Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

June 1, 2011

Elsevier/Tetherless World Health and Life Sciences Hackathon (27-28 June 2011)

Filed under: Conferences,Linked Data — Patrick Durusau @ 6:50 pm

Elsevier/Tetherless World Health and Life Sciences Hackathon (27-28 June 2011)

From the announcement:

The Tetherless World Constellation at RPI is excited to announce that TWC and the SciVerse team at Elsevier are planning a 24-hour Health and Life Sciences Semantic Web Hackathon to be held 27-28 June 2011. The Elsevier-sponsored event will be held at the beautiful Pat’s Barn, on the campus of the Rensselaer Technology Park.

Participants will compete against each other to develop apps using linked data from TWC and other sources, web APIs from Elsevier SciVerse, and visualization and other resources from around the Web.

Registration at: http://twcsciverse2011.eventbrite.com/

You won’t see much other than Pat’s Barn but it is a 24-hour hackathon and there are prizes!

Using topic maps to make linked data links less semantically opaque comes to mind.

Nuxeo World 2011

Filed under: Conferences — Patrick Durusau @ 6:50 pm

Nuxeo World 2011

Paris: 20-21 October 2011

From the website:

We are pleased to invite you to Nuxeo World 2011, the second edition of our international conference on Nuxeo technology and solutions.

Whether you’re a partner or a customer, Nuxeo World provides multiple opportunities to discuss ECM topics and share experiences. We would love to hear how Nuxeo solutions have impacted your business, and give you a chance to share your knowledge and expertise with others in the industry.

Here’s your chance to show how topic maps enhance Enterprise Content Management (ECM) solutions.

May 31, 2011

Balisage 2011 Call for Late-breaking News

Filed under: Conferences — Patrick Durusau @ 6:45 pm

Balisage 2011 Call for Late-breaking News

The call for late-breaking news for Balisage has gone out!

Due 10 June 2011!

Submit a paper if:

  • You have plane tickets for Montreal but are not (yet) attending a conference
  • You are fleeing to Canada early to avoid the draft avoidance rush and need a cover story
  • You want to go to that great Greek restaurant just down from the Europa
  • You heard about St. Catherine’s but just don’t believe the reports.
  • You are attending Balisage and haven’t submitted a paper, yet

Oh, I almost forgot, the conference organizers have some suggestions on entering the fierce competition for a late-breaking paper:

a) really late-breaking (it reports on something that happened in the last month or two) or

b) a well-developed paper, an extended paper proposal, or a very long abstract with references on a topic related to Markup and not already on the 2011 conference program.

Try Balisage. It is the best markup conference of the year. (full stop)

May 30, 2011

Semantic Web Dog Food (There’s a fly in my
bowl.)

Filed under: Conferences,OWL,RDF,RDFa,Semantic Web — Patrick Durusau @ 6:59 pm

Semantic Web Dog Food

From the website:

Welcome to the Semantic Web Conference Corpus – a.k.a. the Semantic Web Dog Food Corpus! Here you can browse and search information on papers that were presented, people who attended, and other things that have to do with the main conferences and workshops in the area of Semantic Web research.

We currently have information about

  • 2133 papers,
  • 5020 people and
  • 1273 organisations at
  • 20 conferences and
  • 132 workshops,

and a total of 126886 unique triples in our database!

The numbers looked low to me until I read in the FAQ:

This is not just a site for ISWC [International Semantic Web Conference] and ESWC [European Semantic Web Conference] though. We hope that, in time, other metadata sets relating to Semantic Web activity will be hosted here — additional bibliographic data, test sets, community ontologies and so on.

This illustrates a persistent problem of the Semantic Web. This site has one way to encode the semantics of these papers, people, conferences and workshops. Other sources of semantic data on these papers, people, conferences and workshops may well use other ways to encode those semantics. And every group has what it feels are compelling reasons for following its choices and not the choices of others. Assuming they are even aware of the choices of others. (Discovery being another problem but I won’t talk about that now.)

The previous semantic diversity of natural language is now represented by a semantic diversity of ontologies and URIs. Now our computers can more rapidly and reliably detect that we are using different vocabularies. The SW seems like a lot of work for such a result. Particularly since we continue to use diverse vocabularies and more diverse vocabularies continue to arise.

