WWW 2003 Workshop on E-Services and the Semantic Web (fwd)

Kirk Borne borne at rings.gsfc.nasa.gov
Sat Feb 22 14:47:16 PST 2003


---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 21 Feb 2003 13:52:04 -0600
From: Mike Wilde <wilde at mcs.anl.gov>
To: all at griphyn.org
Subject: WWW 2003 Workshop on E-Services and the Semantic Web

CALL FOR PAPERS

WWW 2003 Workshop on E-Services and the Semantic Web
Budapest, Hungary
Tuesday, May 20, 2003

Workshop Co-Chairs:
Fabio Casati (Hewlett-Packard Labs, Palo Alto, USA), E-mail: 
fabio_casati at hp.com
Dimitris Plexousakis (ICS-FORTH and University of Crete, Greece) E-mail: 
dp at ics.forth.gr

Workshop web page: http://www.ics.forth.gr/isl/essw2003/


Theme of the Workshop
---------------------

Two important trends are emerging in the World Wide Web.  The first is
the proliferation of electronic services (e-services) and in particular
of Web services.  The second is the emergence of the so-called
"Semantic Web".  The confluence of these trends forms the basis for
this workshop. The application of Semantic Web technologies to e-services
requires the specification of service capabilities and behaviors. Such
descriptions will enable the automation of a variety of tasks, including
e-service discovery, invocation, composition and interoperation.

The upcoming technology of electronic services enables the development
and deployment of loosely coupled, interoperable, distributed,
heterogeneous systems.  These will help establish relationships amongst
service providers, customers and intermediaries more rapidly and with
reduced setup time and cost. The industry has provided the initial
building blocks for programmatic access to e-services, through
standards such as UDDI, WSDL, ebXML, BPEL and SOAP, and through
e-service platforms such as WebLogic, .Net and WebSphere.
Nevertheless, many issues remain largely unresolved. In particular,
many of the initial goals of the early e-service and Semantic Web
visionaries, such as dynamic discovery, binding, and composition of
e-services as well as their secure and reliable execution, are yet to
be reached.  The resolution of these issues, possibly through the
provision of machine-interpretable e-service descriptions through the
emergence of the Semantic Web, could enable fundamentally new
approaches to finding, assembling, executing, and monitoring e-services.

Workshop Topics and Objectives
-----------------------------

The "E-Services and the Semantic Web" workshop will provide a forum for
presentation and discussion of theoretical foundations, computational
techniques, and emerging systems technologies for e-service
description, discovery, and composition.  This will include
investigation of e-services issues in:
- the application of the Semantic Web paradigm to e-services
- workflow and distributed systems (e.g., process models for
  e-services, transactional properties, security, optimization)
- AI (e.g., knowledge representation and reasoning, ontologies,
  planning, and verification)
- databases (e.g., metadata, data management)

The workshop will also address principled applications of these
technologies in areas such as e-commerce, e-business, health care,
scientific computing, education, and e-government.

The following is a non-exhaustive list of topics of interest to the workshop:

Formal Models and Languages for Service Description
Process Models for Composite Services
Service Descriptions and Ontologies
Service Registration, Discovery, and Selection
Service Assembly, Interoperation, and Re-use
Execution and Monitoring of Composite Services
Reasoning about Services and Composite Services
Verification, Proof and Trust Agents
Personalization and Preference Languages
Security
Cross-enterprise service interoperation
Transactional Aspects
Performance Aspects
Distributed and Ambient Computing
Database Services for the Semantic Web
Business and Payment Models
Standards
Applications in Business, Education, Healthcare, Science, Government


Paper Submission and Review
--------------------------

Papers should be submitted via email to the workshop co-chairs
(fabio_casati at hp.com, dp at ics.forth.gr).  Papers submitted to the
workshop will undergo a peer-review process overseen by the program
committee co-chairs. Each paper will be reviewed by three program
commitee members. Accepted papers will appear in informal electronic
and/or printed proceedings that will be made available prior to the
workshop. Selected workshop papers will possibly be invited for
inclusion in a special issue of an international journal.

Papers should not exceed 5000 words (approximately 12 pages) in length and
must be submitted in Postscript or PDF. Short papers (up to 6 pages)
describing early research results are also welcome.


Important Dates
---------------

Deadline of electronic submission: March 10, 2003
Author notification: April 14, 2003
Workshop: May 20, 2003


Workshop Program Committee:

Gustavo Alonso (ETH Zurich)
Boualem Benatallah (Univ. of South Wales)
Bernard Burg (Hewlett-Packard Corp.)
Chris Bussler (Oracle Corp., USA)
Vassilis Christophides (ICS-FORTH, Greece)
Sara Comai (Politecnico di Milano, Italy)
Jonathan Dale (Fujitsu Labs of America, USA)
Asuman Dogac (Middle East Technical University, Turkey)
Alon Halevy (Univ. of Washington, USA)
Sheila McIlraith (Stanford University, USA)
Peter Patel-Schneider (Bell Labs, USA)
Barbara Pernici (Politechnico Di Milano, Italy)
Jerome Simeon (Bell Labs, USA)
Mike Wilde (Argonne National Laboratory, USA)
Steven Willmott (Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya, Spain)

Workshop Steering Committee:

Fabio Casati (Hewlett-Packard)
Vassilis Christophides (ICS-FORTH Crete, Greece)
Rick Hull (Lucent)
Sheila McIlraith (Stanford University)
Dimitris Plexousakis (University of Crete, Greece)

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