- From: bhavna <borgun@ics.mq.edu.au>
- Date: Thu, 4 Aug 2005 08:49:53 -0400
- To: <iswc04@cs.toronto.edu>
- Cc: <kweb-all@lists.deri.org>, <announce@sigart.acm.org>, <daml-all@daml.org>, <news-announce-conferences@uunet.uu.net>, <public-sws-ig@w3.org>, <www-rdf-logic@w3.org>, <www-rdf-rules@w3.org>, <www-rdf-interest@w3.org>, <semanticweb@egroups.com>, <semanticweb@yahoogroups.com>, <agents@cs.umbc.edu>, <project@aktors.com>, <dip-all@lists.deri.org>, <aiia@dis.uniroma.it>, <iswc04@cs.toronto.edu>, <ruleml-all@ruleml.org>
-------------------------------------------------------------------- CALL FOR PAPERS [Apologies if you receive multiple copies of this announcement] Australasian Ontology Workshop (AOW 2005) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~aow05/ as part of the The 18th Australian Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence 5-9 December 2005, Sydney, Australia http://attend.it.uts.edu.au/ai05/ THEMES AND GOALS The use of formal ontologies in knowledge systems has many advantages. It allows for an unambiguous specification of the structure of knowledge in a domain, enables knowledge sharing and, as a result, makes it possible to perform automated reasoning about ontologies. In recent years there has been a worldwide increase in the use of ontologies, both in industry and in research laboratories. There is a growing community of researchers in Australia and New Zealand, working on various aspects of ontologies. The primary aim of this workshop is to bring together ontology researchers in the region. This event will be the first annual installment of the workshop in its most recent incarnation, and the continuation of an annual workshop series that has existed under various guises since 2001. The workshop will seek submission of papers on original and unpublished research on all aspects of ontology research, including (but not limited to) the following: * interoperability in ontologies; * multi-agent systems and ontologies; * ontologies and the semantic web; * description logics for ontologies; * reasoning with ontologies; * ontology harvesting on the web; * ontology of agents and actions; * ontology visualisation; * ontology merging, alignment and integration; * web ontology languages; * formal concept analysis and ontologies. SUBMISSION GUIDELINES Papers will be evaluated based on originality, significance, technical soundness, and clarity of expression. All submissions will be formally peer reviewed. Submissions should not be more than 10 pages in length in using Springer's LNAI style available at http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html and include the author's name, affiliation and contact details. They should be submitted by e-mail as PDF files before August 27, 2005, to aow05@cse.unsw.edu.au Authors will be notified of acceptance by October 1, 2005. At least one author of accepted papers should participate in the Workshop. Workshop proceedings will be published on two different media: First, the proceedings of the AOW05 workshop will be published as part of the conference proceedings. Finally, they will also be available via the workshop web-site. IMPORTANT DATES Workshop papers due: 27 August 2005 Author notification: 1 October 2005 Workshop date: 6 December 2005 WORKSHOP CHAIRS Thomas Meyer Knowledge Representation and Reasoning (KRR) program of National ICT Australia (NICTA). Mehmet Orgun Intelligent Systems Group (ISG), Department of Computing, Macquarie University, Sydney. WORKSHOP PROGRAM COMMITTEE Mike Bain (UNSW) Werner Ceusters (ECOR/ Saarland University) Stephen Cranefield (University of Otago, NZ) Anne Cregan (UNSW) Peter Eklund (University of Wollongong) Norman Foo (UNSW) Jane Hunter (DSTC) Bhavna Orgun (Macquarie University) Maurice Pagnucco (UNSW) Abhaya Nayak (Macquarie University) Abdul Sattar (Griffith University) Rolf Schwitter (Macquarie University) Barry Smith (ECOR/ SUNY Buffalo) Leon Sterling (University of Melbourne) York Sure (Karlsruhe University) Zahir Tari (RMIT) Kerry Taylor (CSIRO) Mary-Anne Williams (UTS)
Received on Thursday, 4 August 2005 12:50:47 UTC