- From: Guadalupe Ortiz <gobellot@hotmail.com>
- Date: Fri, 26 Aug 2005 09:44:59 +0200
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[We apologise if you receive multiple copies of this message] -------------------------------------------------------------------- C A L L F O R P A P E R S 1ST INT. WORKSHOP ON ENGINEERING SERVICE COMPOSITIONS (WESC'05) In conjunction with the 3rd Int. Conference on Service Oriented Computing (ICSOC 2005) http://www.icsoc.org/ December 12, 2005 Amsterdam, The Netherlands WESC Workshop Website http://fresco-www.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/wesc05/ Abstract Submission Deadline: September 9th, 2005 SYNOPSIS ======== The emerging paradigm of service-oriented computing (SOC) introduces ground-breaking concepts for distributed- and e-business processing that are radically changing the way software applications are designed, architected, delivered and consumed. Services, which constitute the heart of SOC, are autonomous platform-independent computational elements that can be described, published, discovered and accessed over the Web using standard protocols. Service-oriented architectures (SOA) leverage the foundational capabilities of computational service models to provide technological as well as conceptual frameworks for a new class of cooperative business applications: agile networks of collaborating business applications distributed within and across organisational boundaries. Consequently, SOA not only includes software technologies to aggregate atomic services into composite services (a.k.a. service composition) but also the software engineering methodology to turn composite services into cooperative business applications (a.k.a. service engineering). In fact, service composition and software engineering are highly interrelated. Service composition not only developed towards the major software technology approach for composing multiple coarse-grained applications over the Web but also originated pioneering concepts such as orchestration and choreography. Such concepts introduce significantly different ways of managing business connectivity, thus making a strong impact on application semantics and vice versa. In order to guarantee a certain quality level of SOA-based cooperative business applications with respect to functional and non-functional requirements, software engineers have to take into account the impacts of service composition models. In the emerging discipline of service engineering, that generally benefits from former research on component- and aspect-oriented software engineering methodologies, there are already promising results on novel conceptual and technological tools to support the development processes of cooperative business applications. However, such tools need to be increasingly aligned with service composition technology. Still, joint approaches on engineering service compositions face several open problems and challenges. Concerning the technology side there is still neither an agreement on service composition models and languages nor on their scope of application; let alone experiences on mission critical operation. As regards methodology , reference architectures of service-oriented cooperative information systems taking into account particularities of the service composition lifecycles are just at the beginning. This is just to name a few of the challenges. GOAL ==== Accordingly, the workshop is intended to bring together experts from service composition technology and service engineering methodology; researchers and practitioners from industry and academia. It is meant to foster discussions about problems and challenges that particularly arise during the practical combination of both fields of expertise for the realisation of service-based, cooperative business information systems. TOPICS ====== WESC'05 welcomes research submissions on all topics related to engineering service compositions, including but not limited to those listed below: Models for composing software applications from services - Models and languages for composition, coordination and aggregation of application software services - Programming abstractions for service composition - High-level abstractions for service composition (workflows, rules, policies...) - Scope and applicability of service composition standards (e.g. BPEL, WSCI) w.r.t. software composition - ... Themes/paradigms for conceptualising service compositions - Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) as composition framework - Service composition as a form of programming in the large - Software services as building blocks for componentware and component-oriented software engineering - Service composition for product line software e.g. in an application service provision (ASP) context - Service composition as a link between software engineering and enterprise application integration (EAI) - Service composition in agent-based software engineering - ... Methodology for engineering service