WORKSHOPS
Despite often working on similar topics and goals, the artificial
intelligence and agent communities have been somewhat separate from those of databases and
information systems. This lack of interaction causes members of one community to be
unaware of the problems, results, trials, and errors that originated in the others.
Indeed, e-service development draws on research and technology from all of these research
communities. A key objective of this workshop is to provide a forum that fosters
collaboration and synergies among all e-service researchers. The workshop will expose
systems-oriented e-services researchers to the approaches and technologies being developed
by the Semantic Web e-services community, and will likewise expose Semantic Web e-services
researchers to the full breadth of systems issues raised by e-services, thereby enabling
researchers to leverage ideas and results coming from research groups that have
heterogeneous backgrounds but common goals. This multidisciplinary nature of the workshop
is also reflected in the composition of the organizing and program committee, that include
members of all the communities mentioned above.
Specifically, the "E-Services and the Semantic Web" workshop
will provide a forum for presentation and discussion of theoretical foundations,
computational techniques, and emerging systems technologies for e-service description,
discovery, and composition. This will include investigation of e-services issues in:
- the application of the Semantic Web paradigm to e-services
- workflow and distributed systems (e.g., process models for e-services,
transactional properties, security, optimization)
- AI (e.g., knowledge representation and reasoning, ontologies, planning, and
verification)
- databases (e.g., metadata, data management)
The workshop will also address principled applications of these
technologies in areas such as e-commerce, e-business, health care, scientific computing,
education, and e-government.
Facilitators:
Fabio Casati is a senior researcher at HP Labs, Palo Alto. He got
his PhD from Politecnico di Milano (Italy) in 1999. His research interests include
workflows, Web services, and business activity management. He is author of more than 50
papers in international conferences and journals, and has served as organizer and program
committee member in several conferences. In particular, he has been involved in the
majority of workshops and conferences on Web services coming from the database and
information systems communities, such as VLDB, TES, and CoopIS. He has also served as
guest editor in three journal special issues on the same theme.
Dimitris Plexousakis is an Associate Professor of Computer Science
at the Computer Science Department of the Universtity of Crete, Greece and a Researcher at
the Information Systems Lab of the Institute of Computer Science of the Foundation of
Research and Technology - Hellas. He holds a B.Sc. in Computer Science from the University
of Crete and M.Sc. and Ph.D. degress in Computer Science from the University of Toronto.
Prior to joining the faculty of the University of Crete he was an Assistant Professor at
Kansas State University and the University of South Florida. He is a member of ACM and
IEEE. His research interests include data and knowledge base management, workflow and
business process management systems, peer-to-peer and grid-based systems, applications of
AI in data management, metadata management and query languages for the Semantic Web. He is
an active participant in the OntoWeb and Planet Networks of Excellence. He served as the
co-chair of the 1st International Workshop on the Semantic Web and a member of the
steering committee of the subsequent workshops in this series, including ESSW02. He also
serves (with Sheila McIlraith) as the Workshops co-Chair for the 2nd International
Conference on the Semantic Web, that will take place in Florida, USA in October 2003.
For more details please visit: Workshop web site
The World Wide Web has become part of our everyday life and information
retrieval and data mining on the web is now of enormous practical interest. Some of the
algorithms supporting these activities are based substantially on viewing the web as a
graph, induced in various ways by links among pages, links among hosts, or other similar
networks.
The aim of the 2003 Workshop on Algorithms for the Web-Graph (WAW 2003) is
to further the understanding of these web-induced graphs, and stimulate the development of
high-performance algorithms and applications that use the graph structure of the web.
Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
- Mathematical and physical models for the web
- Algorithms for analyzing the web graph
- Modification of classic graph algorithms to bring them to web scale
- Representation and compression of the web graph
- Topology generators
- Graph oriented statistical sampling of the web
- Practical algorithmic techniques
- Application of web graph algorithms to information retrieval on the
web, data mining, etc.
- Crawling as a graph search process
- Empirical studies and issues
Many contributed papers presented in past editions of WWW belong to some
of these topics and therefore we expect this workshop to be of interest to a fair number
of WWW attendees.
