- From: Bernardo Cuenca Grau <bernardo@mindswap.org>
- Date: Tue, 11 Oct 2005 20:46:01 -0400 (EDT)
- To: dbworld@cs.wisc.edu
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Apologies for cross-postings *************************************************************** CALL FOR PARTICIPATION: OWL EXPERIENCES AND DIRECTIONS WORKSHOP *************************************************************** Early Registration Date: 15th October 11, 2005 Online Registration: http://www.mindswap.org/2005/OWLWorkshop/participation.shtml Workshop Dates: 11th and 12th November 2005 Workshop website: http://www.mindswap.org/2005/OWLWorkshop Accepted Papers: http://www.mindswap.org/2005/OWLWorkshop/accepted.shtml Programme: http://www.mindswap.org/2005/OWLWorkshop/programme.shtml Summary: The W3C OWL Web Ontology Language has now been a W3C recommendation for more than one year. OWL is playing an important role in an increasing number and range of applications, and is the focus of research into tools, reasoning techniques, formal foundations, language extensions etc. This level of experience with OWL means that the community is now in a good position to discuss how OWL be applied, adapted and extended to fulfill current and future application demands. The aim of the workshop is to establish a forum for practitioners in industry and academia, tool developers and others interested in OWL to describe real and potential applications, to share experience and to discuss requirements for language extensions/modifications. The workshop will bring users, implementors and researchers together to measure the state of need against the state of the art, and to set an agenda for research and deployment in order to incorporate OWL-based technologies into new applications Topics of interest include, but are not limited to the following: - Applications of and experience with OWL - Application-driven requirements for OWL - Extensions to OWL, including - non-monotonic extensions - rules extensions - extensions for representing temporal and spatial information - extended property constructors - keys - extended class constructors - extended datatype constructors - probabilistic and fuzzy Extensions - Implementation techniques for OWL and related languages - Reasoning-related tasks for OWL, including explanation - Security and Trust for OWL-based information - Tools for OWL, including - editors - visualisation tools - parsers and syntax checkers - versioning frameworks - OWL based Semantic Web Service frameworks Organizing Committee: Bernardo Cuenca Grau Ian Horrocks Bijan Parsia Peter Patel-Schneider Program Committee: Dean Allemang, TopQuadrant (USA) Phil Archer, ICRA (UK) Michael Champion, Microsoft (USA) Dan Connolly, W3C (USA) Mike Dean, BBN Technologies (USA) Enrico Franconi, University of Bolzano (Italy) Jennifer Golbeck, University of Maryland (USA) Christine Golbreich, University Rennes 2 (France) Pat Hayes, University of West Florida (USA) Kaoru Hiramatsu, NTT (Japan) Joanne Luciano, BioPAX (USA) Carsten Lutz, TU Dresden (Germany) Sheila McIlraith, University of Toronto (Canada) Boris Motik, University of Karlsruhe (Germany) Enrico Motta, Open University (UK) Ryusuke Masuoka, Fujitsu Laboratories of America (USA) Gary Ng, Cerebra (USA) Natasha Noy, Stanford University (USA) Alan L. Rector, University of Manchester (UK) Andrew Schain, NASA (USA) monica schraefel, University of Southampton (UK) Guus Schreiber, Vrije Universitat Amsterdam (Netherlands) Evan Wallace, NIST (USA) Christopher Welty, IBM Research (USA)
Received on Wednesday, 12 October 2005 00:46:23 UTC