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CALL FOR PARTICIPATION

12th ACM/IEEE-CS Joint Conference on Digital Libraries (JCDL 2012)
June 10-14, 2012
Washington, DC, USA

Hosted by The George Washington University and The Library of Congress

http://www.jcdl2012.info<http://www.jcdl2012.info/>

CALL FOR PAPERS

The ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries is a major international 
forum focusing on digital libraries and associated technical, practical, 
organizational, and social issues. JCDL encompasses the many meanings of the 
term digital libraries, including (but not limited to) new forms of information 
institutions and organizations; operational information systems with all manner 
of digital content; new means of selecting, collecting, organizing, 
distributing, and accessing digital content; theoretical models of information 
media, including document genres and electronic publishing; and theory and 
practice of use of managed content in science and education.

IMPORTANT DATES

   * Full Papers due January 23, 2012
   * Short Papers, Panels, Posters & Demos, Workshops, Tutorials due January 
30, 2012
   * Notification of acceptance for Workshops and Tutorials: March 1, 2012
   * Notification of acceptance for Papers, Panels, Posters & Demos: March 21, 
2012
   * Doctoral Consortium Abstract submissions due March 31, 2012

CONFERENCE FOCUS

The theme for JCDL 2012 is #sharing #linking #using #preserving. Digital 
libraries, under a variety of names and modalities, are often part of the every 
day web experience. The challenge is how digital libraries can enhance user 
experience through providing stability in changing information environment, 
breaking down information silos, integrating into accepted practices of the 
web, and providing a range of access and services to resources across the web, 
both to human and machine users.

The intended community for this conference includes those interested in all 
aspects of digital libraries such as infrastructure; institutions; metadata; 
content; services; digital preservation; system design; scientific data 
management; workflows; implementation; interface design; human-computer 
interaction; performance evaluation; usability evaluation; collection 
development; intellectual property; privacy; electronic publishing; document 
genres; multimedia; social, institutional, and policy issues; user communities; 
and associated theoretical topics. JCDL welcomes submissions in these areas, 
and submissions associated with the JCDL 2012 theme of social media influenced 
themes of linking, sharing, usage, and preservation are particularly welcome. 
The conference sessions, workshops and tutorials will cover all these aspects.

Participation is sought from all parts of the world and from the full range of 
established and emerging disciplines and professions including computer 
science, information science, web science, data science, librarianship, data 
management, archival science and practice, museum studies and practice, 
information technology, medicine, social sciences, education and humanities. 
Representatives from academe, government, industry, and others are invited to 
participate.

JCDL 2012 will be held in Washington, DC on the campus of The George Washington 
University. The program is organized by an international committee of scholars 
and leaders in the digital libraries field and attendance is expected to 
include several hundreds of researchers, practitioners, managers, and students.

JCDL 2012 invites submissions of papers and proposals for posters, 
demonstrations, tutorials, and workshops that will make the conference an 
exciting and creative event to attend. As always, the conference welcomes 
contributions from all the fields that intersect to enable digital libraries. 
Topics include, but are not limited to:

   * Collaborative and participatory information environments
   * Cyberinfrastructure architectures, applications, and deployments
   * Data mining/extraction of structure from networked information
   * Digital library and Web Science curriculum development
   * Distributed information systems
   * Extracting semantics, entities, and patterns from large collections
   * Evaluation of online information environments
   * Impact and evaluation of digital libraries and information in education
   * Information and knowledge systems
   * Information policy and copyright law
   * Information visualization
   * Interfaces to information for novices and experts
   * Linked data and its applications
   * Personal digital information management
   * Retrieval and browsing
   * Scientific data curation, citation and scholarly publication
   * Social media, architecture, and applications
   * Social networks, virtual organizations and networked information
   * Social-technical perspectives of digital information
   * Studies of human factors in networked information
   * Theoretical models of information interaction and organization
   * User behavior and modeling
   * Visualization of large-scale information environments
   * Web archiving and preservation

IMPORTANT NOTES FOR ALL SUBMISSIONS

All contributions must be submitted in electronic form via the conference's 
EasyChair submission page, following ACM format guidelines and template 
available from http://www.acm.org/sigs/pubs/proceed/template.html. Please 
submit all papers in PDF format.

PAPER SUBMISSIONS

Paper authors may choose between two formats: Full papers and short papers. 
Both formats will be included in the proceedings and will be presented at the 
conference. Both formats will be rigorously peer reviewed. Complete papers are 
required-abstracts and incomplete papers will not be reviewed.

Full papers report on mature work, or efforts that have reached an important 
milestone. Short papers will highlight efforts that might be in an early stage, 
but are important for the community to be made aware of. Short papers can also 
present theories or systems that can be described concisely in the limited 
space.

