[sem-grd] 2nd CFP SWUMA'06
Terry Payne
trp at ecs.soton.ac.uk
Wed Feb 22 15:17:58 CST 2006
Second C a l l f o r P a p e r s
2nd International Workshop on the use of
Semantic Web Technologies for Ubiquitous and
Mobile Applications (SWUMA'06)
Trentino, Italy, August 28th 2006
http://www.swuma.org/
Important Dates
===============
Electronic submission deadline: April 10th, 2006
Notification: May 10th, 2006
Camera Ready Copies: May 24th, 2006
Workshop date: August 28th, 2006
Workshop Theme
Mobile and ubiquitous computing refers to an emerging computing
paradigm that aims at providing hardware and software means for
offering user-friendly information and communication services,
anywhere and anytime. The central concept is to empower users through
a digital environment that is aware of their presence and context,
able to provide personalized services to their requirements, capable
of anticipating their behaviour and responding to their presence.
An essential aspect for the ubiquitous vision to become true is
therefore the provisioning of small, handheld, wireless computing
devices that enable interaction between users and environments (e.g.,
sensors, actuators, interactive screens, displays, etc.), and
computing elements (usually hardwired) that carry out specific
networking functions such as data processing, storage and routing.
These devices offer functionalities that can be described, advertised
and discovered by others and they are eventually able to interoperate
even though they have not been designed to work together. This type
of interoperability is based on the ability to understand other
devices and reason about their functionalities when necessary.
Knowledge deployed in mobile and ubiquitous applications is therefore
pervasive, distributed, heterogeneous, and dynamic by nature. In this
respect, mobile and ubiquitous applications can benefit from marrying
the Semantic Web, which provides the infrastructure for the extensive
usage of distributed knowledge, to be deployed for modelling devices
functionalities and add meaning (through ontologies), enabling
lightweight discovery and composition of device functionalities
(using annotations and reasoning for service matchmaking), and
coordination of processes (using negotiation strategies). The ability
to appropriately combine ubiquity and semantic grounded data sharing
has generated and is continuously triggering challenging questions in
several areas of computer science, engineering and networking.
The workshop on Semantic Web technology for mobile and ubiquitous
applications aims to gather input covering the above mentioned
challenges, and it is intended as a lively forum of discussion for
bringing together and fostering the interaction of practitioners and
researchers coming from the many disciplines contributing to the
design and deployment of mobile and ubiquitous applications in a
semantic-grounded perspective.
TOPICS OF INTEREST
The main topics of interest include but are not restricted to:
• Lightweight semantic negotiation for mobile and
ubiquitous applications;
• Semantic Web and p2p;
• Ontologies for mobile and ubiquitous systems;
• Semantic Web Technology for Context aware applications;
• Personalisation;
• Knowledge representation, discovery and management in mobile
and ubiquitous applications;
• Knowledge representation, discovery and management for
semantic web services in mobile and ubiquitous
environments;
• Semantic web services;
• Dynamic composition of semantic web services;
• Agent technologies for mobile and ubiquitous systems;
• Integration of agent-based services and web services;
• Mobile and ubiquitous databases and information retrieval.
SUBMISSION
Papers are solicited for any of the topics of interest listed above.
We invite contributions of different kinds. We solicit regular
research papers which may report on:
• completed work;
• description of current, but mature, work in progress;
• discussion papers comparing different approaches, or
account of practical experiences of using SW
technology in
mobile and ubiquitous applications..
In addition, we invite people wishing to participate in the workshop
to submit a short position paper concerning statements of interest,
or technical or policy issues. Spaces will be limited and those who
have submitted a paper will be given priority for registration. Both
type of papers will provide the framework for the discussions during
the workshop. Papers must be written in English.
Submitted papers will be reviewed by at least three members of the
programme committee, and selected on the basis of their relevance and
originality. Both research and position papers should be formatted
according to the official formatting guidelines of the ECAI main
conference. Research papers should not exceed twelve pages, while
position statements should not exceed five pages. Papers and position
statements can be submitted to submissions at swuma.org
ORGANISERS
All enquiries and submissions should be directed to chair at swuma.org
Terry Payne, University of Southampton (Co-Chair)
Valentina Tamma, University of Liverpool (Co-Chair)
David Tarrant, University of Southampton (Webmaster)
Tim Finin, University of Maryland Baltimore County
Norman M. Sadeh, ISRI, Carnegie Mellon University
Massimo Paolucci, DoCoMo Communications Laboratories Europe
Ora Lassila, Nokia Research Center, Cambridge, MA
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Akio Sashima, AIST, Japan
Ashok Mallya, North Carolina State University, NC
Chiara Ghidini, ITC Trento, Italy
Chris van Aart, Y'all The Netherlands
Dave de Roure, University of Southampton, UK
Deepali Khushraj, Nokia
Donato Malerba, University of Bari, Italy
Fabien Gandon, INRIA Sophia Antipolis, France
Filip Perich, Cougaar Software, USA
Floriana Grasso, University of Liverpool, UK
Grigoris Antoniou, ICS Forth, Greece
Harry Chen, Image Matters, LLC, US
Jinghai Rao, CMU, US
Kaoru Hiramatsu, NTT Corporation, Japan
Kendall Clark, MINDLAB, University of Maryland, USA
Luigi Iannone, University of Liverpool, UK
Manolis Koubarakis, Technical University of Crete, Greece
Matthias Klusch, DFKI, Germany
Michael Berger, Siemens, Germany
monica mc schraefel, University of Southampton
Richard Benjamins, iSOCO, Spain
Ryusuke Masuoka, Fujitsu Labs of America, MD
Sergio Tessaris, Free University of Bolzano/Bozen, Italy
Simon Thompson, Intelligent Systems Lab, BTexact Technologies, UK
York Sure, University of Karlsruhe, Germany
Zakaria Maamar, Zayed University, United Arab Emirates
_______________________________________________________________________
Terry R. Payne, PhD. | http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~trp/index.html
AgentLink III Co-coordinator | AgentLink III - http://
www.agentlink.org
University of Southampton | Voice: +44(0)23 8059 8343 [Fax: 8059
2865]
Southampton, SO17 1BJ, UK | Email: terry at acm.org / trp at ecs.soton.ac.uk
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