[This information is being posted to multiple lists - we apologise if you get 
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Please, pass the information to whom it may benefit. Thank you for 
understanding and cooperation. The organisers.]


CALL FOR PAPERS
1st International Workshop on Ontologies come of Age in the Semantic Web, 
OCAS2011
Collocated with the 10th International Semantic Web Conference (ISWC2011)
October 23rd or 24th, 2011
Bonn, Germany

Also, OCAS Challenge:

Prizes
First place: US$ 2000
Second place: US$ 1000
Three third prizes of $500 each

For the Challenge, specifically for the Challenge, check 
http://ocas.mywikipaper.org/?q=node/8


The OCAS Workshop

http://ocas.mywikipaper.org

The real challenge for Semantic Web technologies and ontologies lays in the 
adoption; although the need for this disruptive technology is clear, it has not 
yet been fully adopted by the mainstream. Ontologies: where, what for, how, 
when and why? Ontologies are being used in several applications, but is 
ontology engineering a mature discipline? Not only are we interested in 
practical realizations of the Semantic Web, but also in visions of technology 
that illustrate how SW technology and ontologies could change our experience of 
the Web.

Questions addressed by OCAS2011:

* How are SW technologies and ontologies being adopted by mainstream?
* Experience reports of the introduction of SW technologies and ontologies in 
corporate and government environments
* Once introduced in an environment, how do SW and ontology-based applications 
evolve?
* Ontologies in manufacturing and production chains
* Ontologies supporting CAD interoperability and feature extraction; towards 
smart CAD environments
* How could RDF(a) and ontologies be used to represent the knowledge encoded in 
scientific documents and in general-interest media publications?
* What ontologies do we need for representing structural elements in a document?
* How can we capture the semantics of rhetorical structures in scholarly 
communication, and of hypotheses and scientific evidence?
* What does a network of truly interconnected documents look like? How could 
interoperability across documents
be enabled?
* Are decision support systems in the biomedical domain using ontologies? How?
* How are biomedical ontologies logically formalizing the rich set of lexical 
definitions gathered? How are these
ontologies going beyond controlled vocabularies?
* Practical cases of successful and unsuccessful application of ontologies and 
SW technologies in application domains such as: financial, biomedical, 
e-business, engineering, law enforcement, document management, egovernment, 
legislative systems.


Organizing Committee

Alexander García Castro is an instructor at the University of Arkansas for 
Medical Sciences. He is currently working on the application and development of 
SW technologies and ontologies in translational research. He is particularly 
interested in Knowledge Management, Ontology engineering and Semantic Web 
Technologies in the biomedical domain. Alexander has been leading the 
development of the ORATEOntology repository, focusing on manual and automatic 
mapping facilities. He has also led the development of a number of Protégé 
plug-ins. In addition Alexander has successfully participated in a number of 
Semantic Web related projects, some of them have been awarded at in 
international contests such as the 2009 Elsevier Grand Challenge. In addition 
Alexander has successfully organized workshops such as ORES (at ESWC2010), 
SERES (at ISWC2010), SePublica (at ESWC2011) and OSEMA (at ESWC2011).

Ken Baclawski is an Associate Professor of the College of Computer and 
Information Science, Northeastern University. His primary research area is 
ontology based computing. This includes research in the Semantic Web, formal 
ontology-based methods for software engineering and software modeling, and 
ontology-based methods in biology and medicine. He was one of the founders of 
the OOR initiative. He and his students have been active developers of the OOR. 
Professor Baclawski holds 10 US and UK patents. He has authored articles in 
such journals and conferences as the US National Academy of Science, 
Information Systems, the International Conference on Intelligent Systems for 
Molecular Biology, the Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing, and the International 
Semantic Web Conference. He has served on numerous peer review panels for the 
National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and the 
Association for Computing Machinery, and has organized and served on many 
program committees of research conferences. He serves as a consultant to 
companies and government laboratories, and has edited and written several books 
and research monographs.

