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CFP  Semantic Web Journal: 
Special Issue on Human Computation and Crowdsourcing (HC&C) in the Context of 
the Semantic Web
http://tinyurl.com/q6brzzc 
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Submission Deadline Extended to: April 15, 2015 (23:59 Hawaii Standard Time)

Stemming from its original motivation of extending the Web with a layer of 
semantic representation, the Semantic Web (SW) aims to solve a set of complex 
problems that computers cannot yet fully master such as the creation of 
conceptual models, the semantic annotation of various media types, or entity 
linking across Linked Open Datasets. As a result, the large-scale deployment of 
Semantic Web technologies often depends  on the availability of significant 
human contribution, traditionally provided by specialised experts, for example, 
ontology engineers to build ontologies or annotators to create the semantic 
data or to link between the instances of various data sets.

Human Computation (HC) methods leverage human processing power to solve 
problems that are still difficult to solve by using solely computers, and 
therefore are well-suited to support Semantic Web research, for example, as 
methods to create training data for advanced algorithms or as means to evaluate 
the output of such algorithms. While HC methods could theoretically involve 
only small numbers of contributors, crowdsourcing approaches, leverage the 
"wisdom of the crowd" by engaging a high number of online contributors to 
accomplish tasks that cannot yet been automated, often replacing a traditional 
workforce such as employees or domain experts. As such, crowdsourcing methods 
could not only support in creating research relevant data, but more importantly 
they could help to solve the bottleneck of knowledge experts and annotators 
needed for the large-scale deployment of Semantic Web and Linked Data 
technologies.

This special issue aims to explore the current and future trends in using 
methods that fall into the category of Human Computation, Crowdsourcing and the 
intersection thereof (HC&C) to support Semantic Web research and the deployment 
of Semantic Web technologies.

Topics of interest include but are not limited to:

        • Experimental comparisons between various HC&C genres
        • Best practices in decomposing large SW tasks into micro-tasks/game 
units
        • Best practices for presenting formal SW knowledge to non-specialists 
in an easy to understand/engaging manner
        • Reusable templates, task designs, and UIs
        • Defensive task design
        • Strategies for identifying, recruiting and engaging contributors
        • Methods for task assignment and recommendation
        • Methods for ensuring data quality
        • Cheating detection
        • Data aggregation methods
        • (Semantic) Representation of HC&C workflows and data
        • (Semantic) Representation of HC&C performers and task executions
        • HC&C infrastructures and systems developed for SW specific tasks
        • Methodologies and best practice guidelines for using HC&C in ontology 
engineering
        • Methods to closely combine human and machine computation
        • Applications of HC&C methods in SW research and deployment
        • Lessons from other research fields (e.g., NLP, databases) where HC&C 
has been applied and what these lessons would mean for the Semantic Web

Guest editors:
        • Marta Sabou, Technical University of Vienna
        • Lora Aroyo, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
        • Kalina Bontcheva, University of Sheffield
        • Alessandro Bozzon, Delft University of Technology

Submissions shall be made through the Semantic Web journal website at 
http://www.semantic-web-journal.net. Prospective authors must take notice of 
the submission guidelines posted at 
http://www.semantic-web-journal.net/authors. Note that you need to request an 
account on the website for submitting a paper. Please indicate in the cover 
letter that it is for the Ontology and Linked Data Matching special issue.

Submissions are possible in all standing paper type of the journal, see 
http://www.semantic-web-journal.net/authors for descriptions: full research 
papers, surveys, linked dataset descriptions, ontology descriptions, 
application reports, tool/systems reports.


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