- From: <dml2009@easychair.org>
- Date: Thu, 26 Mar 2009 14:50:26 +0100 (CET)
- To: www-math@w3.org
Call for papers: Towards a Digital Mathematics Library (DML 2009) July 8-9th, 2009, Ontario, CA c/o CICM 2009 Workshop webpage: http://www.fi.muni.cz/~sojka/dml-2009.html Deadlines: April 29th: abstract submissions May 4th: paper submissions May 22nd: paper acceptance/rejection decision May 29th: versions for the proceedings due Jul 8th: workshop date, proceedings on site Submissions: http://www.easychair.org/conferences?conf=dml2009 Submissions will be refereed on the basis of technical quality, novelty, potential impact for building DML, and clarity. Final paper versions should conform to the Springer LNCS (llncs class) style, preferably using LaTeX2e. Submission categories: Full paper: 4-12 LNCS pages Short paper/poster/work in progress report: 1-4 LNCS pages Overview: Mathematicians dream of a digital archive containing all peer-reviewed mathematical literature ever published, properly linked and validated/verified. It is estimated that the entire corpus of mathematical knowledge published over the centuries does not exceed 100,000,000 pages, an amount easily manageable by current information technologies. The workshop's objectives are to formulate the strategy and goals of a global mathematical digital library and to summarize the current successes and failures of ongoing technologies and related projects, asking such questions as: # What technologies, standards, algorithms and formats should be used and what metadata should be shared? # What business models are suitable for publishers of mathematical literature, authors and funders of their projects and institutions? # Is there a model of sustainable, interoperable, and extensible mathematical library that mathematicians can use in their everyday work? # What is the best practice for * retrodigitized mathematics (from images via OCR to MathML and/or TeX); * retro-born-digital mathematics (from existing electronic copy in DVI, PS or PDF to MathML and/or TeX); * born-digital mathematics (how to make needed metadata and file formats available as a side effect of publishing workflow [CEDRAM/Euclid model])? Proceedings: will be published by Masaryk University and will be available on site, with best papers chosen for postconference proceedings published by renowned publisher or for journal. Keynote (conditioned by funding approval): David Ruddy (Project Euclid, Cornell University Library, US): Getting from Here to There: Assembling the Pieces of the Digital Mathematics Library (tentative title) Topics: (include, but are not limited to) o search, indexing and retrieval of mathematical documents o ranking of mathematical papers, similarity of mathematical documents o math OCR with MathML/TeX output o document conversions from/to MathML, OpenMath, LaTeX, PostScript and [tagged] PDF o conversions between various mathematical formalisms o mathematical document compression o processing of scanned images o algorithms for crosslinking of bibliographical items, intext citations search o mathematical document classification, MSC 2010 o mathematical text mining o mathematical documents metadata exchange via OAI-PMH and/or OAI-ORE o long term archiving, data migration o reports and experience from math digitization projects o math publishing with long term archival goal o software engineering aspects of creating, handling MathML, OMDoc, OpenMath documents, and displaying them in web browsers Programme Committee (some members approval pending): Jose Borbinha (Technical University of Lisbon, IST, PT) Thierry Bouche (University Grenoble, Cellule Mathdoc, FR) Michael Doob (University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, CA) Thomas Fischer (Goettingen University, Digitization Center, DE) Vaclav Hlavac (Czech Technical University, Faculty of Engineering, Prague, CZ) Janka Chlebikova (Comenius University, MFF, Bratislava, SK) Enrique Macias-Virgos (University of Santiago de Compostella, ES) Jiri Rakosnik (Academy of Sciences, Mathematical Institute, Prague, CZ) Eugenio Rocha (University of Aveiro, Dept. of Mathematics, PT) David Ruddy (Cornell University, Library, US) Volker Sorge (University of Birmingham, UK) Petr Sojka (Masaryk University, Faculty of Informatics, Brno, CZ) [chair] Masakazu Suzuki (Kyushu University, Faculty of Mathematics, JP) Bernd Wegner (Zentralblatt MATH, Berlin, DE) Organizing Committee: Michael Doob, Adam Rambousek, Michal Ruzicka, Petr Sojka Registration, Travel, Accomodation: see CICM web pages http://www.orcca.on.ca/conferences/cicm09/ Questions/inquiries: email to dml2009 at easychair dot org CFP distribution: Please, distribute at your institution. Apologies for multiple postings!
Received on Thursday, 26 March 2009 17:17:07 UTC