Refereed Papers
| Browsers and User Interfaces |
Data Mining |
Industrial Practice and Experience |
| Internet Monetization |
Mobility |
Performance and Scalability |
Rich Media |
Search |
| Security and Privacy |
Semantic / Data Web |
Social Networks and Web 2.0 |
| Technology for Developing Regions |
Web Engineering |
WWW in China |
XML and Web Data |
Developers Track |
Panels |
Posters |
Tutorials |
Workshops
XML and Web Data
The Web hosts ever-increasing volumes of diverse data and associated services that cannot be fully exploited unless appropriate management and integration technologies are developed. The scale and diversity of Web data requires novel techniques for discovery, analysis storage, and querying. Certainly one critical aspect of Web data management is XML, which has become the lingua-franca of the Web. XML is widely used in exchanging data on the Web and in the publication of data from relational systems.
The XML and Web Data track promotes novel research on next-generation information systems and technologies for managing Web data. The topics of interest for this track but are not limited to:
- XML query processing and data management
- Models and query languages for Web data
- Hidden Web resource discovery, retrieval and integration
- Data management support for Web crawling
- Approximate and trustworthy query answering
- Data stream management systems
- Integration of text into XML and relational databases
- XML Data and schema integration
- Warehousing Web data
- Data management in Peer-to-Peers systems
- Privacy and security of XML data
- Provenance of Web data
- Large-scale web information integration
- Web wrappers
- Information extraction
- Managing uncertainty in Web-based data
Paper formatting requirements will be provided on the submissions page.
-
Track Chair:
Juliana Freire (University of Utah, USA) -
Deputy Chair:
Michael Benedikt (Oxford University, England) -
Program Committee:
Altigran Silva (Federal University of Amazonas)
Chee-Yong Chan (National University of Singapore)
Chen Li (University of California, Irvine)
Clement Yu (University of Illinois at Chicago)
Felix Weigel (Cornell University)
Georg Gottlob (Oxford University)
Lucian Popa (IBM Almaden)
Maarten De Rijke (ISLA, University of Amsterdam)
Makoto Murata (IBM Research)
Maya Ramanath (Max-Planck-Institute for Computer Science)
Philip Bohannon (Yahoo! Research)
Renee J. Miller (Department of Computer Science, University of Toronto)
Serge Abiteboul (INRIA-Futurs)
Stijn Vansummeren (Hasselt University and Transnational University of Limburg)
Vanessa Braganholo (UFRJ)
Wei Wang (UNSW)
Wenfei Fan (University of Edinburgh and Bell Labs)
Xin Dong (University of Washington, Seattle)
Yannis Velegrakis