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CALL FOR PAPERS


International Provenance and Annotation Workshop (IPAW'06)
             Chicago, Illinois, USA
                May 3-5, 2006
       http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~lavm/IPAW06

Introduction
------------

This workshop is a follow-up to workshops in Chicago in October 2002
(http://www-fp.mcs.anl.gov/~foster/provenance/) and in Edinburgh in 
December 2003 (http://www.nesc.ac.uk/esi/events/304/). It will 
further investigate the issues of data provenance, process 
documentation, data derivation, and data annotation.

In scientific and business workflows, typically data is repeatedly 
copied, corrected, and transformed as it passes through numerous 
databases or services. Understanding where data has come from and 
how it arrived in a database or filestore is of crucial importance 
to the trust a user will put in that data, yet this information is 
seldom captured properly.

The importance of provenance goes well beyond verification; it is 
closely related to archiving and annotation, also important in the 
context of scientific and business data. Moreover, it may be used in 
data discovery. Knowing the provenance of a data item may help a 
user to make connections with other useful data. Alternatively, a 
user may want to understand a derivation in order to repeat it with 
modified parameters, and being able to describe a derivation may 
help a user to discover whether a particular kind of analysis has 
already been performed.

Annotation is closely related to provenance. End users do more than 
produce and consume data: they comment on it and refer to it, and to 
the results of queries upon it. Annotation is therefore an important 
aspect of communication. One user may want to highlight a point in 
data space for another to investigate further. They may wish to 
annotate the result of a query such that similar queries show the 
annotation.

Information for Authors
-----------------------

IPAW'06 encourages the submission of theoretical, experimental, 
methodological, and applications papers related to the issue of 
provenance and annotation. Papers should be no longer than 8 pages 
(lncs column format). Submissions will be peer reviewed and selected 
for presentation at the workshop; papers will be evaluated on the 
basis of the quality of their technical contribution, originality, 
soundness, significance, presentation, understanding of the state of 
the art, and overall quality. There will be proceedings published 
after the workshop (publisher TBC).

Submission instructions
-----------------------

To be added here.

Topics of interest
------------------

Topics of interest to IPAW'06, include but are not limited to:

    * models of provenance and annotation
    * applications requiring provenance, uses cases, methodologies
    * provenance systems, functionality, protocols, implementation
    * relationship between provenance, annotation and metadata
    * provenance-based reasoning and Semantic Web techonologies
    * relationship between workflows, processes and provenance
    * security considerations for provenance
    * scalability issues
    * granularity of provenance
    * legal issues relating to provenance
    * provenance, business processes and compliance

Important Dates
---------------

Submission deadline:             February 10, 2006
Acceptance Notification:       March 6, 2006
IPAW'06 date:                     May 3-5, 2006

Location
--------

Chicago, Illinois, downtown Sheraton hotel.

Provisional Programme Committee
-------------------------------

    * Dave Berry, National e-Science Centre, UK
    * Peter Buneman, University of Edinburgh, UK
    * Ian Foster (co-chair), Argonne National Lab/University of 
Chicago, USA
    * Jim Hendler, University of Maryland, USA
    * Carole Goble, University of Manchester, UK
    * Reagan Moore, San Diego Supercomputer Center, USA
    * Luc Moreau (co-chair), University of Southampton, UK
    * Jim Myers, National Center for Supercomputing Applications, USA
    * Mike Wilde, Argonne National Lab/University of Chicago, USA











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