Full papers must not exceed 10 pages. Short papers are limited to at most 4 
pages. All papers must be original contributions. The material must therefore 
not have been previously published or be under review for publication 
elsewhere. All contributions must be written in English and must follow the ACM 
formatting guidelines, http://www.acm.org/sigs/pubs/proceed/template.html. 
Papers are to be submitted via the conference's EasyChair submission page, 
http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=jcdl2012

All accepted papers will be published by ACM as conference proceedings and 
electronic versions will be included in both the ACM and IEEE digital libraries.

POSTER & DEMOSTRATION SUBMISSIONS

Posters permit presentation of late-breaking results in an informal, 
interactive manner. Poster proposals should consist of a title, extended 
abstract, and contact information for the authors, and should not exceed 2 
pages. Proposals must follow the conference's formatting guidelines and are to 
be submitted via the conference's EasyChair submission page, 
http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=jcdl2012. Accepted posters will be 
displayed at the conference and may include additional materials, space 
permitting. Abstracts of posters will appear in the proceedings.

Demonstrations showcase innovative digital libraries technology and 
applications, allowing you to share your work directly with your colleagues in 
a high-visibility setting. Demonstration proposals should consist of a title, 
extended abstract, and contact information for the authors and should not 
exceed 2 pages. Proposals must follow the conference's formatting guidelines 
and are to be submitted via the conference's EasyChair submission page,
http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=jcdl2012. Abstracts of 
demonstrations will appear in the proceedings.

PANELS & INVITED BRIEFINGS

Panels will complement the refereed portions of the program with lively 
discussions of controversial and cutting-edge issues that are not addressed by 
other program elements. Invited briefings will explain a topic of interest to 
those building digital libraries-they can be thought of as being 
mini-tutorials. We are not soliciting formal proposals for panels or invited 
briefings, but if you have an idea for one that you'd like to hear, please send 
email directly to the panels/briefings chairs, Noha Adly, a...@bibalex.org, and 
Haowei Hsieh, haowei-hs...@uiowa.edu.

TUTORIAL SUBMISSIONS

Tutorials provide an opportunity to offer in-depth education on a topic or 
solution relevant to research or practice in digital libraries. They should 
address a single topic in detail over either a half-day or a full day. They are 
not intended to be venues for commercial product training. Experts who are 
interested in engaging members of the community who may not be familiar with a 
relevant set of technologies or concepts should plan their tutorials to cover 
the topic or solution to a level that attendees will have sufficient knowledge 
to follow and further pursue the material beyond the tutorial. Leaders of 
tutorial sessions will be expected to take an active role in publicizing and 
recruiting attendees for their sessions.

Tutorial proposals should include: a tutorial title; an abstract (1-2 
paragraphs, to be used in conference programs); a description or topical 
outline of tutorial (1-2 paragraphs, to be used for evaluation); duration 
(half- or full-day); expected number of participants; target audience, 
including level of experience (introductory, intermediate, advanced); learning 
objectives; a brief biographical sketch of the presenter(s); and contact 
information for the presenter(s).

Tutorial proposals are to be submitted in electronic form via the conference's 
EasyChair submission page, http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=jcdl2012.

WORKSHOP SUBMISSIONS

Workshops are intended to draw together communities of interest-both those in 
established communities, and also those interested in discussion and 
exploration of a new or emerging issue. They can range in format from formal, 
perhaps centering on presentation of refereed papers, to informal, perhaps 
centering on an extended roundtable discussions among the selected participants.

Submissions should include: a workshop title and short description; a statement 
of objectives for the workshop; a topical outline for the workshop; 
identification of the expected audience and expected number of attendees; a 
description of the planned format and duration (half-day, full-day, or 
one-and-a-half day); information about how the attendees will be identified, 
notified of the workshop, and, if necessary, selected from among applicants; as 
well as contact and biographical information about the organizers. Finally, if 
a workshop has been held previously, information about the earlier sessions 
should be provided-dates, locations, outcomes, attendance, etc.

Workshop proposals are to be submitted in electronic form via the conference's 
EasyChair submission page, http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=jcdl2012.

DOCTORAL CONSORTIUM

The Doctoral Consortium is a workshop for PhD students from all over the world 
who are in the early phases of their dissertation work (i.e., the consortium is 
not intended for those who are finished or nearly finished with their 
dissertation). The goal of the Doctoral Consortium is to help students with 
their thesis and research plans by providing feedback and general advice on 
using the research environment in a constructive and international atmosphere.

Students interested in participating in the Doctoral Consortium should submit 
an extended abstract describing their digital library research. Submissions 
relating to any aspect of digital library research, development, and evaluation 
are welcomed, including: technical advances, usage and impact studies, policy 
analyses, social and institutional implications, theoretical contributions, 
interaction and design advances, and innovative applications in the sciences, 
humanities, and education.

Doctoral Consortium proposals are to be submitted via the conference's 
EasyChair submission page, http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=jcdl2012.

**********************************


Barrie Howard
Coordinator, Program Management
National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program
Office of Strategic Initiatives
The Library of Congress
101 Independence Avenue, SE
Washington DC 20540-1300
+1-202-707-1830
b...@loc.gov<mailto:ma...@loc.gov>
http://www.digitalpreservation.gov/

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