Here is a one-page printable
PDF version
of the CFP for this track.
Internet and Web technologies enable new kinds of applications,
usually
prefixed with a capital "E" as in E-Commerce, E-Business, E-Learning,
E-Science, E-Healthcare, E-Entertainment, and E-Communities. Many of
these applications are innovative in their use of these technologies,
and support new work, learning, or business scenarios. Focusing on E*
Applications
leads to new requirements as well as to new technologies or
extensions of
existing ones.
The E* Applications Track provides a unique forum both for describing
innovative E* Applications and scenarios as well as innovative
technologies
for these areas. We welcome contributions relating to specific
classes of E*
Applications as well as to cross-cutting issues. Relevant topics
include, but
are not restricted to, the following:
-
E-Communities and Web-based collaboration (including communities
and
collaboration in web-based educational environments; E-Learning and
E-Science
community portals; synchronous collaboration applications and
services;
community discovery and structures)
-
Data management (including distributed and peer-to-peer-based
learning and E-Science repositories; scientific metadata and annotation
management;
intellectual property and digital rights management; data and
workflow
provenance for E-Science; scientific data quality and data cleaning)
-
Service architectures (including distributed Web services; embedded
Web
applications; Web standards for E* applications; data protection,
security and
privacy; ubiquitous computing and internet appliances;
recommendation,
reputation, and trust systems; computational markets for information
services)
-
Data analytics and visualization (including data mining, analysis,
and
statistics in E-Science; scientific visualization and E-Science)
-
E-Commerce and E-Government (including trading algorithms and
infrastructures; trend detection and discovery; experiences with
innovative
e-government infrastructures)
-
Ontologies and the semantic web (including semantic Web and
ontologies for
E* applications; ontology-based data integration and analysis;
languages for
describing goods, services and contracts; ontologies for E-Science;
conceptual
modeling and knowledge represention for E-Science)
-
Experience reports and case studies for E* applications
Paper formatting requirements are provided on the
submissions page.
Track Chair:
Wolfgang Nejdl (L3S and University of Hannover, Germany)
Deputy Chair:
Elisa Bertino (Purdue University, USA)
Program Committee
- Juergen Angele (Ontoprise, Germany)
- Wolf-Tilo Balke (L3S and University of Hannover, Germany)
- Jim Basney (NCSA, USA)
- Kalina Bontcheva (University of Sheffield, UK)
- Athman Bouguettaya (Virginia Tech, USA)
- Peter Brusilovsky (University of Pittsburgh, USA)
- Malu Castellanos (HP Research Labs, USA)
- Stefano Ceri (Politecnico di Milano, Italy)
- Boris Chidlovskii (Xerox Research Centre Europe, France)
- Alexandra Cristea (University of Warwick, UK)
- John Domingue (Knowledge Media Institute, UK)
- Thomas Fahringer (University of Innsbruck, Austria)
- Jianping Fan (University of North-Carolina at Charlotte, UK)
- Christoph Freytag (Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany)
- Moustafa Ghanem (Imperial College, London, UK)
- C. Lee Giles (Pennsylvania State University, USA)
- Jeffrey Grethe (University of California, San Diego, USA)
- Friedrich Hesse (University of Tubingen, Germany)
- Geert-Jan Houben (VU Brussel, Belgium)
- Matthias Jarke (RWTH Aachen, Germany)
- Rohit Khare (CommerceNet, USA)
- Rob Koper (Open University, Netherlands)
- Massimo Mecella (University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy)
- Erica Melis (DFKI, Germany)
- Daniel Schwabe (PUC Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)
- Amit Sheth (University of Georgia and Semagix, USA)
- Heinz Stockinger (University of Vienna, Austria)
- Kien-Lee Tan (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
- Klaus Tochtermann (TU Graz, Austria)
- Xiaoxin Wu (Intel, China)
- Aoying Zhou (Fudan University, China)