The SW solution, using OWL Full:

5.2.1 owl:sameAs

The built-in OWL property owl:sameAs links an individual to an individual. Such an owl:sameAs statement indicates that two URI references actually refer to the same thing: the individuals have the same “identity”.

For individuals such as “people” this notion is relatively easy to understand. For example, we could state that the following two URI references actually refer to the same person:

<rdf:Description rdf:about="#William_Jefferson_Clinton">
<owl:sameAs rdf:resource="#BillClinton"/>
</rdf:Description>

The owl:sameAs statements are often used in defining mappings between ontologies. It is unrealistic to assume everybody will use the same name to refer to individuals. That would require some grand design, which is contrary to the spirit of the web.

In OWL Full, where a class can be treated as instances of (meta)classes, we can use the owl:sameAs construct to define class equality, thus indicating that two concepts have the same intensional meaning. An example:

<owl:Class rdf:ID="FootballTeam">
<owl:sameAs rdf:resource="http://sports.org/US#SoccerTeam"/>
</owl:Class>

One could imagine this axiom to be part of a European sports ontology. The two classes are treated here as individuals, in this case as instances of the class owl:Class. This allows us to state that the class FootballTeam in some European sports ontology denotes the same concept as the class SoccerTeam in some American sports ontology. Note the difference with the statement:

<footballTeam owl:equivalentClass us:soccerTeam />

which states that the two classes have the same class extension, but are not (necessarily) the same concepts.

Anyone see a problem? Other than requiring the use of OWL Full?

The absence of any basis for “…denotes the same concept as….?” I can’t safely reuse this axiom because I don’t know on what basis its author made such a claim. The URIs may provide further information that may satisfy me the axiom is correct but that still leaves me in the dark as to why the author of the axiom thought it to be correct. Overly precise for football/soccer ontologies you say but what of drug interaction ontologies? Or ontologies that govern highly sensitive intelligence data?

So we repeat semantic diversity, create maps to overcome the repeated semantic diversity and the maps we create have no explicit basis for the mappings they represent. Tell me again why this was a good idea?

Social Data on the Web (SDoW2011)

Filed under: Conferences,Data,Semantic Web — Patrick Durusau @ 6:55 pm

Social Data on the Web (SDoW2011)

Important Dates:

Submission deadline: Aug 15, 2011 (23:59 pm Hawaii time, GMT-10)
Notification of acceptance: Sep 05, 2011
Camera-ready paper submission: Sep 15, 2011
Camera-ready proceedings: Oct 07, 2011
Workshop: Oct 23/24, 2011

From the website:

Aim and Scope

The 4th international workshop Social Data on the Web (SDoW2011) co-located with the 10th International Semantic Web Conference (ISWC2011) aims to bring together researchers, developers and practitioners involved in semantically-enhancing social media websites, as well as academics researching more formal aspect of these interactions between the Semantic Web and Social Web.

It is now widely agreed in the community that the Semantic Web and the Social Web can benefit from each other. One the one hand, the speed at which data is being created on the Social Web is growing at exponential rate. Recent statistics showed that about 100 million Tweets are created per day and that Facebook has now 500 million users. Yet, some issues still have to be tackled, such as how to efficiently make sense of all this data, how to ensure trust and privacy on the Social Web, how to interlink data from different systems, whether it is on the Web or in the enterprise, or more recently, how to link Social Network and sensor networks to enable Semantic Citizen Sensing.

Prior Proceedings:

SDoW2008

SDoW2009

SDoW2010

May 27, 2011

Web 2.0 Expo SF 2011

Filed under: Conferences,Interface Research/Design — Patrick Durusau @ 12:32 pm

Web 2.0 Expo SF 2011

Presentations and in many cases slides from the Web 2.0 Expo, March 28-31, 2011.

Just scanning the titles of the presentations, I would suggest sending this link to your UI team. There are a number of presentations that will give your UI team ideas for a successful interface.

Having a great topic map engine isn’t enough. Nor is having great content enough. Users have to like using your interface.

If there are any presentations that you find particularly helpful, please mention them in a comment.

May 26, 2011

Something Completely Different:
A useful deliverable?

Filed under: Conferences — Patrick Durusau @ 3:41 pm

Breaking with long-standing, respected and near holy traditions of conference workshops with jet-lagged, caffeine-jagged, email-reading, passive-aggressives half-listening to speakers, who are not reading their email, Balisage pre-conference workshop will focus on creation of a useful deliverable.

