- From: Sanjiva Weerawarana <sanjiva@watson.ibm.com>
- Date: Mon, 7 Jun 2004 22:49:46 +0600
- To: <www-ws@w3.org>
[Apologies for multiple copies you may receive via multiple lists.] SUBMISSION DEADLINE HAS BEEN EXTENDED TO JUNE 18th! See below for details. CALL FOR PAPERS ICSOC04 2nd International Conference on Service Oriented Computing New York City, NY, USA November 15-19, 2004 http://www.icsoc.org/ Co-sponsored by ACM SIGWEB and ACM SIGSOFT (approval pending) Service Oriented Computing (SOC) is the new emerging paradigm for distributed computing and e-business processing that is changing the way software applications are designed, architected, delivered and consumed. Services are autonomous platform-independent computational elements that can be described, published, discovered, orchestrated and programmed using standard protocols for the purpose of building agile networks of collaborating business applications distributed within and across organizational boundaries. Combined with recent developments in the area of distributed systems, workflow management systems, business protocols and languages, services can provide the automated support needed for e-business integration both at the data and business logic level. They also provide a sound support framework for developing complex business transaction sequences and business collaboration applications. Adopting the service oriented computing paradigm has the potential to bring about reduced programming complexity and costs, lower maintenance costs, faster time-to-market, new revenue streams and improved operational efficiency. However, before the service oriented computing paradigm becomes reality, there is a number of challenging issues that need to be addressed including among other things service modeling and design methodologies, architectural approaches, service development, deployment and composition, programming and evolution of services and their supporting technologies and infrastructure. This conference aims to bring together researchers and developers from diverse areas of computing and developers to explore and address these challenging research issues in order to develop a common research agenda and vision for service oriented computing. LIST OF TOPICS Core service activities and technologies Service description and advertisement Service discovery and selection Service monitoring and management Service quality Service level agreement lifecyle Service composition Service security issues & concerns Business process modeling and specification Business protocols & transactions Software engineering techniques for service-based development Service lifecycle Service analysis techniques Service design principles Service design patterns Requirements for service-oriented processes Infrastructure issues for Service Oriented Applications Scalable techniques for providing high availability and reliability Security and robustness of service-oriented Computing systems Novel architectural approaches for service-oriented computing Autonomous, self-configuring systems for service-oriented computing Resource management for service-oriented computing systems Distributed storage for service-oriented computing systems Operating system support for scalable computing services Thin-client computing for computing services Service & AI Computing Intelligent services Multi-agent based service models Knowledge-management & services Service brokering & composition-panning Non-conventional planning techniques for services Service & P2P/Grid Computing Open/dynamic grid service architectures Grid computing & services on-demand Communication protocols & policy based management mechanisms Publish-Subscribe schemes Real-time supply chain integration Performance analysis & evaluation Service & Mobile Computing Location-based services Proximity-based notification Mobile e-business Services for 3G+ Networks Disaster Recovery and Continuous Operation Service Computing & Applications e-Business e-Learning e-Government Telecommunication service provisioning Banking and insurance service based applications CONFERENCE CHAIRS General Chairs: Paolo Traverso, ITC-irst (Italy) Sanjiva Weerawarana, IBM Research (USA) PC Chairs: Americas Francisco Curbera, IBM Research (USA) Europe Mike P. Papazoglou, Univ. of Tilburg, (Netherlands) Australasia Mikio Aoyama, Nanzan Univ., (Japan) Publication Chair: Marco Aiello, Univ. of Trento (Italy) Industrial Papers Chair:Steve Vinoski, Iona (USA), Ioannis Fikouras, Biba (Germany) Panel Chair: Dennis Gannon, Indiana University (USA) Registration Chair: Asit Dan, IBM Research (USA) Tutorial Chair: Fabio Casati, Hewlett Packard Labs (USA) Publicity Chair: Bernd Kraemer, Univ. of Hagen (Germany) Finance Chair: Vincenzo D'Andrea, Univ. of Trento (Italy) Local Organization Chair: Bill Nagy, IBM Research (USA), Jason Nieh, Columbia University (USA) IMPORTANT DATES Paper abstract submission June 11, 2004 Tutorial and panel submission June 18, 2004 Full paper submission: June 18, 2004 Notification of acceptance: August 6, 2004 Final manuscript due: September 10, 2004 Tutorials: November 15, 2004 Main conference: November 16-18, 2004 PAPER SUBMISSION One of the goals of the conference is to bring the academic and industrial research communities closer. To this end the conference solicits two kinds of submissions, research and industrial papers, and places emphasis on the SOC industrial program. Research Papers The conference is soliciting only original high quality research papers on all aspects of service-oriented computing. Submitted papers will be evaluated on significance, originality, technical quality, and exposition. They should clearly establish the research contribution, its relevance to service-oriented computing and its relation to prior research. Industrial & Applications Papers The conference also encourages high quality submissions covering the application of SOC in practice, including papers describing innovative