** apologies for cross-posting **
==== Second Call for Papers ====
2015 Workshop on Semantics, Analytics, Visualisation: Enhancing Scholarly Data (SAVE-SD
2015)
**** LATE BREAKING NEWS **********************
** Submission deadline for research, position, demo, poster papers: January 24, 2015
** Invited speaker: Paul Groth (Elsevier Labs)
** Possibility of HTML submission in RASH format (i.e., simplified HTML+RDFa)
** Best Paper Award (250 euros) sponsored by Pensoft
** Best RASH Paper Award (voucher of 150 euros in books) sponsored by Springer
** Selected papers for Journal of Documentation special issue
** All papers will be published the in ACM Digital Library
Date: May 19, 2015 (Half day)
Venue: Florence, Italy (co-located with WWW 2015)
Hashtag: #savesd2015
Twitter: @savesdworkshop
Site:
http://cs.unibo.it/save-sd/2015/index.html
Workshop chairs:
- Francesco Osborne (Open University, UK)
- Silvio Peroni (University of Bologna, Italy, and National Research Council, Italy)
- Jun Zhao (Lancaster University, UK)
# DESCRIPTION
The main goal of the SAVE-SD workshop is to bring together publishers, companies and
researchers from different fields (among which Document and Knowledge Engineering,
Semantic Web, Natural Language Processing, Scholarly Communication, Bibliometrics, and
Human-Computer Interaction) in order to bridge the gap between the theoretical/academic
and practical/industrial aspects in regards to scholarly data.
The following fields will be addressed:
- semantics of scholarly data, i.e. how to semantically represent, categorise, connect and
integrate scholarly data, in order to foster reusability and knowledge sharing;
- analytics on scholarly data, i.e. designing and implementing novel and scalable
algorithms for knowledge extraction with the aim of understanding research dynamics,
forecasting research trends, fostering connections between groups of researchers,
informing research policies, analysing and interlinking experiments and deriving new
knowledge;
- visualisation of and interaction with scholarly data, i.e. providing novel user
interfaces and applications for navigating and making sense of scholarly data and
highlighting their patterns and peculiarities.
# TOPICS OF INTEREST
We would encourage submission of papers covering one or more of the following topics:
Semantics:
- Data models (e.g., ontologies, vocabularies, schemas) for the description of scholarly
data and the linking between scholarly data and academic papers that report or cite them
- Description of citations and citation networks
- Theoretical models describing the rhetorical and argumentative structure of scholarly
papers and
their application in practice
- Description and use of provenance information of scholarly data
- From digital libraries of scholarly papers to Linked Open Datasets: models,
applicability and
challenges
- Definition and description of scholarly publishing processes
- Modelling licences for scholarly documents and data
Analytics:
- Assessing the quality and/or trust of scholarly data
- Pattern discovery of scholarly data
- Citation analysis and prediction
- Scientific claims identification from textual contents
- New indicators for measuring the quality and relevance of research
- Comparison between standard metrics (e.g., h-index, impact factor, citation counting)
and
alternative metrics in real-case scenarios
- Automatic or semi-automatic approaches to making sense of research dynamics
- Content- and data-based semantic similarity of scholarly papers
- Citation generation
- Automatic semantic enhancement of existing scholarly libraries and papers
- Reconstruction, forecasting and monitoring of scholarly data
Visualisation and Interaction:
- Novel user interfaces for interaction with paper, metadata, content, and data
- Visualisation of citation networks according to multiple dimensions (e.g., citation
counting,
citation functions, kinds of citing/cited entities)
- Visualisation of related papers or data according to multiple dimensions (semantic
similarity of
abstracts, keywords, etc.)
- Applications for making sense of scholarly data
- Usability studies on existing interfaces (e.g., Web sites, Web applications, smartphone
apps) for
browsing scholarly data
- Scholarly data and ubiquity: accessing scholarly information from multiple devices (PC,
tablet,
smartphones)
- Applications for the (semi-)automatic annotation of scholarly papers
# IMPORTANT DATES
- Submission deadline: January 24, 2015 (23:59 Hawaii Standard Time)
- Acceptance notification: February 22, 2015
- Camera ready deadline: March 8, 2015
# SUBMISSIONS
SAVE-SD welcomes the submission of original research and application papers dealing with
the tree aforementioned field. We encourage theoretical, methodological, empirical and
applications papers. We appreciate the submission of papers incorporating links to data
sets and other material used for evaluation as well as to live demos and software source
code.