For the topic: Document Oriented XML: Identifying Attainable Expectations

Important dates:

Balisage
Symposium August 1, 2011
Conference August 2-5, 2011

From the announcement:

This year after a short introduction to the topic, the goal, and the approach, the attendees will break out into work groups with writing assignments and will actively participate in the development of a white paper. As the day progresses, groups will work on assignments, report back to the whole, and receive new assignments.

The notes, text, lists, and stories created during the workshop will be turned over to an editor who will produce a White Paper from the work produced during the workshop.

We expect this to be an intense, interactive, and productive day.

Participate if you want to:

  • help draft a document that will meet the needs of many
  • influence the direction and content of this document
  • learn what some others think
  • work elbow to elbow with XMLers of different backgrounds for a day
  • throw yourself into an interactive group activity.

If this does not sound like your sort of day, if you are more comfortable in a more traditional conference environment, please join us for Balisage: The Markup Conference 2011, starting the following day.

Registration Information: http://www.balisage.net/registration.html

Details on the Symposium: http://www.balisage.net/interchange/
Details on Balisage: The Markup Conference: http://www.balisage.net

August, Montreal, Balisage, markup folks, what more could you want?

24th OpenMath Workshop

Filed under: Conferences,Mathematics — Patrick Durusau @ 3:40 pm

24th OpenMath Workshop
Bertinoro, Italy
July 20, 2011
co-located with CICM 2011
Continuous submission until July 10

From the post with the announcement (the link at the CICM site is broken, as of 24 May 2011)

OBJECTIVES

With the release of the MathML 3 W3C recommendation, OpenMath enters a new phase of its development. Topics we expect to see at the workshop include

  • Feature Requests (Standard Enhancement Proposals) and Discussions for OpenMath3
  • Convergence of OpenMath and MathML 3
  • Reasoning with OpenMath
  • Software using or processing OpenMath
  • New OpenMath Content Dictionaries

though others related to OpenMath are certainly welcomed. For examples of contributions see the 22nd OpenMath Workshop of 2009 (http://staff.bath.ac.uk/masjhd/OM2009.html#contributions).

Contributions can be either full research papers, Standard Enhancement Proposals, or a description of new Content Dictionaries, particularly ones that are suggested for formal adoption by the OpenMath Society.

IMPORTANT DATES (all times are GMT)

OpenMath 2011 does not have a submission deadline. Submissions will be accepted until July 10 and reviewed and notified continuously.

SUBMISSIONS

Submission is by e-mail to omws2011@googlegroups.com. Papers must conform to the Springer LNCS style, preferably using LaTeX2e and the Springer llncs class files.

Submission categories:

  • Full paper: 4-12 LNCS pages
  • Short paper: 1-8 LNCS pages
  • CD description: 1-8 LNCS pages; a .zip or .tgz file of the CDs should be attached.
  • Standard Enhancement Proposal: 1-12 LNCS pages (as appropriate w.r.t. the background knowledge required); a .zip or .tgz file of any related implementation (e.g. a Relax NG schema) should be attached.

PROCEEDINGS

Electronic proceedings will be published on the OpenMath web site in time for the conference.

WORKSHOP COMMITTEE

  • James Davenport (The University of Bath)
  • Michael Kohlhase (Jacobs University Bremen, Germany)
  • Christoph Lange (Jacobs University Bremen, Germany)

Comments/questions/inquiries: to be sent to omws2011@googlegroups.com

May 18, 2011

Balisage 2011 Preliminary Program

Filed under: Conferences,Data Mining,RDF,SPARQL,XPath,XQuery,XSLT — Patrick Durusau @ 6:40 pm

At-A-Glance

Program (in full)

From the announcement (Tommie Usdin):

Topics this year include:

  • multi-ended hypertext links
  • optimizing XSLT and XQuery processing
  • interchange, interoperability, and packaging of XML documents
  • eBooks and epub
  • overlapping markup and related topics
  • visualization
  • encryption
  • data mining

The acronyms this year include:

XML XSLT XQuery XDML REST XForms JSON OSIS XTemp RDF SPARQL XPath

New this year will be:

Lightning talks: an opportunity for participants to say what they think, simply, clearly, and persuasively.

As I have said before, simply the best conference of the year!

