Apologies for the inevitable multiple receptions.

========================================

PRELIMINARY CALL FOR PAPERS

Journal of Web Semantics

Special Issue on Semantic Web Dynamics

========================================

Description

-----------

Recent years have witnessed the arrival of more and more semantically annotated 
data and related ontologies in the Semantic Web. For example, the linked data 
initiative has been very successful in making datasets available online, with a 
total of about 5 billion triples all together so far. While existing semantic 
tools and reasoning engines are year after year getting better in dealing with 
time invariant domain of ontological knowledge, supporting rapidly changing 
information has not yet attracted sufficient attention.

There are more and more heterogeneous and/or dynamic data types being created 
and which integration could lead to interesting applications and models (e.g. 
sensor data streams, geospatial information and imagery, financial 
transactions, news feeds, 3D models, engineering data, information for policy 
intelligence etc.). Current Stream Database Management Systems provide on the 
fly analysis of data streams, but they suffer several limitations: they cannot 
handle heterogeneous data streams originating from a variety of already 
deployed sensors; they cannot combine data streams with slowly evolving 
knowledge at query time; and they cannot perform reasoning tasks. And in the 
area of reasoning, while the problem of classical, time invariant domain of 
ontological knowledge has been extensively studied, the task of reasoning with 
rapidly changing information has been mostly neglected and constitutes a new 
challenge.

Furthermore, ontologies, just like any structure holding knowledge and 
information, need to be updated too: changes could be initiated because of a 
change in the world being modelled; or by a change in the users' needs which 
would require a different conceptualization; or by the acquisition of knowledge 
previously unknown, unclassified or otherwise unavailable; or by the noticing 
of a design flaw in the original conceptualization. In all these cases, the 
representation of knowledge in the ontology should be modified so as to form a 
more accurate or adequate conceptualization of the domain.

This general issue of Semantic Web Dynamics includes difficulties from both 
practical and theoretical points of view, raising a variety of research 
questions and development challenges, such as how to support the ontology and 
data publishers in maintaining up-to-date, adequate representations; how to 
detect the need for evolution and changes; how to facilitate the integration of 
new, dynamic sources in existing datasets and ontologies; how to validate and 
evaluate the impact of the changes on semantic information; how to handle 
changes triggered from multiple sources and collaborative updates; and how to 
keep track of (possibly

concurrent) versions of and ensure the delivery of up-to-date and valid 
knowledge.

Topics of Interest

------------------

For this special issue, we seek articles describing foundational and 
theoretical work as well as technological solutions to these challenges.

More specifically, we expect submission on (but not restricted to) the 
following topics:

* Foundational and formal aspects of Semantic Web dynamics

* Language extensions for Semantic Web dynamics

* Reasoning with dynamic data and ontologies

* Engineering dynamic data and ontologies

* Requirements and practical issues for Semantic Web dynamics

* Applications of dynamic data and ontologies

* Theory for stream reasoning

* Logic language for stream reasoning

* Scalability issues in stream reasoning

* Ontologies for dynamic environments

* Dynamic knowledge building, and (re-)use

* Ontology evolution and versioning

* Language extensions for evolution

* Belief revision for ontologies

* Change propagation in ontologies dynamic datasets and ontologies

* Inconsistency in evolving semantic information

* Incremental reasoning

* Case studies and applications of ontology and knowledge evolution

* Tools to support dynamic data and ontologies

Important Dates

---------------

31 May 2010: Submission deadline

31 August 2010: First-round reviews complete

31 October 2010: Revised papers submitted

23 December 2010: Final acceptance decisions

Method of Submission

--------------------

Only electronic submissions will be considered. The precise method will be 
announced later. Any question can be addressed to the guest editors.

Guest Editors

-------------

Grigoris Antoniou (FORTH, Greece)

Mathieu d'Aquin (The Open University, United Kingdom)

Jeff Z. Pan (University of Aberdeen, United Kingdom)




The University of Aberdeen is a charity registered in Scotland, No SC013683.

Reply via email to