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*** EXTENDED
DEADLINE: last days for abstract submission
- deadline 21/02/2014 - last call ***
*** Best papers
to be published in an ISI-indexed journal ***
ICWE 2014 - 14th
International Conference on Web Engineering
"Engineering the
Web for users, developers and the crowd"
(call for research
papers, industrial papers and late breaking results)
IMPORTANT DATES
* Abstract
submission: February 21, 2014 (EXTENDED - HARD deadline)
(23h59 Hawaii Time)
* Full paper
submission: February 25, 2014 (EXTENDED - HARD deadline)
(23h59 Hawaii Time)
* Paper
notification: March 28, 2014
ICWE 2014 AT A
GLANCE
ICWE aims to bring
together researchers and practitioners from various disciplines
in academia and industry to tackle the emerging challenges in
the engineering of Web applications and in the problems of its
associated technologies, as well as the impact of those
technologies on society and culture. The 14th edition of ICWE is
centered around the theme of Engineering the Web for users,
developers and the crowd, hereby highlighting the
importance of all the different people that, somehow,
participate in the development process of interactive Web
applications and, ultimately, becomes the actors and the main
users of the best practices and results of the research
performed in the domain of the Web Engineering.
ICWE 2014 is
innovating with the introduction of six major research tracks:
cross-media and mobile applications, HCI and the Web, modelling
and engineering web applications, quality aspects of Web
applications, social web applications, and Web applications
composition and mashups.
In addition to the
six research tracks, ICWE 2014 also welcomes contributions as
demos and posters, student papers to the PhD Symposium,
tutorials and workshops, which will be subject of individual
calls for papers. The conference will be held at Toulouse,
France Toulouse which is the 3rd university city of France and
it hosts one of the oldest in Europe (founded in 1229). Further
information on the web site
http://icwe2014.webengineering.org/.
SUBMISSIONS TO
THE RESEARCH TRACKS
This call is
concerned by research and industrial contributions in one of the
following categories:
* Full research
papers: mature, original research contribution ideally
accompanied with some type of formal/empirical validation,
evidence of use in practice and/or demonstration of scalability
(18 pages)
* Industrial papers:
description of commercial solutions that are highly innovative,
discuss trends in the market and/or challenge the community to
find solutions to new problems (18 pages)
* Late breaking
results: description of preliminary results and/or ongoing
efforts that present new ideas and concepts. (10 pages)
Accepted
contributions will be included into the ICWE 2014 Springer LNCS
proceedings.
The modern Web use
is nomadic and across various devices - often simultaneously -
and the Web experience should be enjoyable, of high quality and
consistent across all devices, regardless of the purpose, place
and time of use. Such mobile, cross-device usage forces Web
developers to evolve or re-invent their engineering methods and
techniques to these new requirements and user demands. Web
applications have to be tailored to deal with the constraints
imposed by mobile technology such as small screens, low (and
sometimes expensive) bandwidth, limited browser capabilities,
different usage situations, cross- and multi-device use.
Simultaneously, modern mobile devices offer a rich set of
sensors, available through current Web browsers, allowing Web
pages access to geo-location, NFC, and other sensor data, as
well as tracking user identity across devices. Also, he rise of
the app as an alternative for Web sites is a concern to be
addressed to ensure a future, open Web.
Most Web
applications are conceived as interactive systems that aim at
communicating with users. Users do not only consume information
via the Web, but can also play an active role by contributing
content (e.g., Web 2.0), get involved in the development process
of Web applications (e.g., agile and user-centered design
processes) and even conceive their own components by interacting
with specialized tools (e.g., end-user development tools). In
this context, there are many user roles involved in the
socio-technical environment encompassing the development of Web
applications. This track is devoted to the studies on user
interface software and technologies that improve the
relationship between users and Web applications. We welcome
research focused on improving usability, accessibility, and user
experience with Web applications, as well as user-centered
design approaches that describe how Web technology and
innovative design solutions can help users to better accomplish
their tasks over the Web.
The Modeling and
Engineering Web applications track concerns principles, methods,
notations, processes, approaches, and tools for supporting the
development and evolution of high-quality Web applications in a
more effective and efficient way. Model-driven approaches are of
particular interest for addressing complexity, scalability, and
maintainability of solutions for the development of Web
applications, improving communication among participants of the
development teams, and supporting the development of innovative
tools and process. Furthermore, empirical and comparative
studies of applying Web engineering methods and approaches,
especially model-driven ones, are of particular interest.
The development and
usage of Web applications in different platforms and devices are
continuously increasing. Web applications have become the most
predominant form of software delivery today, with users and
businesses choosing to rent or use software rather than buy it.
The success of such applications depends on their capability to
satisfy the customer needs. This has led to increased attention
on quality models, processes and methods that facilitate
understanding, evaluating, and especially improving the overall
quality of products, processes and quality in use.
Social aspects are
an integral part of todays Web, and the widespread use of the
Web to connect, share and tap into collective knowledge provides
a wealth of actionable data. The crowd can be deployed in
various ways, i.e. the so-called crowdsourcing and human
computation applications, and their generated data is valuable
for developers, researchers and marketers alike. Successfully
tapping into the crowds knowledge, and gathering, analyzing, and
visualizing complex, heterogeneous social data, and putting it
to good use are major current challenges.
Composition on the
Web aims to integrate Web services, Web data sources and Web
widgets into other Web services or Web applications. Mashups,
and especially mashup tools with their modeling languages and
instruments for mashup development, bring significant innovation
as they tackle integration across the data, API and user
interface layers; they aim at simplicity and ease of use rather
than completeness of features and full expressiveness (compared
to traditional Web programming languages and tools), but still
they allow fairly sophisticated development tasks in a Web
browser. Hereby, mashups represent an important and emerging
strain of Web applications, with their own set of research
challenges and opportunities.
ORGANIZATION
General Chair:
Marco
Winckler, University Paul Sabatier, Toulouse, France
Program Chairs:
Sven
Casteleyn, Universitat Jaume I, Castellon, Spain
Gustavo Rossi,
Universidad Nacional de la Plata, Argentina
Research Track
chairs:
Cross-media
and mobile Web applications
In-young Ko,
Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, South Korea
Niels Olof
Bouvin, Aarhus University, Denmark
HCI and the
Web
Fabio Paternò,University
of Pisa, Italy
José Antonio
Gallud, Universidad de Castilla La Mancha, Spain
Modeling and
Engineering Web applications
Marco
Brambilla, Politecnico di Milano, Italy
Manuel Wimmer,
Technical University of Vienna, Austria
Quality
aspects of Web applications
Silvia
Abrahão,Universidad Politecnica de Valencia, Spain
Filomena
Ferrucci, Università di Salerno, Italy
Social Web
applications
Maria
Bielikova, Slovak University of Technology in Bratislava,
Slovakia
Flavius
Frasincar, Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Web
applications composition and mashups
Cesare
Pautasso (University of Lugano, Switzerland)
Takehiro
Tokuda (Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan)
Demo and Poster
Chairs:
Michael
Nebeling, ETH, Switzerland
Jordi Cabot,
INRIA / École des Mines de Nantes, France
Phd Symposium
Chairs:
Martin Gaedke,
Technische Universitat Chemnitz, Germany
Cinzia
Cappiello, Politecnico di Milano, Italy
Tutorial Chairs:
Luis Olsina,
Universidad National de la Pampa, Argentina
Oscar Pastor,
Universidad Politecnica de Valencia, Spain
Workshop Chair:
Santiago
Melia, University of Alicante, Spain
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PS.
Apologies for cross-posting.