Conference site: http://www.balisage.net/

Registration: http://www.balisage.net/registration.html

May 16, 2011

Emerging multidisciplinary research across database management systems

Filed under: Conferences,Database — Patrick Durusau @ 3:19 pm

Emerging multidisciplinary research across database management systems by Anisoara Nica, Fabian Suchanek (INRIA Saclay – Ile de France), Aparna Varde.

Abstract:

The database community is exploring more and more multidisciplinary avenues: Data semantics overlaps with ontology management; reasoning tasks venture into the domain of artificial intelligence; and data stream management and information retrieval shake hands, e.g., when processing Web click-streams. These new research avenues become evident, for example, in the topics that doctoral students choose for their dissertations. This paper surveys the emerging multidisciplinary research by doctoral students in database systems and related areas. It is based on the PIKM 2010, which is the 3rd Ph.D. workshop at the International Conference on Information and Knowledge Management (CIKM). The topics addressed include ontology development, data streams, natural language processing, medical databases, green energy, cloud computing, and exploratory search. In addition to core ideas from the workshop, we list some open research questions in these multidisciplinary areas.

Good overview of papers from PIKM 2010, a number of which will be of interest to topic mappers.

PIKM 2010 (You will need to use the Table of Contents tab.)

May 10, 2011

May 9, 2011

Google at CHI 2011

Google at CHI 2011

From the Google blog:

Google has an increasing presence at ACM CHI: Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, which is the premiere conference for Human Computer Interaction research. Eight Google papers will appear at the conference. These papers not only touch on our core areas such as Search, Chrome and Android but also demonstrate our growing effort in new areas where HCI is essential, such as new search user interfaces, gesture-based interfaces and cross-device interaction. They showcase our efforts to address user experiences in diverse situations. Googlers are playing active roles in the conference in many other ways too: participating in conference committees, hosting panels, organizing workshops and teaching courses, as well as running demos and 1:1 sessions at Google’s booth.

The post also has a complete set of links to papers from Google and other materials.

I remember reading something recently about modulating the amount of information sent to a user based on their current activity level. That is a person who was engaged in a task requiring immediate attention (does watching American Idol count?) is sent less information than a person doing something less important (watching a presidential address).

Is merging affected by my activity level or just delivery of less than all the results?

May 5, 2011

The 5th International Joint Conference on Natural Language Processing (IJCNLP2011)

Filed under: Conferences,Natural Language Processing — Patrick Durusau @ 1:50 pm

The 5th International Joint Conference on Natural Language Processing (IJCNLP2011)

May 20, 2011, submission deadline

From the announcement:

The 5th International Joint Conference on Natural Language Processing, organized by the Asian Federation of Natural Language Processing will be held in Chiang Mai, Thailand on November 8-13, 2011. The conference will cover a broad spectrum of technical areas related to natural language and computation. IJCNLP 2011 will include full papers, short papers, oral presentations, poster presentations, demonstrations, tutorials, and workshops.

May 2, 2011

Triplification Challenge 2011

Filed under: Conferences,RDF — Patrick Durusau @ 10:31 am

Triplification Challenge 2011

From the website:

The yearly organized Linked Data Triplification Challenge awards prizes to the most promising application demonstrations and approaches in three fields related to Linked Data.

For the success of the Semantic Web it is from our point of view crucial to overcome the chicken-and-egg problem of missing semantic representations on the Web and the lack of their utilization within concrete applications, to solve real-world problems. The Triplification Challenge aims to expedite this process by raising awareness and showcasing best practices.

3.000 € in prize money will be awarded to the winners of the open track and the special Open Government Data track.

The challenge is open to anyone interested in applying Semantic Web and Linked Data technologies. This might include students, developers, researchers, and people from industry. Individual or group submissions are both acceptable.

Could be an interesting opportunity to expose topic maps as triples. Not to mention an attractive prize!

Important dates:

Extended Submission Deadline: May 30, 2011

Notification of Acceptance: June 27, 2011

Camera-Ready Paper: July 18, 2011

I-SEMANTICS 2011: September 7 – 9, 2011

April 30, 2011

Bridging the Gulf:…

Filed under: Conferences,Digital Library,Information Retrieval — Patrick Durusau @ 10:16 am

Bridging the Gulf: Communication and Information in Society, Technology, and Work

October 9-13, 2011, New Orleans, Louisiana

From the website:

The ASIST Annual Meeting is the main venue for disseminating research centered on advances in the information sciences and related applications of information technology.

