*** Please excuse the cross-posting ***
"LINKING TO THE FUTURE"
International Conference on Dublin Core and Metadata Applications
2-6 September 2013, Lisbon, Portugal
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DC-2013 CALL FOR PARTICIPATION
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DC-2013 will explore questions regarding the persistence, maintenance, and
preservation of metadata and descriptive vocabularies. The need for stable
representations and descriptions spans all sectors including cultural
heritage and scientific data, eGovernment, finance and commerce. Thus, the
maintenance and management of metadata is essential to address the long
term availability of information of legal, cultural and economic value. On
the web, data—and especially descriptive vocabularies—can change or vanish
from one moment to the next. Nonetheless, the web increasingly forms the
ecosystem for our vocabularies and our data. DC-2013 will bring together in
Lisbon the community of metadata scholars and practitioners to engage in
the exchange of knowledge and best practices in developing a sustainable
metadata ecosystem.
DC-2013 will be collocated and run simultaneous with iPRES 2013 providing a
rich environment for synergistic exploration of issues common to both
communities.
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IMPORTANT DEADLINES & DATES:
--SUBMISSION DEADLINE: 29 March 2013
--AUTHOR NOTIFICATION: 7 June 2013
--FINAL COPY: 5 July 2013
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IMPORTANT URLS:
--ONLINE CFP: http://purl.org/dcevents/dc-2013/cfp
--CONFERENCE WEBSITE: http://purl.org/dcevents/dc-2013
--SUBMISSION URL:
http://dcevents.dublincore.org/index.php/IntConf/dc-2013/author/submit?requ…
--ORGANIZING COMMITTEE:
http://dcevents.dublincore.org/index.php/IntConf/dc-2013/about/organizingTe…
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Beyond the conference theme, papers, reports, and poster submissions are
welcome on a wide range of metadata topics, such as:
-- Metadata principles, guidelines, and best practices
-- Metadata quality (methods, tools, and practices)
-- Conceptual models and frameworks (e.g., RDF, DCAM, OAIS)
-- Application profiles
-- Metadata generation (methods, tools, and practices)
-- Metadata interoperability across domains, languages,
time, structures, and scales.
-- Cross-domain metadata uses (e.g., recordkeeping, preservation,
curation, institutional repositories, publishing)
-- Domain metadata (e.g., for corporations, cultural memory
institutions, education, government, and scientific fields)
-- Bibliographic standards (e.g., RDA, FRBR, subject headings)
as Semantic Web vocabularies
-- Accessibility metadata
-- Metadata for scientific data, e-Science and grid applications
-- Social tagging and user participation in building metadata
-- Usage data (paradata/attention metadata)
-- Knowledge Organization Systems (e.g., ontologies, taxonomies,
authority files, folksonomies, and thesauri) and Simple Knowledge
Organization Systems (SKOS)
-- Ontology design and development
-- Integration of metadata and ontologies
-- Search engines and metadata
-- Linked data and the Semantic Web (metadata and applications)
-- Vocabulary registries and registry services
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SUBMISSIONS
--All submissions must be in English.
--All submissions will be peer-reviewed by the International Program
Committee.
--Unless previously arranged, accepted papers, project reports and posters
must be presented in Lisbon by at least one of their authors.
Submissions for Asynchronous Participation: With prior arrangement, a few
exceptional papers, project reports and extended poster abstracts will be
accepted for asynchronous presentation by their authors. Submissions
accepted for asynchronous presentation must follow both the general author
guidelines for submission as well as additional instructions located at
http://dcevents.dublincore.org/IntConf/index/pages/view/remote.
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PUBLICATION
-- Accepted papers, project reports and poster abstracts will be published
in the permanent online conference proceedings and in DCMI Publications (
http://dcpapers.dublincore.org/).
-- Special session and community workshop session abstracts will be
published in the online conference proceedings.
-- Papers, research reports and poster abstracts must conform to the
appropriate formatting template available through the DCMI Peer Review
System.
-- Submitting authors in all categories must provide basic information
regarding current professional positions and affiliations as a condition of
acceptance and publication.
