MEPDaW 2016 Last Call for Papers (1 Week Left)

**** We apologize if you receive multiple copies of this CFP ****

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CALL FOR PAPERS: 2nd Workshop on Managing the Evolution and Preservation of the 
Data Web - MEPDaW 2016

Co-⁠located with  13th ESWC 2016,  Heraklion, Crete, Greece

Submission: 4th March
Workshop: 30th May

Web: http://eis.iai.uni-bonn.de/Event/mepdaw2016.html
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== MOTIVATION ==

There is a vast and rapidly increasing quantity of scientific, corporate, 
government and crowd-sourced data published on the emerging Data Web. Open Data 
are expected to play a catalyst role in the way structured information is 
exploited in the large scale. This offers a great potential for building 
innovative products and services that create new value from already collected 
data. It is expected to foster active citizenship (e.g., around the topics of 
journalism, greenhouse gas emissions, food supply-chains, smart mobility, etc.) 
and world-wide research according to the “fourth paradigm of science”. The most 
noteworthy advantage of the Data Web is that, rather than documents, facts are 
recorded, which become the basis for discovering new knowledge that is not 
contained in any individual source, and solving problems that were not 
originally anticipated. In particular, Open Data published according to the 
Linked Data Paradigm are essentially transforming the Web into a vibrant 
information ecosystem.

Published datasets are openly available on the Web. A traditional view of 
digitally preserving them by “pickling them and locking them away” for future 
use, like groceries, would conflict with their evolution. There are a number of 
approaches and frameworks, such as the LOD2 stack, that manage a full 
life-cycle of the Data Web. More specifically, these techniques are expected to 
tackle major issues such as the synchronisation problem (how can we monitor 
changes), the curation problem (how can data imperfections be repaired), the 
appraisal problem (how can we assess the quality of a dataset), the citation 
problem (how can we cite a particular version of a linked dataset), the 
archiving problem (how can we retrieve the most recent or a particular version 
of a dataset), and the sustainability problem (how can we spread preservation 
ensuring long-term access).

Preserving linked open datasets poses a number of challenges, mainly related to 
the nature of the LOD principles and the RDF data model. In LOD, datasets 
representing real-world entities are structured; thus, when managing and 
representing facts we need to take into consideration possible constraints that 
may hold. Since resources might be interlinked, effective citation measures are 
required to be in place to enable, for example, the ranking of datasets 
according to their measured quality. Another challenge is to determine the 
consequences that changes to one LOD dataset may have to other datasets linked 
to it. The distributed nature of LOD datasets furthermore makes archiving a 
headache.


== IMPORTANT DATES ==

-⁠ Submission: Friday 4th March
-⁠ Notification: Friday 1st April
-⁠ Final version: Friday 15th April
-⁠ Workshop: 30th May


== TOPICS ==

-⁠ Change Discovery

 * Change detection and computation in data and/⁠or vocabularies
 * Change traceability
 * Change notifications (e.g., PubSubHubPub, DSNotify, SPARQL Push)
 * Visualisation of evolution patterns for datasets and vocabularies
 * Prediction of changes

 -⁠ Formal models and theory

 * Formal representation of changes and evolution
 * Change/⁠Dynamicity characteristics tailored to graph data
 * Query language for archives
 * Freshness guarantee for query results
 * Freshness guarantee in databases

-⁠ Data Archiving and preservation

* Scalable versioning and archiving systems/⁠frameworks
* Query processing/⁠engines for archives
* Efficient representation of archives (compression)
* Benchmarking archives and versioning strategies

Ideally the proposed solutions should be applicable at web scale.


== SUBMISSION GUIDELINES ==

Papers should be formatted according to the Springer LNCS format. For 
submissions that are not in the LNCS PDF format, 400 words count as one page. 
All papers should be submitted 
tohttps://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=mepdaw2016.

We envision four types of submissions in order to cover the entire spectrum 
from mature research papers to novel ideas/datasets and industry technical 
talks:

A)  Research Papers (max 15 pages), presenting novel scientific research 
addressing the topics of the workshop.

B) Position Papers and System and Dataset descriptions (max 5 pages), 
encouraging papers describing significant work in progress, late breaking 
results or ideas of the domain, as well as functional systems or datasets 
relevant to the community.

C) Industry & Use Case Presentations (max 5 pages), in which industry experts 
can present and discuss practical solutions, use case prototypes, best 
practices, etc., in any stage of implementation.

D) Open RDF archiving challenge (max 5 pages), is intended to encourage 
developers, data publishers, and technology/tool creators to apply Semantic Web 
techniques to create, integrate, analyze or use an archive of linked open 
datasets. Thus, we expect developments showcasing developments demonstrating 
one (or all) of:
   -⁠ useful functionality over RDF archives
   -⁠ a potential commercial application or RDF archives
   -⁠ tools to support/⁠manage RDF archives at Web scale
   (*) A list of recommended datasets for the challenge is available at the 
workshop homepage: http://eis.iai.uni-bonn.de/Event/mepdaw2016.html#challenge

All accepted papers will be published in the CEUR workshop proceedings series.


== ORGANIZING COMMITTEE  ==

- Jeremy Debattista (Enterprise Information Systems, University of Bonn, 
Germany / Organized Knowledge, Fraunhofer IAIS, Germany)
-⁠ Jürgen Umbrich (Vienna University of Economics and Business)
-⁠ Javier D. Fernández (Vienna University of Economics and Business)


== PROGRAM COMMITTEE  ==

-⁠ Mathieu d’Aquin, The Open University, United Kingdom
-⁠ Judie Attard, University of Bonn/⁠Fraunhofer IAIS, Germany
-⁠ Wouter Beek, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands
-⁠ Ioannis Chrysakis, FORTH-⁠ICS, Greece
-⁠ Keith Cortis, University of Passau, Germany
-⁠ Giorgos Flouris, FORTH-⁠ICS, Greece
- Magnus Knuth, Hasso Plattner Institute – University of Potsdam, Germany
-⁠ Marios Meimaris, ATHENA R.C., Greece
-⁠ Fabrizio Orlandi, University of Bonn/⁠Fraunhofer IAIS, Germany
-⁠ Yannis Roussakis,  ATHENA R.C., Greece
-⁠ Anisa Rula, University of Milano-⁠Bicocca, Italy
-⁠ Yannis Stavrakas, ATHENA R.C., Greece
-⁠ Fouad Zablith, American University of Beirut, Lebanon
-⁠ Amrapali J. Zaveri, Dumontier Lab -⁠ Stanford University, USA


== CONTACT INFORMATION  ==

Email:  mepdaw2...@googlegroups.com<mailto:mepdaw2...@googlegroups.com>

Homepage: http://eis.iai.uni-bonn.de/Event/mepdaw2016.html
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