ASIST 2011 builds on the success of the 2010 conference structure and will have the integrated program that is an ASIST strength. This will be achieved using the six reviewing tracks pioneered in 2010, each with its own committee of respected reviewers to ensure that the conference meets your high expectations for standards and quality. These reviewers, experts in their fields, will assist with a rigorous peer-review process.

Important Dates:

  1. Papers, Panels, Workshops & Tutorials
    • Deadline for submissions: May 31
    • Notification to authors: June 28
    • Final copy: July 15
  2. Posters, Demos & Videos:
    • Deadline for submissions: July 1
    • Notification to authors: July 20
    • Final copy: July 27

One of the premier technical conferences for librarians and information professionals in the United States.

The track listings are:

  • Track 1 – Information Behaviour
  • Track 2 – Knowledge Organization
  • Track 3 – Interactive Information & Design
  • Track 4 – Information and Knowledge Management
  • Track 5 – Information Use
  • Track 6 – Economic, Social, and Political Issues

A number of opportunities for topic map based presentations.

The conference being located in New Orleans is yet another reason to attend! The food, music, and street life has to be experienced to be believed. No description would be adequate.

April 28, 2011

Dataset linkage recommendation on the Web of Data

Filed under: Conferences,Entity Resolution,Linked Data,LOD — Patrick Durusau @ 3:18 pm

Dataset linkage recommendation on the Web of Data by Martijn van der Plaat (Master thesis).

Abstract:

We address the problem of, given a particular dataset, which candidate dataset(s) from the Web of Data have the highest chance of holding co-references, in order to increase the efficiency of coreference resolution. Currently, data publishers manually discover and select the right dataset to perform a co-reference resolution. However, in the near future the size of the Web of Data will be such that data publishers can no longer determine which datasets are candidate to map to. A solution for this problem is finding a method to automatically recommend a list of candidate datasets from the Web of Data and present this to the data publisher as an input for the mapping.

We proposed two solutions to perform the dataset linkage recommendation. The general idea behind our solutions is predicting the chance a particular dataset on the Web of Data holds co-references with respect to the dataset from the data publisher. This prediction is done by generating a profile for each dataset from the Web of Data. A profile is meta-data that represents the structure of a dataset, in terms of used vocabularies, class types, and property types. Subsequently, dataset profiles that correspond with the dataset profile from the data publisher, get a specific weight value. Datasets with the highest weight values have the highest chance of holding co-references.

A useful exercise but what happens when data sets have inconsistent profiles from different sources?

And for all the drum banging, only a very tiny portion of all available datasets are part of Linked Data.

How do we evaluate the scalability of such a profiling technique?

April 24, 2011

Hadoop Summit 2010

Filed under: Conferences,Hadoop — Patrick Durusau @ 5:33 pm

Hadoop Summit 2010

Slides and some videos from the Hadoop Summit 2010 meeting.

April 21, 2011

Graph Data Management (GDM 2011)

Filed under: Conferences,Graphs — Patrick Durusau @ 12:36 pm

The 2nd International Workshop on Graph Data Management: Techniques and Applications (GDM 2011)

The Path-o-Logical Gremlin presentation I mentioned the other day was at this conference.

I am looking for slides and/or papers from the other presentations.

April 20, 2011

CUFP: Commercial Users of Functional Programming

Filed under: Conferences,Functional Programming — Patrick Durusau @ 2:19 pm

CUFP: Commercial Users of Functional Programming

The How Twitter Scales post lead me to the CUFP site that has free videos from previous conferences!

The call for participation for CUFP 2011 has gone out and proposals are due by 15 June 2011.

Co-located with the ACM International Conference on Functional Programming (ICFP) conference in Toyko. September 19-21, 2011.

April 19, 2011

April 15, 2011

Fifth International AAAI Conference on Weblogs and Social Media (ICWSM) – Papers

Filed under: Artificial Intelligence,Conferences — Patrick Durusau @ 6:28 am

Fifth International AAAI Conference on Weblogs and Social Media (ICWSM) – Papers

Matthew Hurst has gathered up links for the accepted papers for ICSWM 2011.

Thanks Matthew!

