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EvoDyn 2012 - 2nd Joint Workshop on Knowledge Evolution and Ontology Dynamics

Date2012-11-11

Deadline2012-07-31

VenueBoston, USA - United States USA - United States

Keywords

Website

Topics/Call fo Papers

2nd Joint Workshop on Knowledge Evolution and Ontology Dynamics
Collocated with the 11th International Semantic Web Conference (ISWC 2012)
November 11/12th, 2012
Boston, US
http://www.ontologydynamics.org/od/index.php/evody...
DESCRIPTION

Over the course of the last decade, the Semantic Web research has engaged
in capturing and representing global knowledge in the form of the Linked
Data cloud and expressive distributed ontologies of various levels of
granularity. Usually, emphasis is put on representing as up-to-date and
accurate
a state of knowledge as possible. However, an important aspect that has
largely been overlooked, and has been treated only in a very rudimentary
fashion so far, is the evolution of knowledge itself. Ontology dynamics
and versioning is one aspect of this field that has been well studied,
but only for the purposes of change-management. This is only one of many
facets of knowledge evolution and we propose to create and foster a
research
community concerned with all aspects of how knowledge evolves and changes
over time in the context of the Semantic Web. This includes analysis of
trends
and change in formal descriptions (i.e., ontologies), but also in
associated
raw sources of knowledge (scientific publications, unstructured or
semi-structured web content, traditional data stores, e-mail or on-line
discussion threads, etc.).
EvoDyn 2012 builds on the success of the 2011 edition and on the previous
workshops aggregated under the IWOD workshop series. EvoDyn continues in
the
tradition of IWOD in being the core annual event to discuss advances in the
broad area of ontology dynamics, and to track recent work directly or
indirectly
related to the problem of evolving ontologies. As ontologies are formal
representations of knowledge, the study of their dynamics is an inherent
part
of investigating the knowledge evolution phenomena, yet it is only one of
many
relevant aspects this workshop aims to cover in an integral manner.
In particular, the workshop focuses on analysis of trends and change in
formal
descriptions (i.e., ontologies), but also in associated raw sources of
knowledge
(scientific publications, unstructured or semi-structured web content,
traditional data stores, e-mail or on-line discussion threads, etc.). We
are
especially interested in research targeted on various states of knowledge
evolution,
such as (a) conflicts, (b) consolidation, (c) discovery, (d) paradigm
shifts,
and (e) breakthroughs. One crucial objective of better understanding these
different
states may be to study directly the underlying causes and dynamics needed
to
generate discoveries and breakthroughs. We will only be able to facilitate
and
possibly also generate such desirable situations if we can understand the
process
of how knowledge evolves. The process of how knowledge in a field grows and
changes,
crystallizes, and fractures are all areas of interest of this workshop. The
same
holds for related novel applied technologies, such as:
* Tools for tracking the progress of knowledge from latent ideas, through
hypotheses
to well-supported facts and/or claims;
* Methods for identifying what are the crucial fulcrum-points where a
particular field
may blossom or fail;
* Methodologies and supporting tools for identification and reinforcement
of emerging
promising trends in various academic and/or industrial domains;
* Platforms facilitating interconnection and cross-fertilization of related
endeavors
in isolated disciplines.
TOPICS

The topics of interest include, but are not limited to the following
categories and
their sub-domains.
Foundations of Knowledge Evolution:
* Philosophical and epistemological aspects of evolving knowledge
* Evolving knowledge as a complex system
* Models and ontologies for knowledge evolution
* Models and ontologies for change management
Temporal Aspects of Knowledge Capture:
* Dynamic ontology learning
* Ontology-based data mining
* Hypothesis and claim extraction
* Information retrieval and extraction for detecting paradigm shifts
* Evolution of ontologies from a general purpose design to a usable
application-oriented
form
The Representation and Reasoning of Evolving Knowledge:
* Time representation
* Semantic evolution and discovery
* Temporal reasoning
* Provenance
* Reasoning for trend analysis
* Reasoning for knowledge shift detection
Knowledge Integration and Analysis Over Time:
* Time-aware ontology alignment
* Time-aware data integration
* Similarity metrics for evolving knowledge
* Detecting, managing and reconciling conflicting knowledge
The Visualization and Presentation of Evolving Knowledge:
* Querying for evolving knowledge
* Browsing evolving knowledge
* Visualizing trends, changes and paradigm shifts
* Visual summarization of knowledge sub-domains
* User interfaces for evolving knowledge presentation
Possible Application Domains:
* Genetics / Molecular Biology
* Clinical Science
* Biomedical informatics
* Neuroscience / Neuroinformatics
* Business analytics
* Legal studies
* Discourse analysis
* Digital humanities
We especially encourage submissions that integrally cover multiple
above-mentioned topics.
SUBMISSIONS

We accept two types of submissions:
* Full papers - up to 12 pages
* Position papers - up to 4 pages
All submissions should be submitted in PDF format, via EasyChair at:
* http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=evodyn2...
Submissions should be formatted according to the LNCS Springer format
(http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-...). The
workshop proceedings will both be uploaded to CEUR (http://ceur-ws.org/)
and placed on electronic media for distribution at the conference.
DATES

July 31, 2012: Submission of papers
August 21, 2012: Notification of acceptance/rejection
September 10, 2012: Camera ready paper submissions
COMMITTEES

Organising Committee
* Tudor Groza, School of ITEE, The University of Queensland
* Dimitris Plexousakis, Institute of Computer Science, FORTH, Greece
* Vit Novacek, DERI (Digital Enterprise Research Institute), National
University
of Ireland Galway
Steering Committee
* Grigoris Antoniou, Institute of Computer Science, FORTH
* Mathieu d'Aquin, Knowledge Media Institute, The Open University
* Gully Burns, Information Sciences Institute, University of Southern
California
* Giorgos Flouris, Institute of Computer Science, FORTH
* Carole Goble, Information Management Group, Manchester University
* Zhisheng Huang, Division of Mathematics and Computer Science, Vrije
Universiteit of
Amsterdam
* Jeff Z. Pan, Department of Computing Science, University of Aberdeen
* Guilin Qi, School of Computer Science and Engineering, Southeast
University, China
* Fouad Zablith, Olayan School of Business, American University of Beirut,
Lebanon
Program Committee
* Paul Buitelaar, DERI Galway, Ireland
* Vinay Chaudhri, SRI International, US
* Tim Clark, MGH, Harvard University, US
* Yolanda Gil, ISI, University of Southern California, US
* Jerome Euzenat, INRIA & LIG, France
* Lawrence Hunter, University of Colorado, US
* Pascal Hitzler, Wright State University, US
* Yuan-Fang Li, Monash University, Australia
* Thomas Meyer, Meraka Institute, South Africa
* Enrico Motta, Open University, UK
* Livia Predoiu, University of Magdeburg, Germany
* Cartic Ramakrishnan, ISI, University of Southern California, US
* Vladislav Ryzhikov, Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, Italy
* Agnes Sandor, Xerox Research Centre Europe, France
* Kavitha Srinivas, IBM, US
* Tania Tudorache, Stanford University, US
* Kewen Wang, Griffith University, Australia
* Renata Wasserman, Universidade de Sao Paolo, Brazil

Last modified: 2012-06-01 23:57:41