Facilitators:
Andrei Broder is an IBM Distinguished Engineer in the Research
Division of IBM working on search technology and knowledge management applications. His
main research interests are the design, analysis, and implementation of probabilistic
algorithms and supporting data structures, in particular in the context of web-scale
information retrieval and applications.
Prabhakar Raghavan is Vice President and Chief Technology Officer
at Verity, Inc. and Consulting Professor of Computer Science at Stanford University.
He was previously at IBM Research, where he worked on algorithms, data and web mining,
optimization and information retrieval, including the HITS and Clever projects at IBM
Almaden.
Bela Bollobas is Professor of Department of Mathematical Sciences
at the University of Memphis. His research interest are functional analysis and
combinatorics.
For more details please visit: Workshop Web
site
The Semantic Web is widely accepted as a means to enhance the Web with
machine processable content. Several workshops dealt with the development of techniques
and technologies for representing and using information with formally specified semantics
on the Web. However, mostly the Semantic Web is aiming at techniques and technologies for static
information, in contrast to dynamic services or distributed computing,
which is the topic of several interest groups, which are working on infrastructure for
enabling distributed computing. These efforts are in part top-down organized
efforts, involving multiple formal organizations and dedicated projects, and bottom-up
efforts, sometimes started by single organizations or individuals in a grassroots effort.
The Grid, a top-down effort, is aiming at technologies which allow the
flexible, secure, coordinated resource sharing among dynamic collections of individuals,
institutions, and resources, enabling virtual organizations. Problems encountered include
authentication, authorization, resource access, resource discovery, and interoperation of
active services. The same problems are eminent in the Peer-to-Peer (P2P) area, where
projects are typically organized in a bottom-up fashion. Reusable infrastructures like
SUN's JXTA are emerging, attracting numerous applications based once these infrastructures
appear. However, each application uses its own data format, and it is hard to see how
applications should interoperate. A related area is Web Services: driven by industry
efforts numerous specifications are developed, which are of interest for the Grid projects
as well as for the Peer-to-Peer efforts. Although there is an agreement that Web Services
would benefit from more semantics, little systematic research has been done on the problem
of how to combine the notion the Semantic Web with Web Services, Peer-to-Peer and Grid
computing.
The main topic of this workshop will be the relationship between Semantic
Web, Grid computing and Peer-to-Peer efforts, and how developed technologies in one area
can advance another area. More specifically, workshop topics include:
- Scalable infrastructures for service discovery in Grid computing and
P2P networks, e.g., based on reconfiguration of the network with respect to shared
interests or shared ontologies
- Interoperation infrastructure for enabling heterogeneous peers to
exchange and translate information
- Incrementally learning and evolution of ontologies in a distributed
computing environment.
- Metadata infrastructures for P2P and Grid computing
- Task ontologies and service composition languages
- How can Semantic Web services benefit from being Grid Services.
The workshop will be organized in part around talks presenting research
result in the intersection of the Semantic Web, P2P and Grid computing. Another important
part of the workshop will be break-out groups, focusing on the amalgamation of Semantic
Web and distributed computing. We hope the break-out groups will evolve into independent
working groups and generate follow-up activities, which contribute to the technology
areas. The proceedings will be published on the Web and a workshop report will
summarize the outcome of the break out groups.
Facilitators:
Karl Aberer is full professor for distributed information systems
at the department of communication systems, EPFL. His research interest are Information
Commerce, Decentralized Information Systems and Use of Economic Principles for Information
Management.
Stefan Decker works as a Computer Scientist at the Information
Sciences Institute. His main research interest are the Semantic Web; adding semantics to
the Web with XML and RDF; ontology based access to information; combining and managing
semantical heterogenous information.
David De Roure David De Roure is a Professor of Computer Science in
the Intelligence Agents Multimedia Research Group in the Electronics and Computer Science,
University of Southampton, UK, where he researches large scale adaptive information
systems - especially grid and pervasive computing systems.
Carole Goble Carole Goble is a Professor in the Department of
Computer Science in the University of Manchester. She is the co-leader of the Information
Management Group, founded in 1997. Her research interests are centred around the
accessibility of information, particularly the use of terminological and ontological
services for the representation and classification of metadata in a number of application
domains.