compositions - Reference architectures for composite service-based applications - Lifecycle models for service composition - Impacts of service composition on requirement engineering - Methods for design and analysis of service compositions - Dependability of service compositions - Quality models and measures for service compositions - Methods for validation and verification of service compositions - Refactorisation of service compositions - ... Technology for developing/implementing service compositions - Pattern techniques and service composition patterns - Framework architectures for service composition - Aspect-oriented composition of software services - Applying/adopting UML and MDA for service composition - Testing of service compositions - CASE-tools for service composition - Industrial case studies - ... WORKSHOP FORMAT =============== The workshop will be held on a single day, consisting of a keynote speech*, peer-reviewed paper presentations and a closing panel. Keynote and panel will be held jointly with the workshop on Design of Service-oriented Applications. * To be announced SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS ======================= Authors are invited to submit original, previously unpublished research papers. Papers should be written in English and must not exceed 8 pages strictly following Springer's LNCS style (http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html) including all text, references, appendices, and figures. Prospective authors are supposed to submit an abstract of their work until September, 9th 2005. Full paper submission is due October, 1st 2005. Both submissions should be done electronically at: http://vsis-www.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/wesc05/ PDF format is preferred, but portable Postscript format is also acceptable. All submissions will be peer-reviewed by members of the international program-committee based on originality, significance, technical soundness, and clarity of presentation. Accepted papers will be distributed electronically to all participants before the workshop. They will also be included in the workshop proceedings and formally published as IBM research report. Authors of accepted papers are supposed to participate in the workshop. Publication will be subject to receipt of a confirmation via e-mail to wesc05@informatik.uni-hamburg.de until September, 9th 2005, stating that at least one author is going to attend in case of acceptance. Workshop attendees are not required but are, of course, encouraged to register for the core ICSOC conference. IMPORTANT DATES =============== *Abstract Submission & Confirmation Due: September 9th, 2005 *Paper Submission Due: September 30th, 2005 *Notification of Acceptance: October 21st, 2005 *Camera-Ready Copy Due: November 4th, 2005 *Workshop: December 12th, 2005 PROGRAM COMMITTEE* ================= M. Aiello (University of Trento, Italy) B. Benatallah (University of New South Wales, Australia) F. Casati (HP Palo Alto, USA) A. Colyer (IBM Hursley, UK) F. Cubera (IBM Watson, USA) V. D'andrea (University of Trento, Italy) E. Deelman (ISI, USA) K. Duddy (DSTC, Australia) S. Dustdar (Technical University of Vienna, Austria) W. Emmerich (University College London, UK) G. Feuerlicht (Technical University of Sydney, Australia) W. Gentsch (Sun, Germany) P. Goldsack (HP Bristol, UK) M. Hauswirth (EPFL Lausanne, Switzerland) J. Hernandez (University of Extremadura, Spain) W. Lamersdorf (University of Hamburg, Germany) F. Leymann (University of Stuttgart, Germany) S. McIlraith (Stanford University, USA) M. Mecella (University of Rome, Italy) N. Medvidovic (University of Southern California, USA) G. Ortiz (University of Extremadura, Spain) M. Papazoglou (Tilburg University, The Netherlands) P. Plebani (Politecnico di Milano, Italy) G. Piccinelli (University College London, UK) T. Risse (Fraunhofer Society, Germany) C. Roland (University of Paris, France) S. Shrivastava (University of Newcastle, UK) C. Szyperski (Microsoft Research, USA) S. Tai (IBM Watson, USA) M. Weske (HPI at University of Potsdam, Germany) A. Wolf (University of Boulder, USA) J. Yang (Macuquarie University, Australia) C. Zirpins (University of Hamburg, Germany) *Candidates, confirmation pending ORGANISING COMMITTEE ==================== Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Emmerich University College London, UK Email: w.emmerich@cs.ucl.ac.uk Prof. Dr. Winfried Lamersdorf University of Hamburg, Germany Email: lamersdorf@informatik.uni-hamburg.de Guadalupe Ortiz University of Extremadura, Spain Email: gobellot@unex.es Christian Zirpins University of Hamburg, Germany Email: zirpins@informatik.uni-hamburg.de If you have any further queries please do not hesitate to send an e-mail to the workshop contact: wesc05@informatik.uni-hamburg.de WE'RE LOOKING FORWARD TO MEETING YOU ALL AT WESC/ICSOC IN AMSTERDAM! --------------------------------------------------------------------
Received on Friday, 26 August 2005 07:45:11 UTC