John Bateman is a full Professor of Applied Linguistics in the English and 
Linguistics Departments of the University of Bremen, specializing in 
functional, computational and multimodal linguistics. His research interests 
include functional linguistic approaches to multilingual and multimodal 
document design, dialogue systems and discourse structure. He has been 
investigating the relation between language and social context for many years, 
focusing particularly on accounts of register, genre, functional variation, 
lexicogrammatical description and theory, multilingual and multimodal 
linguistic description, and computational instantiations of linguistic theory. 
He has published widely in all these areas, as well as authoring several 
introductory and survey articles on natural language generation and 
systemic-functional linguistics. His current interests centre on the 
application of functional linguistic and corpus methods to multimodal meaning 
making, analysing and critiquing multimodal documents of all kinds, the 
development of linguistically-motivated ontologies, and the construction of 
computational dialogue systems for robothuman communication.

Kim Viljanen is a working as a doctoral candidate in the Semantic Computing 
Research Group at the Aalto University, focusing on semantic web, linked data, 
future of web and content management technologies. He has published many 
scientific papers, has given lots of talks both internationally and in Finland, 
and acted as a lecturer. Kim has participated in the creation of award winning 
applications such as the semantic portals MuseumFinland and HealthFinland. He 
is currently developing the Finnish semantic web infrastructure FinnONTO, 
focusing his research work on the Ontology Library ONKI.

Christoph Lange is a Ph.D. student at Jacobs University Bremen, Germany. His 
thesis, to be submitted in January 2010, as well as his recent publications, 
focus on collaborative authoring of mathematical documents using Semantic Web 
technologies. This involves document ontologies, interactive assistive services 
embedded into documents, as well as Linked Data publishing. He was a chair of 
the Semantic Wiki workshop series at ESWC 2008 to 2010, of the ORES (Ontology 
Repositories) workshop and the AI Mashup Challenge at ESWC 2010, and a PC 
member of  WIMS 2011, the Balisage Markup conference 2010 and 2011, and 
I-SEMANTICS 2007 through 2011.


Program Committee

* Li Ding, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA.
* John Bateman, Universität Bremen, Germany.
* Michael Kohlhase, Jacobs University, Germany.
* Raul Palma, Poznan University, Poland.
* Oscar Corcho, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid, Spain.
* Fabian Neuhaus, University of Maryland, USA.
* William Hogan, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences.
* Nigam Shah, Stanford University, USA.
* Peter Haase, Institute of Applied Informatics and Formal Description Methods, 
Germany.
* Michael Gruninger, University of Toronto, Canada
* Leyla Garcia, Bundeswehr University, Germany.
* Benjamin Good, Novartis, USA
* Matthew Horridge, University of Manchester, UK
* Oliver Kutz, University of Bremen, Germany.
* Raul Garcia Castro, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid, Spain.
* Mike Dean, BBN Technologies, USA.
* Steve Pettifer, Manchester University, UK.
* Carlos Toro, VICOMTech Industrial Applications. Spain
* Riichiro Mizoguchi, Osaka University, Japan.
* Carlos Pedrinaci, Open University, England
* Jouni Tuominen, University of Helsinki, Finland


IMPORTANT DATES

- Paper submission deadline: August 15
- Notification of acceptance or rejection: September 5
- Camera ready version due: September 16

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

We are looking forward to your submissions.
Please do not hesitate to contact us in case you have any questions.

Join us also on Facebook at: 
https://www.facebook.com/pages/OCAS-2011/149248101814932

The workshop is collocated with the 10th International Semantic Web Conference
ISWC2011 (October 23-27, 2011 - Bonn, Germany): http://iswc2011.semanticweb.org/


Kind regards,

Alexander García Castro, Ken Baclawski, John Bateman, Kim Viljanen, Christoph 
Lange


--
Kim Viljanen
Semantic Computing Research Group SeCo, Dep. of Media Technology, Aalto 
University
email: [email protected]
snail: P.O. Box 15500, FI00076 Aalto, Finland
visit: Room 2541, Otaniementie 17, Espoo, Finland
mob: +358 40 5414654
web: http://www.seco.tkk.fi/u/kimvilja/

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