service-based implementations, novel applications of service-oriented technology, and major improvements to the state-of-practice. Actual case studies from practitioners emphasizing applications, service technology, system deployment, organizational ramifications, or business impact are especially welcomed. Because industry-based authors typically create their submissions on their own time in addition to their normal responsibilities, the conference has different evaluation criteria for industrial and applications papers to ease the burden for such authors. Specifically, such submissions are expected to focus on details and issues surrounding actual implementations and applications, and they need not be as detailed regarding prior art as academic papers are expected to be. Papers submitted to the Industrial Track are also expected to be shorter than academic papers. Industrial Track submissions that do not relate to commercial software and standards, or industrial prototypes in actual use, are not encouraged. Because of these different evaluation criteria, authors must clearly indicate that their submissions are intended for the industrial track. Submissions that do not specifically indicate that they are intended for the Industrial Track will be submitted to the regular track. Paper Submission Guidelines Research papers are not to exceed 5000 words and should be submitted in PDF. Industrial papers are not to exceed 3000 words and should likewise be submitted in PDF. Paper abstracts not exceeding 150 words need to be submitted one week prior to the paper submission deadline. Acceptance of a paper means an obligation for at least one of the authors to attend the conference and present the paper. Tutorials The SOC conference solicits the submission of high quality tutorial proposals on any of the conference topics. Tutorial proposals should not exceed five pages, and should include enough material to describe what is being covered and at which level of depth. Proposals should also indicate the required background knowledge of the intended audience, the tutorial length (1.5 hours or 3 hours), as well as the name, contact information, and short bios of the speakers. A one page abstract of the tutorial must also be included, to be incorporated into the conference proceedings. Proposals should be submitted electronically to fabio.casati@hp.com no later than June 18, 2004. Tutorial notes will be made available to SOC participants Conference Proceedings The ICSOC'04 proceedings will be published by ACM Press. Program Committee Marco Aiello, Univ. of Trento (Italy) Vincenzo d' Andrea, Univ. of Trento (Italy) Valleria de Antonellis, Universita' di Brescia (Italy) Grigoris Antoniou, FORTH (Greece) Mikio Aoyama, Nanzan Univ., (Japan) Carlo Batini, Univ. of Milano, Bicoca (Italy) Luciano Baresi, Pol. di Milano (Italy) Boualem Benatallah, Univ. of New South Wales (Australia) Arne Berre, SINTEF (Norway) Athman Bouguettaya, Virginia Tech (USA) Sjaak Brinkamper, Univ. of Utrecht (Netherlands) Chris Bussler, National University of Ireland (Ireland) Fabio Casati, Hewlett Packard Labs (USA) Tiziana Catarci, Universita' di Roma "La Sapienza" (Italy) Francisco Curbera, IBM Research (USA) Asit Dan, IBM Research (USA) Alex Delis, Univ. of Athens (Greece) Jean Jacques Dubray, Attachmate (USA) Shachram Dustar, Vienna University of Technology (Austria) David Edmond, Queensland University of Technology, (Australia) Ioannis Fikouras, Biba (Germany) Geoffrey Fox, Indiana University (USA) Alex Galis, University College London (UK) Dennis Gannon, Indiana University (USA) Yaron Goland, BEA (USA) Paul Grefen, Univ. of Eindhoven (Netherlands) Manfred Hauswirth, EPFL (Switzerland) Tomoko Itao, NTT Network Innovation Labs. (Japan) Willem Jan van den Heuvel, Univ. of Tilburg (Netherlands) Paul Johanesson, Univ. of Stockholm (Sweden) Kate Keahy, Argonne National Lab (USA) Joe Klein, Microsoft (USA) Manolis Koubarakis, Techn. Univ. of Crete (Greece) Bernd Kraemer, Univ. of Hagen (Germany) Winfied Lammersdorf, Univ. of Hamburg (Germany) Maurizioo Lenzerini, Universita' di Roma "La Sapienza" (Italy) Frank Leymann, IBM (Germany) Hiroshi Maruyama, IBM (Japan) Maurzizo Marchese, Univ. of Trento (Italy) Fabio Massacci, Univ. of Trento (Italy) Shigeyuki Matsuda, NTT Data (Japan) Massimo Mecella, Universita' di Roma "La Sapienza" (Italy) Jason Nieh, Columbia University (USA) Bill Nagy, IBM Research (USA) Enrico Nardelli, Universita' di Roma "Tor Vergata" (Italy) Massimo Paolucci, Carnegie Mellon University (USA) George Papadopoulos, Univ. of Cyprus (Cyprus) Mike P. Papazoglou, Univ. of Tilburg, (Netherlands) Oscar Pastor, Universidad Politécnica de Valencia (Spain) Barbara Pernici, Pol. di Milano, (Italy) Giocomo Piccinelli, University College London (UK) Dimitris Plexousakis, FORTH (Greece) Matei Ripeanu, University of Chicago (USA) Thomas Risse, IPSI, Fraunhofer (Germany) Colette Rolland, Univ. Paris I (France) Ichiro Satoh, NII (Japan) Twittie Senivongse, Chulalongkorn University, Tailand (TH) Amit Sheth, University of Georgia (USA) Maarten Steen, Telematica Instituut (Netherlands) Munindar Singh, North Carolina State University (USA) Katia Sycara, Carnegie Mellon University (USA) Stefan Tai, IBM Research (USA) Satish Thatte, Microsoft (USA) Paolo Traverso, ITC-irst (Italy) Aphrodite Tsalgatidou, Univ. of Athens (Greece) Steve Tuecke, Argonne National Lab (USA) Sanya Uehara, Fujitsu Labs. (Japan) Steve Vinoski, Iona (USA) Werner Vogels, Cornell University (USA) Bekt Wangler, University of Skoevde (Sweden) Sanjiva Weerawarana, IBM Research (USA) Roel Wieringa, Univ. of Twente (Netherlands) Andreas Wombacher, IPSI, Fraunhofer (Germany) Jian Yang, Swinbourne University (Australia) Christoph Zirpins, Univ. of Hamburg (Germany) Additional Information Conference Web-site: http://www.icsoc.org/ For more information about the conference please send and e-mail to: info@icsoc.org
Received on Monday, 7 June 2004 12:50:29 UTC