Link to pdf file .

Please find below a link to an attractive flyer of the slightly revised Call 
for Papers for the First International Pragmatic Web Conference, Interested 
folk might want to download and reproduce it for further distribution. See:
http://www.pragmaticweb.info/CfP%20PragWeb%202006.pdf

Both the pdf and the ascii versions include a few revisions, the most important 
of these being:

"Papers up to 5000 words can be submitted to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
before the deadline. Formatting guidelines and detailed submission
instructions can be found at www.pragmaticweb.info. Proceedings will be
published as Lecture Notes of Informatics by the German Computer Science
Society (GI)."

Please note also that the "Theory, methods, and technologies" section adds "Applied 
pragmatic theories" as a topic.

Apologies for any cross-posting.
Gary Richmond
City University of New York

**********************************************

CALL FOR PAPERS

First International Pragmatic Web Conference (PragWeb 06)

21-23 September 2006, Stuttgart, Germany


The World Wide Web has been very successful in enabling information sharing among a seemingly unlimited number of people worldwide. The vast and ever-growing amount of documents on the Web, however, results in information overload and makes it often difficult to discover the information that is relevant, because the current Web is a syntactic web. The goal of the Semantic Web is thus to provide the basis for intelligent applications that enable more efficient information retrieval and use by not just providing a set of linked documents but a collection of knowledge repositories with meaningful content and additional logics. The key elements of the Semantic Web are ontologies representing the basic conceptual knowledge about some domain. Ontologies are not fixed specifications but always depend on the context of use. Therefore, ontologies co-evolve with their communities of use. Members of a community have to negotiate continuously about what they agree to be their shared background. This is especially important in an (inter)organisational context, where participants from different professional, social, or cultural backgrounds need to understand each other in order to collaborate effectively. In order to enable the use of the Web for communicating, agreeing upon, and cooperatively modifying ontologies, the support provided by the Semantic Web needs to be extended. The crucial questions are first how to model and analyze collaboration, context, organizational commitments, and meaning negotiation; second, how to use these conceptual models in the design and implementation of real-world tools and applications. This new paradigm for effectively exploring and exploiting the potentials of the Web is called the Pragmatic Web. It constitutes the new challenge that will complement the Semantic Web. The goal is to augment human collaboration effectively by modelling and developing appropriate applications of the Semantic Web, such as systems for ontology negotiations or for ontology-based business interactions.
We call for contributions for the First International Pragmatic Web Conference 
dealing with  theoretical, methodological, and technological aspects of the 
Pragmatic Web as well as business, governmental, and other applications.

Papers up to 5000 words can be submitted to [EMAIL PROTECTED] before the 
deadline. Formatting guidelines and detailed submission instructions can be 
found at www.pragmaticweb.info. Proceedings will be published as Lecture Notes 
of Informatics by the German Computer Science Society (GI).


Topics include but are not limited to:

* Theory, methods, and technologies

- Technology acceptance/media choice theories
- Language/action theory
- Evaluation methods
- Communication modelling methods
- Context modelling methods
- Semantic Web technologies
- Web services
- Applied pragmatic theories


* Applications

- Organisational communication
- Collaboration
- Decision support
- Knowledge management
- Negotiation
- Community informatics
- Collaborative working environments
- Active knowledge systems
- Appropriate technologies
- E-business, E-government, E-politics, E-health etc.
- Information brokers and mediators


Invited Talk by Ian Horrocks, University of Manchester, UK


Dates

Submission Deadline: 31 May 2006 (submissions to be sent to [EMAIL PROTECTED])

Notification of Acceptance: 1 July 2006

Final Version: 1 August 2006

Conference: 21-23 September 2006


Conference Chairs

Mareike Schoop, University of Hohenheim, Germany

Aldo de Moor, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium

Jan Dietz, Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands



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