DC-2022 Conference: Metadata Innovation
Call for Participation
https://www.dublincore.org/conferences/2022/cfp/
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Venue: University of Washington, Seattle, USA
Mode: Virtual and (pandemic permitting) in-person
In-Person date: 2022 October 3rd to October 5th
Virtual date: 2022 October 3rd to October 14th
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For more than two decades, the Dublin Core community has
been a fertile ground for researchers, educators,
practitioners and developers to exchange and share ideas,
knowledge, experience, and innovative projects on
metadata for more than two decades.
The DC-2022 conference is expanding its scope to the
whole spectrum of innovation in metadata design,
implementation and best practices, with a special focus
on challenges and opportunities in a diverse and
data-intensive world.
Two years into the pandemic, rising needs for information
justice and equity are pushing the metadata community to
reexamine and address biases and prejudices in metadata
tools and practices in order to make information more
accessible to diverse communities.
Today's data-intensive, data-dependent, and data-driven
environment requires metadata that is intelligent,
interoperable, sharable, and reusable.
Metadata has never been more crucial than today. Trending
fields such as Linked Open Data, research data,
artificial intelligence, machine learning, digital
humanities and open science depend on high-quality
metadata.
The parallel growth of data and metadata challenges the
metadata community to rethink its research and practices
in order to stay ahead of emerging trends.
The Dublin Core conference is a venue for discussing
"innovative practice" - new solutions to practical
problems. It draws participants from universities,
research institutions and LAMs (libraries, archives,
museums), but also from corporations and government
agencies.
The organizers of DC-2022 seeks inspirational submissions
on innovative tools, practices or solutions while
addressing theoretical, analytical, and empirical aspects
of metadata.
Submissions in form of papers, reports, posters, panels,
tutorials, workshops and demonstrations are welcome in
the following broad categories of metadata design,
deployment and best practices:
- Metadata principles, guidelines, and best practices
- Curation, governance, and sustainability
- Conceptual models and frameworks
- Entity management
- Lessons from implementation
- Interoperability and harmonization
- Metadata quality and validation
- Metadata and diversity, equity, inclusion, and
accessibility (DEIA)
- Metadata for research data
- Metadata analytics, AI, and knowledge graph
- Metadata in digital humanities.
# DC-2022 and the pandemic
------------------------
After two years of pandemic conditions and two
all-virtual conferences, many of us look forward to the
day when we again can meet in person, so we are exploring
options for meeting in early October face-to-face,
possibly in North America. The feasibility of doing so
may remain unclear for many more months.
We are therefore planning that the event will, by
default, again be held virtually. If it becomes possible
to hold a face-to-face meeting, attendees and presenters
will have the option to attend either in person or
online.
# Submission Guidelines
------------------------
- At least one author of an accepted submission must be
available to present the work, at a minimum online and
possibly, as an option, in person.
- Submissions must follow the guidelines for one of the
categories enumerated below.
- All submissions must be in English.
- All submissions must be made via the Submission System,
(https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=dc2022)
which will open in late March.
- Submissions must be made using Open Office (.odf) or
Microsoft Word (.doc or .docx), for which templates are
available.
- A template for papers in Latex may also be made
available.
# Formatting Guidelines
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- Page size: ISO A4 (8.27 in x 11.69 in / 21 cm x 29.69 cm)
- Top and bottom margins: 1.18 in / 3 cm
- Left margin: 1.14 in / 2.9 cm
- Right margin: 1.13 in / 2.87 cm
- Header from top: .5 in /1.27 cm
# Submission categories
------------------------
## Peer-reviewed papers
------------------------
Peer-reviewed papers will be published online in the
conference proceedings and will be available before the
start of the conference. The papers are indexed by DBLP
and Google Scholar.
## Full papers
------------------------
Full papers either describe innovative work in detail or
provide critical, well-referenced overviews of key
developments or good practices.
- Session time allotted: 20 minutes (typically 15 minutes
presentation with 5 minutes for questions)
- Paper and presentation slides will be included in online
Proceedings
- 8-10 pages
## Short papers
------------------------
Short papers are narrower in scope than full papers and
may be either a description of work in progress, or a
project report that concisely describes a specific model,
application, or activity.
- Session time allotted: 15 minutes (typically 10 minutes
presentation with 5 minutes for questions)
- Paper & presentation slides included in online
Proceedings
- 4-5 pages
## Posters
------------------------
Posters are for the presentation of projects, research
under development or late-breaking results.
- Abstract and poster slide image will be included in the
online Proceedings
- 2-3 page abstract
# Panels
Panel sessions are organized by experts in a specific
area of metadata. Each panel serves as a focused exchange
regarding the latest research and/or best practice in the
area.
- Session time allotted: 90 minutes
- 1-2 page abstract with panelist bios of 100-150 words
each
- Abstracts and bios will be included in the online
Proceedings
## Tutorials
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Tutorials introduce specific topics of current interest
in metadata practice, optionally including hands-on
practice. Proposals for tutorials must include:
- Title of tutorial and topic to be covered (2-3
paragraphs)
- Target audience: beginners, intermediate users, or
experts
- Tutorial style: lecture, demonstration, hands-on
practice, software installation...
- Any prior knowledge required (eg, RDF, programming
languages)
- Whether participants must (or should) bring laptops or
install software beforehand
- Length of tutorial: 1 - 1.5 hours
- Presenter bios (100-150 words each)
## Student Forum
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The DCMI Student Forum aims at providing an opportunity
to masters' and doctoral students to share their
experiences and exchange ideas of best practices,
research in progress, and findings in areas related to
metadata innovation.
# Submission Deadlines
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- Papers (long and short): 2022 May 2nd
- Posters, Panels, Student forum: 2022 May 31st