Difference between revisions of "ISWC 2018"
(added organizing committee | dates) |
m (added submission info) |
||
Line 26: | Line 26: | ||
|has demo chair=Marieke van Erp, Medha Atre, | |has demo chair=Marieke van Erp, Medha Atre, | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | '' | + | '' |
+ | ISWC is the premier venue for presenting innovative systems and research results related to the Semantic Web and Linked Data, attracting a large number of high quality submissions every year and participants from both industry and academia. ISWC brings together researchers from different areas, such as artificial intelligence, databases, natural language processing, information systems, human computer interaction, information retrieval, web science, etc., who investigate, develop and use novel methods and technologies for accessing, interpreting and using information on the Web in a more effective way. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Besides the main technical program, ISWC will host several workshops on topics related to the general theme of the conference. The role of the workshops is to provide a setting for focused, intensive scientific exchange among researchers and practitioners interested in a specific topic. As such, workshops are the primary venues for the exploration of emerging ideas as well as for the discussion of novel aspects of established research topics. | ||
+ | '' | ||
==Topics== | ==Topics== | ||
==Submissions== | ==Submissions== | ||
+ | All submissions should be submitted in English via EasyChair as a single PDF file not longer than 4 (four) pages containing the following sections: | ||
+ | * Title and Acronym | ||
+ | * Workshop Type: established/emerging | ||
+ | * Abstract: 200 word summary of the workshop purpose | ||
+ | * Topics: What topics of interest will be covered by the workshop? (Bulleted list; no longer than half a page) | ||
+ | * Motivation (emerging only): Why is the topic timely and of particular interest to ISWC participants? (One to three paragraphs) | ||
+ | * Continuation (established only): Why is it worthwhile to continue the workshop in 2018? Discussion may include novel topics that are emerging, external developments that prompt new challenges, etc. Workshops should also argue why they continue to be relevant and maintain a focused identity versus the main conference. (No longer than half a page) | ||
+ | * Past Workshops (established only): describe the development of the workshop series over the past 3-5 years. Provide quantitative information on submissions and attendance. (No longer than a page) | ||
+ | * Workshop Format: The intended mix of events, such as paper presentations, invited talks, panels, demos and general discussion (Either a tabular schedule or a one paragraph summary) | ||
+ | * Audience (emerging only): Who and how many people are likely to attend? (One paragraph) | ||
+ | * Community (emerging only): Demonstrate that there is an existing community interested in the topic e.g., by providing references for recent papers related to the core topic of the workshop, and/or a discussion why the workshop would attract submissions. (No longer than half a page) | ||
+ | * Chair(s): Name, affiliation, email address, homepage and short (one paragraph) biography of each chair, explaining the chair’s expertise in the workshop topic and experience in organising relevant events. | ||
+ | * Program Committee: Names and affiliations of potential PC members (at least 50% of PC members should have confirmed). | ||
+ | * Proposed Length: Half-day or full-day? | ||
+ | We strongly advise having more than one chair, preferably from different institutions, bringing different perspectives to the workshop topic, ideally with a mix of both junior and senior researchers. We also strongly advise to have a maximum of five workshop organisers. We welcome workshops with an innovative structure and a diverse programme which attracts various types of contributions and ensures rich interactions. We highly encourage workshops with open review procedure (i.e., publicly available submissions and reviews, non-anonymous reviews). Proposed workshops should have a core theme that is much more selective than the broader scope of the main conference. We may reject or propose to merge workshops that overlap significantly with other workshops in terms of theme. | ||
+ | Accepted workshops will be required to prepare a workshop web page containing their call for papers and detailed information about the workshop organisation and timelines. While the ISWC workshop and local chairs will assist with the local organisation of the workshop, the workshop organisers will be responsible for conducting their own reviewing process, for publicity of their workshop, and for publishing electronic proceedings. | ||
