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DIEW 2010 - Data Intensive eScience Workshop (DIEW 2010)

Date2010-04-04

Deadline2009-12-21

VenueTsukuba, Japan Japan

Keywords

Websitehttp://dasfaa2010.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp/

Topics/Call fo Papers

Data Intensive eScience Workshop
DIEW 2010

April 4th 2010
In conjunction with DASFAA(Database Systems for Advanced Applications) 2010 conference (April1-4, 2010, Tsukuba, Japan)

Workshop website: http://www.diew2010.org/

DASFAA conference website: http://dasfaa2010.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp/

Workshop Call For Papers in PDF

Scope of the Workshop

Data is a key aspect of the scientific research and the amount and the complexity of scientific data is rapidly increasing.
Creating the computer infrastructure which can extract scientific knowledge by linking, processing and analyzing these distributed and diverse data is a crucial issue. This e-Science infrastructure is also a basis for constructing digital repositories which can archive and share valuable knowledge among science communities.
As the climate change problem shows, scientific research needs to be conducted collaboratively on a global scale and the distributed data infrastructure which can support various science communities would be indispensable. Based on this motivation, this workshop aims to bring scientists from diverse fields together, and to serve them an opportunity to share their research experiences on how data intensive computing has been facilitating scientific discoveries.
Topics

Suggested topics of the workshop include but not limited to:
? Digital Repositories and Data Management
? Distributed Data Integration
? Metadata and Annotation
? Data Provenance
? Knowledge discovery
? Large-scale scientific data analysis and visualization
? Collaboration/workflow tools and technologies
? Assimilation and Re-analysis of Data
eScience Research Fileds
? Bioinformatics and Medical Science
? Physical Sciences and Engineering
? Earth & Planetary Sciences, Astronomy
? Agriculture & Environmental Science

Paper Submission

A paper should be submitted in 10-12 pages in the designated Lecture Notes in Computer Science(LNCS) format, which contains original works not concurrently submitted elsewhere. The formatting instructions are described on the DASFAA2010 website and the style files are available from Springer LNCS site. Papers can be submitted electronically via EasyChair system.
http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=diew201...

Important Dates

Dec. 11, 2009 Dec.21, 2009 Paper submission deadline Deadline Extended
Feb. 12, 2010 Acceptance notification to authors
Feb. 26, 2010 On-site paper deadline
Apr. 26, 2010 Final camera-ready copy deadline

Workshop Date

4th, April, 2010

At least one author should register to present at the workshop. Proceedings will be published as a volume of LNCS from Springer after the workshop.
Workshop Organizers

Kento Aida(NII)
Geoffrey Fox(Indiana U)
Neil Chue Hong(OMII-UK)
Isao Kojima(AIST)
Masatoshi Oishi(NAOJ)

Program Committee

Takeshi Horinouchi(Hokkaido U)
Toshiaki Katayama(U.of Tokyo)
Akira Kinjo (Osaka U)
Akiyoshi Matono(AIST)
Yuji Shirasaki(NAOJ)
Yukio Yamamoto(JAXA/ISAS)
Shohei Yokoyama(Shizuoka-U)

Contact address: diew2010-AT-m.aist.go.jp


Supported by KAKEN-fuzoroi

The woodblock print which is from Utagawa Hiroshige's One Hundred Famous Views of Edo shows the Mt. Tsukuba. Utagawa Hiroshige was a Japanese ukiyo-e artist, and one of the last great artists in that tradition.

Hiroshige’s The Fifty-three Stations of the TōkaidŁE/em> (1833?E834) and One Hundred Famous Views of Edo (1856?E858) greatly influenced French Impressionists such as Monet. Vincent Van Gogh copied two of the One Hundred Famous Views of Edo which were among his collection of ukiyoe prints.

(From Wikipedia: Hiroshige)

Last modified: 2010-06-04 19:32:22