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SUBMISSION CATEGORIES
FULL PAPERS (8-10 pages; Peer reviewed): Full papers either describe
innovative work in detail or provide critical, well-referenced overviews of
key developments or good practice in the areas outlined above. Full papers
will be assessed using the following criteria:
(1) Originality of the approach to the topic and potential for
implementation
(2) Quality of the contribution to the implementation community
(3) Significance of the results presented
(4) Clarity of presentation
PROJECT REPORTS (4-5 pages; Peer reviewed): Project reports describe a
specific model, application, or activity in a concise presentation. Project
reports will be assessed using the following criteria:
(1) Conciseness and completeness of technical description
(2) Usability of the technical description by other potential implementers
(3) Clarity of presentation
POSTERS (1-2 pages; Peer reviewed): Posters are for the presentation of
projects or research under development or late-breaking results. Poster
submission should consist of a one-two page extended abstract. Posters
will be assessed using the following criteria:
(1) Concise statement of research or project goals and milestones
(2) Significance of the research or project
(3) Framing of key barriers and future research
(4) Statement of results and accomplishments
(5) Clarity of presentation
One or more sessions will be scheduled for display and discussion of
posters at the conference venue. Instructions on the preparation of the
display poster can be found at
http://dcevents.dublincore.org/index.php/IntConf/index/pages/view/posterAut…
.
SPECIAL & PANEL SESSIONS: Special and panel sessions are organized by
experts in a specific area of metadata. Each special session serves as a
focused exchange of the latest research and/or best practice in the area. A
proposal for a special session consists of a single document of
approximately 800-1,200 words in length containing:
--Session title
--35-50 word abstract for use in promoting the session
--Brief description of the scope and motivation for the session
--Names and brief CVs of session facilitators, presenters, or panelists
--Brief CVs of the organizers
DCMI COMMUNITY & TASK GROUP WORKSHOP SESSIONS: DCMI Community Workshop &
Task Group Sessions are intended to: (1) advance the specific work of DCMI
entities as defined at http://dublincore.org/groups/#communities; and (2)
to set the work agenda for the Community or Task Group for the coming year.
Note: Communities wanting to present a special session or a panel in the
area of the Community's interest should submit a proposal under Special &
Panel Sessions above.
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PROGRAM COMMITTEE CO-CHAIRS
Kai Eckert
--Research Group Data and Web Science, University of Mannheim, Germany
Muriel Foulonneau
--Knowledge Intensive Systems and Services, Tudor Research Centre,
Luxembourg
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE:
http://dcevents.dublincore.org/index.php/IntConf/dc-2013/about/organizingTe…
Please excuse the cross-posting
==============***ANNOUNCEMENT***==============
Semantic Search: Magnet for the Needle in the Search Haystack
A Joint NKOS-CENDI Workshop
DOT Media Center, Oklahoma City Room
U.S. Department of Transportation, Washington DC
Thursday, December 6, 2012 – 8:30 am-4:30 pm
What is Semantic Search? What user requirements does it seek to address?
How is Semantic Search being implemented? How can Semantic Search
technologies be evaluated? What results have we seen thus far, and what are
the areas of research that may bring future improvements? These questions
and related topics will be addressed by experts in semantic search and
related technologies, users, implementers and academic researchers. Dean
Allemang, Chief Technology Officer and Chief Data Scientist at Open Data
Registry (previously of TopQuadrant) will place semantic search in the
semantic web landscape. Dr. Denise Bedford, Goodyear Professor of Knowledge
Management at Kent State University, will discuss the various views of
semantic search. Other speakers will address linked data applications in
libraries, museums and archives; the impact of semantic search on
visualization tools; and the development of tools to support semantic
search in particular communities. Information managers and technologists
from various user communities will discuss the needs of their end users
that they are seeking to address with semantic search. Students working in
this area will provide a look at the future through a series of lightning
talks.
This workshop will be of interest to information managers, technologists,
content providers, enterprise architects and researchers across sectors.
Registration is now open. The registration and program are available from:
http://www.cendi.gov/activities/12_06_2012_CENDI_NKOS.html
Fee: Free but space is limited
Registration Closes November 26, 2012
The Program Committee:
--Gail Hodge (CENDI/IIa), Chair
--Denise Bedford (Kent State Univ.)
--Joseph Busch (Taxonomy Strategies)
--Michael Crandall (Univ. of Washington)
--Jane Greenberg (Univ. of North Carolina)
--Marjorie Hlava (Access Innovations)
--Michael Pendleton (US EPA)
--Amanda Wilson (National Transportation Library)
--Shewan Workneh (International Monetary Fund)
--Marcia Lei Zeng (Kent State Univ.)
NKOS (Networked Knowledge Organization Systems) (http://nkos.slis.kent.edu/)
is an ad hoc work group of more than 100 international experts and
implementers of knowledge organization systems. NKOS is devoted to enabling
knowledge organization systems/services (KOS), such as classification
systems, thesauri, gazetteers, and ontologies, as networked, interactive
information services to support the description and retrieval of diverse
information resources through the Internet.
CENDI (www.cendi.gov) is an interagency working group of senior scientific
and technical information managers from 13 U.S. federal agencies. CENDI’s
mission is to improve the productivity of federal science, technology and
related programs through effective information systems.