+ | Workshop attendees must pay the ISWC workshop registration fee as well as the conference registration fee. At least two workshop organisers must be registered before the early registration date ends and ultimately attend the conference and participate in the workshop (the free registration counts towards the two registrations required). At the discretion of the chairs, workshops may be cancelled if organisers have not registered in a timely manner or if a workshop has received too few submissions.’ | ||
+ | |||
==Important Dates== | ==Important Dates== | ||
Workshop & Tutorial proposals January 21, 2018 | Workshop & Tutorial proposals January 21, 2018 | ||
Line 53: | Line 75: | ||
Workshops & Tutorials October 8-9, 2018 | Workshops & Tutorials October 8-9, 2018 | ||
Main conference October 10-12, 2018 | Main conference October 10-12, 2018 | ||
+ | |||
==Committees== | ==Committees== | ||
* General Chair | * General Chair |
Revision as of 22:10, 15 December 2017
ISWC 2018 | |
---|---|
17th International Semantic Web Conference
| |
Event in series | ISWC |
Dates | 2018/10/08 (iCal) - 2018/10/12 |
Homepage: | iswc2018.semanticweb.org/ |
Twitter account: | @iswc2018 |
Location | |
Location: | Monterey, California, USA |
Loading map... | |
Important dates | |
Workshops: | 2018/01/21 |
Tutorials: | 2018/01/21 |
Abstracts: | 2018/03/30 |
Papers: | 2018/04/06 |
Posters: | 2018/06/08 |
Demos: | 2018/06/08 |
Submissions: | 2018/04/06 |
Notification: | 2018/05/25 |
Camera ready due: | 2018/06/15 |
Committees | |
General chairs: | Elena Simperl |
Workshop chairs: | Elena Demidova, Amrapali Zaveri |
Seminars Chair: | Elena Demidova, Amrapali Zaveri |
Demo chairs: | Marieke van Erp, Medha Atre |
Table of Contents | |
Tweets by @iswc2018 | |
ISWC is the premier venue for presenting innovative systems and research results related to the Semantic Web and Linked Data, attracting a large number of high quality submissions every year and participants from both industry and academia. ISWC brings together researchers from different areas, such as artificial intelligence, databases, natural language processing, information systems, human computer interaction, information retrieval, web science, etc., who investigate, develop and use novel methods and technologies for accessing, interpreting and using information on the Web in a more effective way.
Besides the main technical program, ISWC will host several workshops on topics related to the general theme of the conference. The role of the workshops is to provide a setting for focused, intensive scientific exchange among researchers and practitioners interested in a specific topic. As such, workshops are the primary venues for the exploration of emerging ideas as well as for the discussion of novel aspects of established research topics.
Topics
Submissions
All submissions should be submitted in English via EasyChair as a single PDF file not longer than 4 (four) pages containing the following sections:
- Title and Acronym
- Workshop Type: established/emerging
- Abstract: 200 word summary of the workshop purpose
- Topics: What topics of interest will be covered by the workshop? (Bulleted list; no longer than half a page)
- Motivation (emerging only): Why is the topic timely and of particular interest to ISWC participants? (One to three paragraphs)
- Continuation (established only): Why is it worthwhile to continue the workshop in 2018? Discussion may include novel topics that are emerging, external developments that prompt new challenges, etc. Workshops should also argue why they continue to be relevant and maintain a focused identity versus the main conference. (No longer than half a page)
- Past Workshops (established only): describe the development of the workshop series over the past 3-5 years. Provide quantitative information on submissions and attendance. (No longer than a page)
- Workshop Format: The intended mix of events, such as paper presentations, invited talks, panels, demos and general discussion (Either a tabular schedule or a one paragraph summary)
- Audience (emerging only): Who and how many people are likely to attend? (One paragraph)
- Community (emerging only): Demonstrate that there is an existing community interested in the topic e.g., by providing references for recent papers related to the core topic of the workshop, and/or a discussion why the workshop would attract submissions. (No longer than half a page)
- Chair(s): Name, affiliation, email address, homepage and short (one paragraph) biography of each chair, explaining the chair’s expertise in the workshop topic and experience in organising relevant events.
- Program Committee: Names and affiliations of potential PC members (at least 50% of PC members should have confirmed).
- Proposed Length: Half-day or full-day?
