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CALL FOR BOOK CHAPTERS
Book: Demand-Driven Web Services: Theory, Technologies and
Applications
Edited by Zhaohao Sun and John Yearwood
To be published by IGI Global, USA
Theme
Web services are playing a pivotal role both in business, service
computing and social networking services, and cloud computing.
This is
also the case in the traditional FREG (foods, resources, energy
and
goods) services, because almost all traditional services are
replaced
fully or partially by web services. Demand-driven web services
(DDWS)
as a tri-paradigm, a computing paradigm, a service paradigm, and a
management paradigm, is becoming important for web services,
service
computing, cloud computing, and social networking computing.
However,
many fundamental issues in developing DDWS remain open. For
example,
what is the demand theory of web services? What is a demand-driven
architecture of web services? How should real world demands be
classified? How should web services be classified? How can an
ontology
of web services be developed? This book will address these issues
by
exploring the cutting-edge theory, technologies, and methodologies
of
demand driven web services based on the novel classification of
demands and web services emphasizing cloud services, mobile
services,
social networking services and e-business services from a
perspective
of computing, service and management. This book also provides
applications of the proposed theory, technologies and
methodologies to
successful demand-driven web services in the real world. The
proposed
approaches will facilitate research and development of web
services,
e-business, service computing, mobile computing, cloud computing,
and
social computing.
Aims and Scope
This book aims at a broad audience of researchers and
practitioners,
and provides the reader with an updated understanding of
demand-driven
web services, cloud services, mobile services, and social
networking
services by attracting high quality manuscripts from academic
researchers, policy makers and practitioners in this area. Papers
of
all theoretical and technological approaches and applications are
welcome.
Submissions that cross multiple disciplines such as service,
business,
management, industry, information systems, and intelligent systems
to
develop theory and provide technologies and applications that
could
move theory and practice forward in demand-driven web services,
cloud
services, mobile services, e-business services, and social
networking
services are especially encouraged.
Topics
Topics of contributions include, but are not limited to, the
following
Part I. Theory of demand-driven web services
· Topics: fundamental concepts, models, architectures,
frameworks, schemes or
theories for planning, designing, building, operating or
evaluating, managing
demand-driven web services.
Part II. Technologies for demand-driven web services
· Topics: AI-based technologies as such: rule-based
systems,
ontology-development
systems, machine learning techniques, multi-agent systems
techniques,
neural networks systems, fuzzy logic systems, cased-based
reasoning
systems, genetic algorithms techniques, data mining algorithms,
intelligent agents, user intelligent interfaces; and emergent
AI-based technologies, Web technologies, service technologies,
social
networking technologies, decision making technologies, DSS
technologies are welcome
Part III. Applications for demand-driven web services
· Topics: case studies and applications in using
technologies
and fundamental theory in Part I, II in the representative service
domains such as: e-business services, mobile services, social
networking services, cloud services, financial services, legal
services, healthcare services, logistics services, educational
services, e- FREG services, and military services taking into
account
demands from government, organization, enterprise, community,
individual, customer, and citizen.
Part IV. Trends and Challenges on demand-driven web services
· Topics: emergent AI-based technologies, technologies of
Big
data, social networking services, integrations of these
technologies,
and the implications, challenges for demand-driven web services.
Part V. Emerging demands and emerging demand-driven web services.
· Topics: Emerging demands, emerging technologies
including
human computation and big data management, methodologies for
demand-driven web services.
Submission Procedure
Please submit a brief summary, consisting of about 150 words, of
the
proposed chapter clearly identifying the main objectives of your
contribution by March 8, 2013. Authors of the accepted proposals
will
be notified and provided with detailed guidelines. Full chapters
are
to be submitted by April 30, 2013.
All submissions through emails should be electronically sent to
the
book editors Dr Zhaohao Sun of University of Ballarat. email:
z.sun@ballarat.edu.au,
and Prof. John Yearwood at
jly@ballarat.edu.au
Submission Format and Evaluation
Every book chapter submission should consist of 8,000-12,000
words,
and be structured into sections including Abstract, Introduction,
background (or related work), main sections, future research
directions, conclusion, references. Every book chapter must be
submitted in Microsoft® Word, and be typewritten in English in APA
style based on manage source function.
Every book chapter submission is original. Only ORIGINAL articles
will
be accepted for publication by IGI-Global. Upon acceptance of your
article, you will be required to sign a warranty that your article
is
original and has NOT been submitted for publication or published
elsewhere.
Each chapter will be evaluated by at least two academic peers on
related themes in a blind mode. Conditioned chapters will have an
additional opportunity for being improved and evaluated. In the
second
evaluation, a definitive editorial decision among: accepted or
rejected will be reported. All of the accepted chapters must be
submitted according to the Editorial publishing format rules
timely.
Instructions for authors can be downloaded at:
http://www.igi-global.com/Files/AuthorEditor/guidelinessubmission.pdf
Important Dates
· March 8, 2013: Submission of Abstract of the proposed
chapter to
the editors (which is optional)
· April 30, 2013: submission deadline of first version of full
chapters.
· June 15, 2013: notification deadline of editorial results
(definitively accepted chapter, conditioned chapter, or
definitively
rejected chapter).
· Early 2014: the book is scheduled for release.
-----------------------
Dr Zhaohao Sun, PhD
School of Science,Information Technology and Engineering
University Of Ballarat (CRICOS Provider Number 00103D)
P.O. Box 663, Ballarat, Vic 3353
AUSTRALIA
Phone: (03) 5327 9232
email:
z.sun@ballarat.edu.au
or
or
zhsun@ieee.org,
or
zhaohao.sun@gmail.com
(this is a private one)