existing semantic models and datasets. Themes and Topics We encourage the authors of papers presented at SWODCH to submit extended versions of their workshop papers (see the “Authors Guidelines” section below for details). We also invite any researcher or practitioner in Digital Cultural Heritage to submit original work related (but not limited) to one or more of the following topic areas: * Conceptual analysis and ontology design for the Digital Humanities: * Domain ontologies or conceptual models for different fields of Humanities. * Methodological aspects of ontology development for the DH. * Application of formal ontology theories in the DH. * Case studies and lessons learnt from the use of standard ontologies (e.g. CIDOC-CRM). * Logical and ontological analysis of CIDOC-CRM or FRBR, e.g., with respect to foundational ontologies (DOLCE, UFO, BFO, etc.). * Philosophical and sociological analysis of digital models and modelling practices in DH. * Social studies on the policies towards the standardisation of ontologies in DH. * Semantic Web Technologies and Applications for Cultural Heritage: * SW technologies for CH content creation, annotation and extraction... * SW architectures and infrastructures for CH. * Interoperability of CH collections. * Applying the FAIR data principles to CH data. * CH knowledge graphs. * Searching, querying and visualising CH data on the SW. * Ontology-based access to CH data. * Publishing CH data on the Web. * Navigating through and browsing CH data on the Web. * SW solutions for trust and provenance issues in CH. * SW applications for digital libraries, museums, tourism, the creative industries, etc. Authors Guidelines We invite full papers, dataset descriptions, application reports and reports on tools and systems. Submissions must be original and should not have been published previously or be under consideration for publication while being evaluated for this special issue. Authors can extend previously published conference or workshop papers; guidelines for this can be found in FAQ 9. Submissions shall be made through the Semantic Web journal website at http://www.semantic-web-journal.net<http://www.semantic-web-journal.net/>. Prospective authors must take notice of the submission guidelines posted at http://www.semantic-web-journal.net/authors. We welcome any submission type as described http://www.semantic-web-journal.net/authors#types. While there is no upper limit, paper length must be justified by content. Note that you need to request an account on the website for submitting a paper. Please indicate in the cover letter that it is for the “Semantic Web and Ontology Design for Cultural Heritage” Special Issue. All manuscripts will be reviewed based on the SWJ open and transparent review policy and will be made available online during the review process. Also note that the Semantic Web journal is open access and all submissions rely on an open and transparent review process (see FAQ 1). Finally please note that submissions must comply with the journal’s Open Science Data requirements, which are detailed in the corresponding blog post. Generative Artificial Intelligence carbon footprint. For any work using LLM and generative algorithms, we expect an assessment of the energy cost and carbon footprint of the proposed solution, on the one hand, and for the work that went into developing it, on the other. The “Machine Learning Emissions Calculator” (https://calculator.linkeddata.es/) is a tool made by the Montreal Institute for Learning Algorithms, Element AI and Polytechnique Montreal that can be used to estimate how much carbon is being generated during training tasks based on several main factors: the energy that is consumed by the system’s hardware; length of training time; the geographical location of the server being used by the provider of cloud computing services; the CO2 emissions per unit of electricity produced in that particular region; and any potential carbon offsets that have been purchased by the cloud provider. In the absence of such an evaluation, the article will be desk rejected. Diversity and inclusion statement. We kindly ask authors to adopt inclusive language in their papers and presentations (https://dbdni.github.io/pages/inclusivewriting.html and https://dbdni.github.io/pages/inclusivetalks.html), and all participants to adopt a proper code on conduct (https://dbdni.github.io/pages/codeofconduct.html). Deadline * Manuscript submission deadline: April 30, 2025 * Manuscript review feedback: June 30, 2025 Guest Editors Antonis Bikakis, University College London, U.K. Roberta Ferrario, ISTC-CNR, Trento, Italy. Stéphane Jean, University of Poitiers - ENSMA, France. Béatrice Markhoff, University François Rabelais de Tours, France. Alessandro Mosca, ISTC-CNR, Trento, Italy & Free University of Bolzano, Italy. Marianna Nicolosi Asmundo, University of Catania, Italy. Guest Editorial Board Trond Aalberg, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway Valentina Bartalesi, ISTI-CNR, Italy Carmen Brando, EHESS-CRH, France Stefano Faralli, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy Manolis Gergatsoulis, Ionian University, Greece Kalliopi Kontiza, University College London, UK Efstratios Kontopoulos,Catalink Ltd, Cyprus Kostas Kotis, University of the Aegean, Greece Yannis Marketakis, FORTH, Greece Ludovica Marinucci, CNR Rome, Italy Nada Mimouni, Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers, France Laura Pandolfo, University of Sassari, Italy Davide Picca, University of Lausanne, Switzerland Michalis Sfakakis, Ionian University, Greece Sofia Stamou, Ionian University, Greece Maria Rosaria Stufano Melone, Politecnico di Bari, Italy Maria Theodoridou, FORTH, Greece Konstantin Todorov, University of Montpellier, France Christos Tryfonopoulos, University of the Peloponnese, Greece Douglas Tudhope, University of South Wales, UK Jouni Tuominen, University of Helsinki, Finland Valentina Vassallo, The Cyprus Institute, Cyprus Costas Vassilakis, University of the Peloponnese, Greece - Marianna Nicolosi Asmundo Department of Mathematics and Computer Science University of Catania
Received on Tuesday, 1 October 2024 13:57:05 UTC