-------- Original Message --------
CALL FOR PAPERS
15th Americas Conference on Information Systems (AMCIS 2009 -
http://amcis2009.org/)
San Francisco, California, August 6 - 9, 2009 (Thursday-Sunday)
TRACK: INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS (SIGABIS)
http://amcis2009.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=121&Itemid=78#track16
Complete Papers Due: February 20, 2009
The purpose of this track is to provide a forum for academics and
practitioners to identify and explore the issues, opportunities, and
solutions related to intelligent systems design, implementation,
integration and deployment. An increasing number of artificial
intelligence-based systems are being developed in different application
domains employing a variety of tools and technologies. This track is
intended to increase cross-fertilization of ideas from these domains,
and
share the lessons learned.
This Track is sponsored by AIS Special Interest Group on Agent-Based
Information Systems (SIGABIS). Best papers from this Track will be fast
tracked for publication in a special issue of International Journal of
Intelligent Information Technologies (IJIIT). This track contains the
following four mini-tracks:
Mini-Tracks
===========
* Artificial Intelligence and Data Mining (Chair: Riyaz T. Sikora)
* Grid computing (Chair: Manish Agrawal)
* Intelligent Agent and Multi-Agent Systems
(Co-chairs: Vijayan Sugumaran,
Stefan Kirn)
* Semantic Web and Ontology (Chair: Victoria Y. Yoon)
A brief description of each of the mini-tracks is given below.
Mini-Track: Artificial Intelligence and Data Mining
===================================================
Riyaz T. Sikora (co-chair SIGABIS)
University of Texas at Arlington
One of the side effects of the increase in connectivity and
collaboration
has been the phenomenal increase in the magnitude and volatility of the
available data. Intelligent methods are now emerging as a way to deal
with
this staggering variety and volume of data in distributed and
heterogeneous environments. This has become especially relevant since
most
large-scale information systems applications of today assume that
components will be added dynamically and that they will be autonomous
(serve different users or providers and fulfill different goals) and
heterogeneous (be built in different ways).
The mini-track on AI and DM provides a forum to bring together
like-minded
researchers, teachers, and practitioners to advance this important
field.
The AI/DM mini-track will seek research and applications highlighting
the
frontiers of new knowledge and advances in AI and DM. Topics of interest
include, but are not limited to:
*
Foundations of AI and DM
*
Machine Learning and Statistical Learning Algorithms
*
Data Mining
*
Pattern Recognition
*
Intelligent Agents
*
Heuristic Search
*
Intelligent Information Retrieval
*
Support Vector Machines
*
Web/Text mining
*
Intelligent Search Techniques
*
Reinforcement Learning
Mini-Track: Grid Computing
==========================
Manish Agrawal
University of South Florida
Grid computing potentially creates enormous processing power dedicated
to
large computing-intensive tasks. Common uses of grid computing include
computer aided design, drug discovery, back-office data processing,
information services, and other interesting academic and social problems
such as the search for extra-terrestrial life. The emergence of grid
computing has led to research questions including the generalizability
of
grid computing solutions, information privacy and assurance on the grid,
and problem decomposition. The purpose of this mini-track is to provide
a
forum for researchers and practitioners to explore these and other
problems, ideas, experiences, and solutions on grid computing.
Potential topics (not limited to):
*
Grid architectures
*
Grid applications
*
Information services on grids
*
Grid application workflows
*
Privacy on grid hosts
*
Heterogeneity on the grid
*
Trust development within the grid
*
Information assurance on the grid
*
Development models
*
Grid resource management
*
Business and social implications of grids
Mini-Track: Intelligent Agent and Multi-Agent Systems
=====================================================
Vijayan Sugumaran, Oakland University
Stefan Kirn, Universität Hohenheim
While research on intelligent agent and multi-agent systems have
progressed, there are still a number of issues that have to be explored
in
terms of agent design, implementation, integration, and deployment. For
example, salient characteristics of agents in different domains, formal
approaches for agent-oriented modeling, designing and implementing
agent-oriented information systems, agent collaboration and coordination
in multi-agent systems, and organizational impact of agent-based systems
are some of the areas in need of further research.
Possible Topics (but not limited to):
* Intelligent Applications in Business
* Distributed Intelligent Systems
* Agent architectures and behavior models
* Models and architectures for agent-oriented information systems
* Agent-oriented software engineering
* Multi-agent systems and applications
* Agent collaboration, and coordination
* Human and agent interaction models
* Agent-based process and workflow systems
* Agents and knowledge management
* Agent-based simulation
* Agent-based e-commerce applications
* Mobile Agents
* Privacy, security, and trust issues in agent-based environments
* Organizational impact of agent-based systems
Mini-Track: Semantic Web and Ontology
=====================================
Victoria Y. Yoon
University of Maryland Baltimore County
Semantic Web has been recognized as one of the most important
Information
Technologies and has received considerable attention from both academia
and industry. Semantic Web has made significant progress over several
years when numerous issues have been addressed and many applications
have
been developed. However, despite all of these advances, the current
state
of Semantic Web requires significant improvements to make it more
effective in a broader range of applications.
This mini-track will provide a forum for gaining a better understanding
of
these new technologies and their business aspects. Potential
authors/researchers are encouraged to submit papers that address the
issues related to designing, developing, and evaluating Semantic
Web/Ontology from the technical, behavioral, economical, or managerial
perspectives.
This mini-track will focus on:
*
Semantic interoperability
*
Semantic web for e-business and e-learning
*
Service discovery, description, and composition
*
Semantic Web mining
*
Ontology creation, evolution, reconciliation, and mediation
*
Ontology mapping, Integration, and/or alignment
*
Software agents for Semantic Web
*
Innovative Semantic Web/Ontology applications
*
Managerial Issues of Semantic Web/Ontology
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Joerg Leukel
Information Systems 2
University of Hohenheim
Schwerzstrasse 35
70593 Stuttgart, Germany
Phone: +43 711 459-23968
E-Mail: joerg.leukel@uni-hohenheim.de
URI: http://www.joerg-leukel.net