CALL FOR PAPERS

ICCS'11: Conceptual Structures for Discovering Knowledge 25th - 29th July, 
University of Derby, United Kingdom

http://www.iccs.info

The 19th International Conference on Conceptual Structures (ICCS 2011) is the 
latest in a series of annual conferences that have been held in Europe, Asia, 
Australia, and North America since 1993. The focus of these conferences has 
been the representation and analysis of conceptual knowledge for research and 
business applications. ICCS brings together researchers in information 
technology, arts, humanities and social science to explore novel ways that can 
conceptual structures can be employed in information systems.

Arising originally out of the work of IBM in Conceptual Graphs, over the years 
ICCS has broadened its scope to include a wider range of theories and 
practices, among them Formal Concept Analysis, Description Logics, the Semantic 
Web, the Pragmatic Web, Ontologies, Multi-agent Systems, Concept Mapping, and 
more. Accordingly conceptual structures represent a family of approaches that 
builds on the successes of artificial intelligence, business intelligence, 
computational linguistics, conceptual modelling, information and web 
technologies, user modelling, and knowledge management.

ICCS 2011's theme is "Conceptual Structures for Discovering Knowledge". More 
and more data is being captured in electronic format (particularly through the 
Web) and it is emerging that this data is reaching such a critical mass that it 
is becoming the most recorded form of the world around us. It now represents 
our business, economic, arts, social, and scientific endeavours to such an 
extent that we require smart applications that can discover the hitherto hidden 
knowledge that this mass of data is busily capturing. By bringing together the 
way computers work with the way humans think, conceptual structures align the 
productivity of computer processing with the ingenuity of individuals and 
organisations in a meaningful digital future.

Papers for ICCS 2011 are invited but are not limited to the following topics:

*       conceptual structures (theory, applications, and experience with case 
studies);
*       their interplay with human or organisational experience and language,
*       semantics and pragmatics;
*       concept analysis and contextual logic,
*       capturing concepts through smart data and information processing;
*       modelling, representation, and visualization of concepts;
*       conceptual knowledge acquisition; and
*       the theory and applications of formal ontologies.

Comparisons of methods and representations on the basis of reasoning ability, 
expressiveness, ease of use, and computational performance are welcome. 
Integration of methodologies, user interfaces, semantic web technologies, 
business intelligence, multi-agent systems, knowledge use, reuse, and 
integration, and business productivity tools are all of high interest.

Authors are invited to submit papers describing both theoretical and practical 
research. Papers accepted or under review by other conferences or journals are 
not acceptable as submissions to ICCS. The language of the conference will be 
English.

Submission Details

Papers are limited to 14 pages in Springer's LNCS format. We recommend the use 
of LaTeX2e for the final version. Visit http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs for 
more details. Short papers (up to 4 pages) are also welcome.

Deadlines

*       Friday January 14, 2011: a one page abstract submitted via conference 
website (http://www.iccs.info) NB: Abstracts should clearly state the purpose, 
results and conclusions of the work to be described in the final paper.
*       Friday January 21, 2011: full paper in PDF format submitted via the 
conference website (http://www.iccs.info)

Final acceptance will be based on the full-length paper, which if accepted, 
must be presented at the conference. Papers accepted for publication will 
appear in the Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence Series by 
Springer-Verlag (see http://www.springeronline.com/lncs). A precondition for 
publication is that the final version is in full compliance with Springer's 
format.

Conference Chairs

General Chair:
Richard Hill
University of Derby, UK
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

Programme Chairs:
Simon Andrews and Simon Polovina
Conceptual Structures Research Group, Sheffield Hallam University, UK 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>, 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>





Regards,

Simon Andrews.

Dr Simon Andrews
Principle Investigator CUBIST Project
Conceptual Structures Research Group
Communication and Computing Research Centre
Furnival Building, City Campus
Sheffield Hallam University, S1 2NU

Tel.: +44 (0) 114 225 6824
Email: [email protected]





_________________________________________________
Dr. Sebastian Rudolph
senior researcher & project leader at AIFB
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)
[email protected]                    phone (new!) +49 721 608 - 47362
www.sebastian-rudolph.de        fax (new!) +49 721 608 - 45998




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