We strongly advise having more than one chair, preferably from different institutions, bringing different perspectives to the workshop topic, ideally with a mix of both junior and senior researchers. We also strongly advise to have a maximum of five workshop organisers. We welcome workshops with an innovative structure and a diverse programme which attracts various types of contributions and ensures rich interactions. We highly encourage workshops with open review procedure (i.e., publicly available submissions and reviews, non-anonymous reviews). Proposed workshops should have a core theme that is much more selective than the broader scope of the main conference. We may reject or propose to merge workshops that overlap significantly with other workshops in terms of theme. Accepted workshops will be required to prepare a workshop web page containing their call for papers and detailed information about the workshop organisation and timelines. While the ISWC workshop and local chairs will assist with the local organisation of the workshop, the workshop organisers will be responsible for conducting their own reviewing process, for publicity of their workshop, and for publishing electronic proceedings. Workshop attendees must pay the ISWC workshop registration fee as well as the conference registration fee. At least two workshop organisers must be registered before the early registration date ends and ultimately attend the conference and participate in the workshop (the free registration counts towards the two registrations required). At the discretion of the chairs, workshops may be cancelled if organisers have not registered in a timely manner or if a workshop has received too few submissions.’
Important Dates
Workshop & Tutorial proposals January 21, 2018 Workshop & Tutorial proposals notifications February 15, 2018 Abstracts (Research, In-use, and Resource tracks) March 30, 2018 Papers (Research, In-use, and Resource tracks) April 6, 2018 Doctoral Consortium submissions April 13, 2018 Author rebuttal phase May 7-11, 2018 Doctoral Consortium notifications May 14, 2018 Paper notifications (Research, In-use, and Resource tracks) May 25, 2018 Doctoral Consortium camera-ready submissions May 28, 2018 Industry papers June 1, 2018 Workshop papers June 1, 2018 End of Early Registration period June 1, 2018 Poster & Demo submissions June 8, 2018 Camera-ready papers (Research, In-use, and Resource tracks) June 15, 2018 Industry papers notifications June 22, 2018 Poster & Demo notifications July 13, 2018 Workshop papers notifications July 13, 2018 End of Standard Registration period July 15, 2018 Industry papers camera-ready papers July 20, 2018 Poster & Demo camera-ready submissions July 24, 2018 Workshops & Tutorials October 8-9, 2018 Main conference October 10-12, 2018
Committees
- General Chair
- Elena Simperl, Professor at University of Southampton, UK
- Local Chair
- Rafael Gonçalves, Research Software Engineer at Stanford University, USA
- Research Track Chairs
- Denny Vrandečić, Ontologist at Google, Mountain View, USA
- Kalina Bontcheva, Senior Researcher at University of Sheffield, UK
- In-Use Track Chairs
- Irene Celino, Research Manager at Cefriel, Italy
- Marta Sabou, Senior Researcher at the Vienna University of Technology, Austria
- Resource Track Chairs
- Mari Carmen Suárez-Figueroa, Assistant Professor at Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain
- Valentina Presutti, Researcher at Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies, Italy
- Journal Chairs
- Abraham Bernstein, Professor at University of Zurich, Switzerland
- Pascal Hitzler, Professor at Wright State University, USA
- Steffen Staab, Professor at University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany
- Workshop and Tutorial Chairs
- Amrapali Zaveri, Postdoctoral Researcher at Maastricht University, Netherlands
- Elena Demidova, Senior Researcher at the L3S Research Center in Hannover, Germany
- Poster and Demo Chairs
- Medha Atre, Assistant Professor at Indian Institute of Technology, India
- Marieke van Erp, Knaw Humanities Cluster, Netherlands
- Poster and Demo Chairs
- Vanessa Lopez, Research Engineer at IBM Research, Dublin, Ireland
- Kavitha Srinivas, Rivet Labs, USA
- Doctoral Consortium Chair
- Sabrina Kirrane, Postdoctoral Researcher at Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria
- Sponsorship Chairs
- Laura Koesten, Research Student at the Open Data Institute, UK
- Maria Maleshkova, Senior Researcher at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany
- Annalisa Gentile, Research Staff Member at IBM Research, San Jose, USA
- Student Coordinators
- Bo Fu, Assistant Professor at California State University, Long Beach, USA
- Anisa Rula, Postdoctoral Researcher at University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy
- Proceedings Chair
- Lucie-Aimée Kaffee, Postgraduate Research Student at University of Southampton, UK
- Metadata Chair
- Oana Inel, Student at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands
- Publicity Chair
- Maribel Acosta, Research Associate at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany
- Semantic Web Challenge
- Heiko Paulheim, Professor at University of Mannheim, Germany
- Local Committee
- Brigid Neff, Meeting Planner Manager
- Tania Tudorache, Senior Research Scientist
- Heidi Wu, Finance Manager
- Galina Malukhina, Division Manager
- Mark Musen, Professor