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TPDL 2017 - 21st International Conference on Theory and Practice of Digital Libraries

Date2017-09-18 - 2017-09-21

Deadline2017-03-03

VenueThessaloniki, Greece Greece

Keywords

Websitehttps://www.tpdl.eu

Topics/Call fo Papers

The 21st version of the International Conference on Theory and Practice of Digital Libraries holds the general theme “Part of the Machine: turning complex into scalable” and wants to create a dialogue that will address the challenge of creatively transforming these highly synthesised environments into solutions that can scale for the benefit of varied communities.
Digital libraries are complex systems that respond to the needs of multiple communities with escalating requirements. Undoubtedly the effect of big data in research and development is immense and their collection, aggregation, analysis and interpretation is currently the main trend. However, smaller developments are equally interesting in giving the example of managing highly structured and organised information resources.
In this series of conferences, the dialectic between theory and practice is intense, but always aims to produce a state of the art imagery of digital libraries, or else networked information systems that affect the life of academia, education, culture, society and industry. The components of this “machinery” are interconnected and claim the skills and knowledge of multidisciplinary researchers.
Topics
Contributions are welcomed in the following eight tracks, some of which are addressed as Special Tracks. However, submissions are not limited to the topics included in these tracks, neither it is implied that one paper is associated with one topic.
Digital Humanities
Corpora development
Metadata & semantics for DH applications
Text & data mining in DH
Textual & visual information extraction
Ontology engineering & use in DH
Visualization in DH
Annotations & critique in DH
Impact of DH in society & academia
E-Infrastructures
Digital library designs & architectures
Ubiquitous computing & Mobile digital libraries
Internet of Things with digital libraries
Digital preservation
Cloud technologies
Security for digital libraries
Digital forensics
Business models for e-infrastructures
Information Retrieval
Information retrieval & discovery
Query analysis
Indexing & compression
Search engine architectures
Recommendation systems & filtering
IR evaluation
Multimedia IR
Multilingual IR
Searching for sensitive information
Semantics
Archival/Bibliographic Linked Data & applications
Linked Data in disciplinary digital libraries
Authenticity & provenance
Authority management issues
Interoperability & integration
Metadata aggregation
Metadata schemas with emphasis to composite content
Quality metrics for metadata & information structures
Users and Societies
Digital library interfaces
Metrics, altmerics & scientometrics for & in digital libraries
User centered evaluation of digital libraries
Economic & legal issues for DLs
Information behaviour studies
Collaborative information seeking
Sentiment analysis
Content
Digital curation & related workflows
Digitization
Audio-Visual digital libraries
Annotations & user generated content
Records management, business archives & organizational archives
3D modeling & provision
Legal issues for content in digital libraries
Data
Big data
Data science & data education
Data mining
Data representation
Data sharing & reusability
Data structures & quality
Domain specific data, such as biomedical, chemical, astronomical, social
Data provenance
Data in Scholarly Communication
Services
Publishing structured & unstructured information
Visualization of information
Network analysis in & for digital libraries
Web archiving
Annotations management in digital libraries
Personal information management & personal digital libraries
Individual researchers and research groups are invited to submit full papers, short papers, posters and demonstrations on the topics above, but on other relevant topics as well. Their research papers should describe original, unpublished research that is not (and will not be) simultaneously under consideration for publication elsewhere.
Students on any of the above mentioned topics are encouraged to participate to the Doctoral Consortium. A four pages paper, which will appear in the Proceedings volume, is required to be submitted through the Doctoral Consortium track.

Last modified: 2017-01-09 23:36:08