All submissions must be written in English. Two formats are possible for the submission:
- PDF, a file formatted according to the ACM double-column instructions
(
http://www.acm.org/sigs/publications/proceedings-templates);
- HTML, a zip archive containing an HTML file compliant with the Research Articles in
Simplified HTML (RASH) format (
http://cs.unibo.it/save-sd/rash/index.html).
We invite four kinds of submissions:
- full research papers (max. 6 pp. in PDF or 5400 words in HTML)
- position papers (max. 4 pp. in PDF or 3600 words in HTML)
- demo papers (max. 2 pp. in PDF or 1800 words in HTML)
- poster papers (max. 2 pp. in PDF or 1800 words in HTML)
All the aforementioned limits include metadata (title, authors, keywords, ACM categories,
abstract), acknowledgements, references and the whole content of the paper. In the HTML
format, figures and tables count 300 words each.
Submissions and reviewing will be supported by the EasyChair system:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=savesd2015
# EVALUATION OF SUBMISSIONS
In order to evaluate the submitted papers, we have three different program committees:
- The Senior PC, whose members will act as meta-reviewers and have the crucial role of
balancing the scores provided by the reviews from the other two PCs (see below);
- The Industrial PC, who will evaluate the submissions from an industrial perspective
mainly – by assessing how much the theories/applications described in the papers do/may
influence (positively or negatively) the publishing domain and whether they could be
concretely adopted by publishers and scholarly data providers;
- The Academic PC, who will evaluate the papers from an academic perspective mainly – by
assessing the quality of the research described in such papers.
All submissions will be reviewed by (at least) one Senior PC member, one Industrial PC
member and two Academic PC members. The final decision of acceptance/rejection will be
made in consensus by the chairs.
# PUBLICATION VENUES
The proceedings of SAVE-SD will be collected in the Companion volume of the WWW 2015
conference, which will be published by ACM in its digital library. The WWW 2015 organisers
will require at least one registration per paper published in the Companion volume. At the
time of submission of the final camera-ready copy, authors will have to indicate the
already registered person for that publication.
In addition, the authors of the best papers of the workshop will be invited to submit an
extended version of their work to a special issue that will be published as part of the
Journal of Documentation (
http://www.emeraldinsight.com/journal/jd), one of the longest
established academic journals in library and information science (2013 Impact Factor:
1.035; indexed in several citation services, among which Elsevier's Scopus and Thomson
Reuters' Journal Citation Reports).
# INVITED SPEAKER
The invited speaker for the opening keynote of the workshop will be Paul Groth from
Elsevier Labs.
Paul Groth holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of Southampton (2007),
has done research at the University of Southern California, and has been an assistant
professor in the Web and Media Group at the VU University of Amsterdam and a member of its
Network Institute.
His research focuses on dealing with large amounts of diverse contextualised knowledge
with a particular focus on the web and science applications. This includes research in
data provenance, web and data science, knowledge and data integration and knowledge
sharing. Paul was co-chair of the W3C Provenance Working Group that created a standard for
provenance interchange. He is co-author of Provenance: an Introduction to PROV. Currently,
he is a key contributor to Open PHACTS (
http://www.openphacts.org) - a project to develop
a provenance-enabled platform for large scale pharmacological information. He blogs at
http://thinklinks.wordpress.com. You can find him on twitter: @pgroth
# AWARDS
An award of 250 euros, kindly sponsored by Pensoft (
http://www.pensoft.net), will be
assigned to the best paper of the workshop. The decision will be taken by considering both
the reviews received and how the authors will address the reviewers' concerns in the
camera ready.
Another award of 150 euros as a voucher for buying Springer's products, kindly
sponsored by Springer (
http://www.springer.com), will be assigned to the best workshop
submission in RASH format (i.e., simplified HTML+RDFa). The decision will be taken by
considering the quality of the markup (i.e., the less syntactical mistakes there are in
the markup, the better), the number of RDF statements defined in RDFa, and the number of
RDF links to LOD datasets.