-------- Original-Nachricht -------- Betreff: [computational.science] 2nd CFP - The First International Workshop on RFID Technology - Concepts, Applications, Challenges Datum: Wed, 06 Dec 2006 09:23:07 +0400 Von: Zakaria Maamar Zakaria.Maamar@zu.ac.ae Organisation: "OptimaNumerics" An: Computational Science Mailing List computational.science@lists.optimanumerics.com
Call for Papers - IWRT'07
The First International Workshop on RFID Technology - Concepts, Applications, Challenges 12 June 2007, Funchal, Madeira, Portugal
http://www.iceis.org/workshops/iwrt/iwrt2007-cfp.html
In conjunction with the 9th International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems (ICEIS'07)
Workshop Background and Goals ----------------------------- Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) is a wireless communication technology that uses radio-frequency waves to transfer information between tagged objects and readers without line of sight. This creates tremendous opportunities for linking various objects from real world. These objects are numbered, identified, catalogued, and tracked. In recent years, RFID has gained a significant momentum and is emerging as an important technology for revolutionizing a wide range of applications including supply chain management, retail, aircraft maintenance, anti-counterfeiting, baggage handling, healthcare, just to cite some.
While RFID provides promising benefits such as inventory visibility and business process automation, some significant challenges need to be overcome before these benefits can be realized. One important issue is how to process and manage RFID data, which is typically in large volume, noisy and unreliable, time-dependent, dynamically changing, and of varying ownership. Another issue is how to seamlessly integrate low-level RFID data into (existing) enterprise information infrastructures (e.g., upper-level business processes). Finally, given the ability of inexpensively tagging and thus monitoring a large number of items and/or people, RFID raises some serious security and privacy concerns. Indeed, RFID privacy and security are stimulating research areas that involve rich interplay among many disciplines, like signal processing, hardware design, supply-chain logistics, privacy rights, and cryptography.
The workshop's objective is to provide a forum for researchers, practitioners, and users to exchange new ideas, developments, and experience on issues related to this emerging field.
Topics of Interest ---------------------- We welcome papers that focus on novel RFID technologies and applications. Topics of interests include, but are not limited to:
* Data management issues in RFID applications * Innovative RFID-enabled applications * Security/privacy and RFID * RFID and sensor networks * Web services and RFID * RFID and semantic Web * RFID standards * RFID case studies * RFID middleware * Next generation RFID technologies * Commercial experience with RFID * RFID network management * COTS and Open Source RFID infrastructure * Integration of RFID with other applications * Performance evaluation * Business process redesign and RFID
Submission of Papers ------------------------ All papers must be written in English. There will be two types of papers: long (approx. 5000 words) and short (approx. 2000 words). Papers should be prepared in postscript, PDF, or Word and should be submitted through ICEIS web-based paper submission system.
Format of the Workshop ------------------------ The workshop will consist of oral presentations. The proceedings of the workshop will be published in the form of a book by INSTICC Press and indexed in DBLP.
Journal Publication ------------------------ Best papers of the workshop will be considered for publication in a Special issue of International Journal of Internet Protocol Technology (IJIPT).
Important Dates ------------------------ Paper Submission: February 19th, 2007 Author Notification: March 23rd, 2007 Final Camera-Ready and Registration: April 9th, 2007
Workshop Co-Chairs ------------------------- Dr. Michael Sheng (Primary Contact) School of Computer Science The University of Adelaide Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia qsheng@cs.adelaide.edu.au
Prof. Zakaria Maamar College of Information Systems Zayed University Po Box 19282, Dubai,U.A.E Zakaria.Maamar@zu.ac.ae
Dr. Mark Cameron Information Engineering Lab CSIRO ICT Center Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia Mark.Cameron@csiro.au
Workshop Program Committee --------------------------- Rebecca Angeles (University of New Brunswick, Canada) Zaheer Asif (Temple University, USA) Paul Brebner (CSIRO ICT Centre, Australia) Christian Floerkemeier (ETH Zurich, Switzerland) Hector Gonzalez (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA) Rajit Gadh (UCLA, USA) Sozo Inoue (Kyushu University, Japan) Shawn R. Jeffery (University of California, Berkeley, USA) Roger Jiao (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore) Mohamed Latrach (ESEO, France) Xue Li (University of Queensland, Australia) Weifa Liang (The Australian National University, Australia) Zongwei Luo (University of Hong Kong, China) Paris Kitsos (Hellenic Open University, Greece) John Mo (CSIRO CMIT, Australia) Melanie Rieback (VU Amsterdam, The Netherlands) Ramesh Raskar (Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs, USA) Jukka Riekki (University of Oulu, Finland) Quan Z. Sheng (CSIRO ICT Centre, Australia) Agnes Voisard (Fraunhofer ISST and FU Berlin, Germany) Fusheng Wang (Siemens Corporate Research, USA) Eiko Yoneki (University of Cambridge, UK)
Workshop Venue --------------------- The workshop will be held in conjunction of the 9th International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems (ICEIS 2007) in Funchal, Madeira, Portugal.
Registration Information ------------------------- At least one author of an accepted paper must register for the workshop. The registration information can be found from http://www.iceis.org
Secretariat ------------------------- ICEIS 2007 Secretariat - The First International Workshop on RFID Technology (IWRT 2007) E-mail: workshops@iceis.org Web site: http://www.iceis.org