April 13, 2011

7th international Digital Curation Conference

Filed under: Conferences,Curation — Patrick Durusau @ 1:23 pm

7th international Digital Curation Conference

Call for papers where topics include:

  • Lessons learned from the inter-disciplinary use of open data: examples of enablers, barriers and success stories
  • Curation of mixed data collections, with open and sensitive or private content
  • Gathering evidence for benefits of data sharing
  • Building capacity for the effective management, sharing and reuse of open data
  • Scale issues in the management of sensitive data
  • Tensions between maintaining quality and openness
  • Linked data, open data, closed data and provenance
  • Technical and organisational solutions for data security
  • Developing new metrics for open data
  • Ethical issues and personal data
  • Legislation and open data

Submission deadline: 25 July 2011

Conference:

5 – 7 December 2011
Marriott Royal Hotel, Bristol, UK

April 12, 2011

SemTech 2011 – London/Washington, D.C.

Filed under: Conferences,Semantics — Patrick Durusau @ 12:06 pm

SemTech 2011 – London/Washington, D.C.

London: September 25-27, 2011

Washington, D.C. November 29 – December 1, 2011

Apparently a common deadline for proposals of Monday, May 2, 2011.

Interesting range of semantic web, linked data, text analysis, data/content management, etc.

I suppose the real question is balancing the hassle of U.K. airport security against the odds of nasty weather in D.C.

Since both are virtually certain, it may come down to which one is more cost effective and convenient.

April 4, 2011

March 31, 2011

….object coreference on the semantic web (and a question)

Filed under: Conferences,Semantic Web — Patrick Durusau @ 3:41 pm

A self-training approach for resolving object coreference on the semantic web by Wei Hu, Jianfeng Chen, and Yuzhong Qu, all of Nanjing University, Nanjing, China.

Abstract:

An object on the Semantic Web is likely to be denoted with multiple URIs by different parties. Object coreference resolution is to identify “equivalent” URIs that denote the same object. Driven by the Linking Open Data (LOD) initiative, millions of URIs have been explicitly linked with owl:sameAs statements, but potentially coreferent ones are still considerable. Existing approaches address the problem mainly from two directions: one is based upon equivalence inference mandated by OWL semantics, which finds semantically coreferent URIs but probably omits many potential ones; the other is via similarity computation between property-value pairs, which is not always accurate enough. In this paper, we propose a self-training approach for object coreference resolution on the Semantic Web, which leverages the two classes of approaches to bridge the gap between semantically coreferent URIs and potential candidates. For an object URI, we firstly establish a kernel that consists of semantically coreferent URIs based on owl:sameAs, (inverse) functional properties and (max-)cardinalities, and then extend such kernel iteratively in terms of discriminative property-value pairs in the descriptions of URIs. In particular, the discriminability is learnt with a statistical measurement, which not only exploits key characteristics for representing an object, but also takes into account the matchability between properties from pragmatics. In addition, frequent property combinations are mined to improve the accuracy of the resolution. We implement a scalable system and demonstrate that our approach achieves good precision and recall for resolving object coreference, on both benchmark and large-scale datasets.

Interesting work.

In particular the use of property-value pairs in the service of discovering similarity.

So, why are users limited to owl:sameAs?

If machines can discover property-value pairs that identify “objects,” then why not enable users to declare property-value pairs that identify the same “objects?”

Such declarations could be used by both machines and users.

March 27, 2011

Ontology Driven Implementation of Semantic Services for the Enterprise Environment (ODISSEE) Workshop

Filed under: Conferences,Ontology — Patrick Durusau @ 3:13 pm

Ontology Driven Implementation of Semantic Services for the Enterprise Environment (ODISSEE) Workshop

April 12-13, 2011 · 8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.

From the website:

Alion Science and Technology and the National Center for Ontological Research (NCOR, University at Buffalo) will host a two-day “Ontology Driven Implementation of Semantic Services for the Enterprise Environment (ODISSEE)” Workshop. ODISSEE aims to foster awareness of and collaboration between disparate information-sharing efforts across the US Government. The workshop will feature individual presentations on information-sharing development, as well as panel sessions on ontology and data vocabulary. This workshop supports the Joint Planning and Development Office (JPDO) information sharing initiatives. Information sharing is at the heart of the transformation from the current state of the National Airspace System (NAS) to NextGen capabilities in 2025 in areas such as unmanned aircraft systems, integrated surveillance and weather.

