Apologies for cross-posting.
Call for Papers:
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Special Issue of the Journal of Web Semantics on
"Reasoning with context in the Semantic Web"
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Mechanisms for reasoning with context have become
increasingly important factors in the Semantic Web. There is a
growing need for general and robust reasoning techniques that
make it possible to integrate heterogeneous knowledge or to use
homogeneous knowledge across different domains.
Research on this topic has so far, and not surprisingly,
concentrated on formal ontologies, i.e., on the logical
structures that encode the semantics of a software's domain of
application. Work on the Semantic Web as well as on information
integration, distributed knowledge management, multi-agent and
distributed reasoning has focussed on the relationship between
an ontology and its context. This has aimed at clarifying how to
relate knowledge that is distributed over many resources. Recent
Semantic Web specific developments suggest that aspects of this
relation can be captured by means of named graphs (to express
meta-information), the use of provenance (to track the context
where data/axioms came from) and querying (to facilitate
reasoning).
Other neighbouring research areas, though, have also
investigated topics that shed light on how to reason with
context in the Semantic Web. Ontology Engineering and
Maintenance, for instance, has tackled the problems faced by
ontology engineers when developing and maintaining an ontology.
The yielded automation of the process of ontology development
and of its phases (e.g. knowledge elicitation, revision cycles,
alignment with pre-existing ontologies etc.) has improved
efficiency, reduced the introduction of unintended meanings into
ontologies and in general made explicit the relationship between
an ontology and its development context. Finally, research on
Problem Solving and Agent Communication has explored how an
agent's ontology needs to change at run-time because of
interactions with its context – for instance with other agents
whose ontologies are not known or with new non-classifiable
world situations. This type of research has delivered a deeper
understanding of the evolution of an ontology and is often based
on non-monotonic reasoning, belief revision or changes of
signature, i.e., of the grammar of the ontology's language, with
a minimal disruption to the original theory.
* Topics of interest:
This special issue aims at bringing together work on
reasoning with context in the Semantic Web from the integration,
development and evolutionary perspectives described above.
Submitted articles, which may describe either theoretical
results or applications, must clearly pertain to the Semantic
Web and/or to semantic technologies. They should present either
Semantic Web specific approaches to reasoning with context, or
approaches that have characteristics that are interesting for
the Semantic Web (e.g., scalability, bounded reasoning), or
approaches that are of value to a larger community containing a
non-trivial Semantic Web sub-community (e.g. revision/update
techniques and error pin-pointing).
Submissions are welcome on topics relevant to reasoning
with context in the Semantic Web and that include but are not
limited to:
- Named graphs
- Provenance
- Knowledge representation languages for semantic
technologies
- Planning and reasoning about action and change in the
Semantic Web
- Ontology fault diagnosis and repair
- Pinpointing of logical errors in contexts and ontologies
- Explanation and justifications in DL ontologies
- Ontology and context evolution, debugging, update and
merging
- Inconsistency handling in contexts and ontologies
- Uncertainty handling, defeasible reasoning and
argumentation in ontologies
- Non-classical belief revision
- Context revision and theory change in DL ontologies
- Ontology and context versioning
- Semantic difference in ontologies and in contexts
- Information and knowledge integration
- The role of context and ontology in distributed reasoning
and knowledge management
- Heuristic and approximate reasoning
- Bounded reasoning and bounded rationality in the Semantic
Web
- Adaptive systems and reconfiguration
- Ontology-based data access
- Querying
- Multi-Agent systems in the Semantic Web
- Temporal and spatial reasoning
- Normative reasoning in the Semantic Web
- General problem solving for semantic technologies
- Machine learning for the Semantic Web
- Philosophical foundations of reasoning about context and
ontology evolution
- Comparison of uses of contexts and ontologies
* How to submit
Maximal length of submissions is 25 pages. Authors should
upload submissions on Elsevier's Electronic Submission System at
Choose "Reasoning with context in SW" as article type. See
the link "Guide Authors" on the above url for instructions.
* Important dates:
- Submission deadline: 15 June 2011
- First-round reviews: 5 September 2011
- Revised papers submitted: 30 September 2011
- Final acceptance decisions: 31 October 2011
- Tentative publication date: April 2012
* Guest editors:
Alan Bundy (University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom)
Jos Lehmann (University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom)
Ivan Varzinczak (CSIR Meraka Institute, South Africa)
Send enquiries and communications to: organization [at] arcoe
[dot] org