2nd CALL FOR PAPERS
1st International Workshop on Linked Science 2011 (LISC2011)
Collocated with the 10th International Semantic Web Conference (ISWC2011)
October 24th (Monday), 2011
Bonn, Germany

http://linkedscience.org/events/lisc2011

OBJECTIVES

Scientific efforts are traditionally published only as articles, with an 
estimate of millions of publications worldwide per year; the growth rate of 
PubMed alone is now 1 paper per minute. The validation of scientific results 
requires reproducible methods, which can only be achieved if the same data, 
processes, and algorithms as those used in the original experiments were 
available. However, the problem is that although publications, methods and 
datasets are very related, they are not always openly accessible and 
interlinked. Even where data is discoverable, accessible and assessable, 
significant challenges remain in the reuse of the data, in particular 
facilitating the necessary correlation, integration and synthesis of data 
across levels of theory, techniques and disciplines. In the LISC 2011 (1st 
International Workshop on Linked Science) we will discuss and present results 
of new ways of publishing, sharing, linking, and analyzing such scientific 
resources motivated by driving scientific requirements, as well as reasoning 
over the data to discover interesting new links and scientific insights.

Making entities identifiable and referenceable using URIs augmented by 
semantic, scientifically relevant annotations greatly facilitates access and 
retrieval for data which used to be hardly accessible. This Linked Science 
approach, i.e., publishing, sharing and interlinking scientific resources and 
data, is of particular importance for scientific research, where sharing is 
crucial for facilitating reproducibility and collaboration within and across 
disciplines. This integrated process, however, has not been established yet. 
Bibliographic contents are still regarded as the main scientific product, and 
associated data, models and software are either not published at all, or 
published in separate places, often with no reference to the respective paper.

In the workshop we will discuss whether and how new emerging technologies 
(Linked Data, and semantic technologies more generally) can realize the vision 
of Linked Science. We see that this depends on their enabling capability 
throughout the research process, leading up to extended publications and data 
sharing environments. Our workshop aims to address challenges related to 
enabling the easy creation of data bundles---data, processes, tools, provenance 
and annotation---supporting both publication and reuse of the data. Secondly, 
we look for tools and methods for the easy correlation, integration and 
synthesis of shared data. This problem is often found in many disciplines 
(including astronomy, biology, geosciences, cultural heritage, earth, climate, 
environmental and ecological sciences and impacts etc.), as they need to span 
techniques, levels of theory, scales, and disciplines. With the advent of 
Linked Science, it is timely and crucial to address these identified research 
challenges through both practical and formal approaches.

SUBMISSIONS

We invite two kinds of submissions:
- Research papers. These should not exceed 15 pages in length.
- Position papers. Novel ideas, experiments, and application visions from 
multiple disciplines and viewpoints are a key ingredient of the workshop.. We 
therefore strongly encourage the submission of position papers. Position papers 
should not exceed 5 pages in length.


Submissions should be formatted according to the Lecture Notes in Computer
Science guidelines for proceedings available at 
http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-7-72376-0. Papers should be 
submitted in PDF format. All submissions will be done electronically via the 
LISC2011 web submission system.

At least one author of each accepted paper must register for the workshop..
Information about registration will appear soon on the ISCW2011 Web pages..


TOPICS OF INTEREST

In both categories, papers are expected in (but not restricted to) the 
following topics:

- Key research life cycle challenges in enabling linked science and proposed 
solution strategies
- Interrelationship of existing traditional solutions and new linked science 
solutions
- Formal representations of scientific data
- Ontologies for scientific information
- Reasoning mechanisms for linking scientific datasets
- Integration of quantitative and qualitative scientific information
- Ontology-based visualization of scientific data
- Semantic similarity in science applications
- Semantic integration of crowd sourced scientific data
- Connecting scientific publications with underlying research datasets
- Provenance, quality, privacy and trust of scientific information
- Enrichment of scientific data through linking and data integration
- Semantic driven data integration
- Support for data publishing for sharing and reuse
- Case studies on linked science, i.e., astronomy, biology, environmental and 
socio-economic impacts of global warming, statistics, environmental monitoring, 
cultural heritage, etc.
- Barriers to the acceptance of linked science solutions and strategies to 
address these
- Linked Data for
- dissemination and archiving of research results
- collaboration and research networks
- research assessment
- Applications for research that build on top of Linked Data
- Legal, ethical and economic aspects of Linked Data in science

PROCEEDINGS

We expect the workshop proceedings to be published as CEUR Workshop
Proceedings (see http://ceur-ws.org).

IMPORTANT DATES

- Paper submission deadline: August 15
- Notification of acceptance or rejection: September 5
- Camera ready version due: September 16


WORKSHOP CHAIRS

- Tomi Kauppinen, University of Muenster, Germany
- Line C. Pouchard, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA


ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

- Mathieu d'Aquin, Open University, UK
- Frank van Harmelen, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands
- Carsten Keßler, University of Muenster, Germany
- Kerstin Kleese-Van Dam, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, USA
- Eric G. Stephan, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, USA
- Jun Zhao, University of Oxford, UK

PROGRAMME COMMITTEE

- Sören Auer, University of Leipzig, Germany
- V. Balaji, Princeton University and NOAA/GFDL, USA  
- Luis Bermudez, Open Geospatial Consortium, USA
- Benno Blumenthal, Columbia University, USA
- Chris Bizer, Free University of Berlin, Germany
- Tim Clark, Harvard University, USA
- Philippe Cudre-Mauroux, University of Fribourg, Switzerland
- Anusuriya Devaraju, University of Münster, Germany
- Stefan Dietze, L3S Research Center, Germany
- Kai Eckert, Mannheim University Library, Germany
- Peter Fox, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
- Auroop Ganguly, Oak Ridge National Laboratory and University of Tennessee, 
Knoxville, USA
- Damian Gessler, U. of Arizona, USA
- Paul Groth, VU University Amsterdam, The Netherlands
- John Harney, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA
- Laura Hollink, TU Delft, The Netherlands  
- Maria Indrawan, Monash University, Australia
- Antoine Isaac, Europeana, The Netherlands
- Krzysztof Janowicz, Pennsylvania State University, USA
- Matt Jones, UC Santa-Barbara, USA
- Werner Kuhn, University of Münster, Germany
- Chris Lynnes, NASA, USA
- Deborah L. McGuinness, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
- Jim Myers, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
- Paulo Pinheiro da Silva, University of Texas El Paso, USA  
- Martin Raubal, ETH Zürich, Switzerland
- Mark Schildhauer, UC Santa-Barbara, USA
- Anita de Waard, Elsevier Labs



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