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[CfP] Journal of Web Semantics - Special Issue on Visualization and Interaction 
for Ontologies and Linked Data
http://www.journals.elsevier.com/journal-of-web-semantics/call-for-papers/special-issue-on-visualization-and-interaction-for-ontologie
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The Journal of Web Semantics invites submissions for a special issue on 
Visualization and Interaction for Ontologies and Linked Data to be edited by 
Valentina Ivanova, Patrick Lambrix, Steffen Lohmann and Catia Pesquita. 

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Submission Deadline: January 31, 2017 (23:59 Hawaii Standard Time)
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Visual representations take advantage of the humans' most powerful perceptual 
channel - the visual system - and play a crucial role in understanding complex 
data and acquiring insight. Interacting with visualizations is indispensable in 
order to facilitate understanding and to overcome limitations of the visual 
representations. Yet, surprisingly, the importance of visual user interfaces is 
often overlooked in the Semantic Web domain. The area needs sophisticated 
visualization and interaction techniques to help its users understand the 
knowledge represented by ontologies and Linked Data and to utilize it in a 
multitude of applications and domains. As any other knowledge-intensive area, 
the Semantic Web deals with inherently intricate content. This poses high 
demands on its users in their tasks, such as modeling, formalizing, editing, 
verifying, sensemaking, etc., and involves a variety of cognitive processes - 
perception, attention, working memory, reasoning, etc. These processes could be 
more efficiently supported if user interfaces encompassing well-designed visual 
representations and interaction techniques were available.

Ontologies and Linked Data are being used in more and more application areas 
and by users with increasingly diverse backgrounds, which presents additional 
requirements. While a number of user interfaces have become available in the 
past years, they are rarely based on analytical or empirical studies of users 
demands, task analysis or advances in cognitive sciences, which can prevent 
their potential in supporting the interaction between users and the Semantic 
Web to unfold. User evaluations of different types - observational studies, 
interviews, etc. - are needed to provide requirements and to analyze the 
benefits of the proposed solutions. Yet, such evaluations are rather uncommon 
in the Semantic Web community. Approaches do not only need to consider common 
interaction contexts but should also take advantage of the opportunities 
provided by new and emerging interaction contexts, ranging from mobile and 
touch interaction to visualizations on large and high-resolution displays, and 
encompassing highly responsive web applications.

Visualization and interaction can be essential to easily provide access to the 
increasing diversity of the knowledge modeled in ontologies. They are an 
integral part of ontology engineering to help bridge the gap between domain 
experts and ontology engineers. Ontology visualization is not a new topic and a 
number of approaches have become available in recent years, with some being 
already well-established, particularly in the field of ontology modeling. In 
other areas of ontology engineering, such as ontology alignment and debugging, 
although several tools have recently been developed, few provide a graphical 
user interface, not to mention navigational aids or comprehensive visualization 
and interaction techniques.

Related to that, the capacity of the Linked Data initiative is underutilized, 
the main consumers are technology experienced users, one of the reasons being 
the lack of appropriate user interfaces and visualizations that support other 
user groups. Various visual and interaction approaches are needed to assist the 
variety of users who pursue diverse goals and pose individual requirements. In 
the presence of a huge network of interconnected resources, one of the 
challenges faced by the Linked Data community is, for instance, the 
visualization of the multidimensional datasets to provide for efficient 
overview, exploration and querying tasks.

The aim of this special issue is to present latest advances in the area and 
further attract attention to these issues from interested communities. 
Ultimately, providing better user interfaces, visual representations and 
sophisticated interaction techniques will foster wider adoption of Semantic Web 
technologies and likely lead to higher quality results in different 
applications employing ontologies and proliferate the consumption of Linked 
Data.


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Topics of interest include (but are not limited to):
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* Visualizations and user interfaces for ontologies and Linked Data (overview, 
exploration, analysis, visual analytics, querying, etc.)
* Visualizations and user interfaces for ontology engineering (ontology 
development, alignment, debugging, evolution, provenance, collaboration, etc.)
* Case studies of applying visualizations in ontology engineering and Linked 
Data consumption
* User evaluations of visual interfaces for Linked Data and ontologies
* Analyses of different user types and needs
* Cognitive aspects of interaction and visualization
* Context-aware visualization and interaction techniques
* Applications of novel interaction techniques (e.g., touch and gesture 
interaction)
* Mobile user interfaces for ontology engineering and Linked Data exploration


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Important Dates
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Call for papers: 30 April 2016
Submission deadline: 31 January 2017
First notification: early April 2017
Revisions due: early May 2017
Final notification: early June 2017
Final revisions due: early July 2017
Publication: third quarter 2017


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Guest Editors
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Valentina Ivanova, Linköping University, Sweden
Patrick Lambrix, Linköping University, Sweden
Steffen Lohmann, Fraunhofer IAIS, Germany
Catia Pesquita, University of Lisbon, Portugal


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Submission Guidelines
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The Journal of Web Semantics solicits original scientific contributions of high 
quality. Following the overall mission of the journal, we emphasize the 
publication of papers that combine theories, methods and experiments from 
different subject areas in order to deliver innovative semantic methods and 
applications. The publication of large-scale experiments and their analysis is 
also encouraged to clearly illustrate scenarios and methods that introduce 
semantics into existing Web interfaces, contents and services.

Submission of your manuscript is welcome provided that it, or any translation 
of it, has not been copyrighted or published and is not being submitted for 
publication elsewhere. Manuscripts should be prepared for publication in 
accordance with instructions given in the JWS guide for authors. The submission 
and review process will be carried out using Elsevier's Web-based EES system. 
Upon acceptance of an article, the author(s) will be asked to transfer 
copyright of the article to the publisher. This transfer will ensure the widest 
possible dissemination of information. Elsevier's liberal preprint policy 
permits authors and their institutions to host preprints on their web sites. 
Preprints of the articles will be made freely accessible on the JWS preprint 
server. Final copies of accepted publications will appear in print and at 
Elsevier's archival online server.

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