For more details please visit: Workshop web site
Community Informatics is the study of information and communications
technology to support communities and their processes. This includes achieving community
objectives, such as overcoming "digital divides", and supporting community-based
IT/ICT-enabled initiatives in community economic development, health, environmental and
sustainable development, community-focused learning and civic engagement and social
justice. Community Informatics traditionally has been applied to "local"
communities in a particular local geographical area. Virtual communities are concerned
with creating and sustaining on-line "communities of interest", gaming
communities, among others. Communities of Practice are virtual communities focusing on
sharing knowledge among peers within organizations. Virtual communities, by definition,
depend on technology, but often only use limited tool sets to support specific types of
interaction.
(Virtual) Community Informatics lies at two cross-roads: (a) bringing
together people concerned with Local Communities, Virtual Communities and Communities of
Practice; and (b) bringing together the researchers and practitioners (developers, leaders
and participants) in these three domains. (Virtual) Community Informatics promotes the
cross-fertilization found at this cross-roads, bringing together researchers and
practitioners from many varied disciplines.
The workshop will focus on opportunities and techniques to support both
virtual and local communities, as well as communities of practice. Practitioners building
and participating within communities are welcome, as are those building tools and process
support for communities, as well as researchers.
Facilitator:
Michael Gurstein has worked in the area of Community Informatics
for many years, publishing journal articles and books on the Internet and community access
issues. He has conducted research in the field for several years. From 1996 to 1999 he was
Director of the Centre for Community Enterprise Networking in Sydney, Nova Scotia. Michael
holds a Ph.D. from Cambridge University. Previously he was Associate Professor of
Management and Technology and Director of the Centre for Community Informatics at the
Technical University of British Columbia. He currently is a visiting Full Professor at the
New Jersey Institute of Technology, where he is establishing a program in Community
Informatics.
For more details please visit: Workshop web site
In 2003 the adaptive hypermedia workshop will focus on adaptation
engineering. Each part of the workshop will approach this problem from a different
perspective, starting with the enabling technologies for realizing adaptation engineering
at WWW 2003, discussing issues with respect to user modelling (as the main driving part of
adaptive applications) at UM 2003, and finally presenting various ways of constructing
adaptive hypermedia at HyperText 03. The three sessions will feature joint proceedings,
published on the Web at http://wwwis.win.tue.nl/ah2003/,
and also as a TU/e Computer Science Report.
Papers that report experimental results, research reviews, case studies,
and theoretical frameworks on adaptation engineering within the following list of
application areas are especially welcome:
- education
- e-commerce, web services
- e-health
- games and entertainment
- e-news
- culture, museums
- law
- workflow management
- wireless and mobility
All contributions should fit into the following list of topics, in order
to enable focused discussions during the workshop sessions.
Facilitator:
Paul de Bra is (full) Professor at the Computer Science Department
of the
Eindhoven University of Technology. He is (co-)author of about 80 publications, among
which 3 books.
The objective of this workshop is to provide a single forum for
researchers and technologists to discuss the state-of-the-art, present their
contributions, and set future directions in emerging innovative applications for
mobile wireless access. The workshop will consist of technical papers, panel
discussions, invited talks and demonstrations of research prototypes. Topics of interest
for technical papers include, but are not limited to the following:
- Security of mobile applications
- Mobile middleware platforms
- Mobile multimedia applications
- Mobile enterprise applications
- Location Aware Services and Applications
- Peer-to-peer mobile computing
- Hybrid applications that seamlessly transfer between cellular and wireless
LAN systems
- Emerging standards and transition issues
- Robustness and Quality of Service (QoS) issues
- Performance studies of mobile applications
Facilitators:
Dr. Charles Petrie is Senior Research Scientist at the
Stanford Center for Information Technology in the Computer Science Department, working on
the FX-Agents Project. Topic: Virtual Enterprises using web services and agents.
Dr. Rittwik Jana is Principal Member Technical Staff at the
AT&T Labs Research. He has been working in the area of mobile and wireless
communications for ten years covering aspects from physical layer modem design to
application layer software development. His primary expertise fall in the areas of radio
resource management, mobile service platform design and ultra wideband channel modeling.
For more details please visit: Workshop web site
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