WORKSHOP OBJECTIVES:

  • Identify and catalogue the various semantic technology efforts across the Federal government.
  • Identify, evaluate, and catalogue standard information-exchange models, such as Universal Core (UCore) and National Information Exchange Model (NIEM) and semantic models of common domains, including time, geography, and events.
  • Explore the use of ontologies to enable information exchanges within a service-oriented architecture (SOA), improve discoverability of services, and align disparate data standards and message models.
  • Coordinate ontology development across diverse Communities of Interest (COIs) to ensure extensibility, interoperability, and reusability.

You guessed from the title this was a government based workshop. Yes? 😉

Looks like a good opportunity to at least meet some of the players in this activity space.

Topic maps certainly qualify as an information-exchange model so that could be one starting point for conversation.

Others?

March 25, 2011

Deep Knowledge Representation Challenge Workshop

Filed under: Conferences,Knowledge Representation — Patrick Durusau @ 4:33 pm

Deep Knowledge Representation Challenge Workshop

From the website:

This workshop will provide a forum to discuss difficult problems in representing complex knowledge needed to support deep reasoning, question answering, explanation and justification systems. The goals of the workshop are: (1) to create a comprehensive set of knowledge representation (KR) challenge problems suitable for a recurring competition, and (2) begin to develop KR techniques to meet those challenges. A set of difficult to represent sentences from a biology textbook are included as an initial set of KR challenges. Cash prizes will be awarded for the most creative and comprehensive solutions to the selected challenges.

The workshop will be a highly interactive event with brief presentations of problems and solutions followed by group discussion. To submit a paper to the workshops, the participants should select a subset of the challenge sentences and present approaches for representing them along with an approach to use that representation in a problem solving task (question answering or decision support). Participants are free to add to the list of challenge sentences, for example, from other chapters of the textbook, or within the spirit of their own projects and experience but should base their suggestions on concrete examples, if possible, from real applications.

Important Dates:

  • 7 May: Submissions due
  • 16 May: Notification of participants
  • 13 June: Final camera ready material for workshop web site and all material for discussion
  • 25 June: Initial workshop – with report back and further, during KCAP. Details to be announced.

I mention this because deep knowledge as in identification of and navigation to is part and parcel of topic maps.

It seems to me that any “…deep reasoning, question answering, explanation and justification system.” is going to succeed or fail based on its identification of subjects.

Or to put it differently, it is difficult to reason effectively if you don’t know what you are talking about. (I could mention several examples from recent news casts but I will forego the opportunity.)

March 21, 2011

EuroHCIR 2011: The 1st European Workshop on Human-Computer Interaction and Information Retrieval

Filed under: Conferences,Information Retrieval,Interface Research/Design — Patrick Durusau @ 8:49 am

EuroHCIR 2011: The 1st European Workshop on Human-Computer Interaction and Information Retrieval

From the website:

HCIR, or Human-Computer Information Retrieval, was a phrase coined by Gary Marchionini in 2005 and is representative of the growing interest in uniting both those who are interested in how information systems are built (the Information Retrieval community) and those who are interested in how humans search for information (the Human-Computer Interaction and Information Seeking communities). Four increasingly popular workshops and an NSF funded event , have brought focus to this multi-disciplinary issue in the USA , and the aim of EuroHCIR 2011 is to focus the European community in the same way.

Consequently, the EuroHCIR workshop has four main goals:

  • Present and discuss novel HCIR designs, systems, and findings.
  • Identify and unite European researchers and industry professionals working in this area.
  • Facilitate and encourage collaboration and joint academic and industry ventures.
  • Define and coordinate a vision for the community for future EuroHCIR events.

The topics for the workshop look quite interesting:

  • Novel interaction techniques for information retrieval.
  • Modelling and evaluation of interactive information retrieval.
  • Exploratory search and information discovery.
  • Information visualization and visual analytics.
  • Applications of HCI techniques to information retrieval needs in specific domains.
  • Ethnography and user studies relevant to information retrieval and access.
  • Scale and efficiency considerations for interactive information retrieval systems.
  • Relevance feedback and active learning approaches for information retrieval.

Important dates:

Submissions: 1st May 2011

Notifications: 20th May 2011

Camera Ready: 2nd June 2011

Workshop: 4th July 2011

March 15, 2011

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