Important Dates
Theme of the Workshop
Goal of the Workshop
Topics of Interest
Workshop Programme
Paper Submission
Publication
Organizing Committee & Workshop Co-chairs
Program Committee
Local Organizer
Contact Address
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Paper submission | 01 March 2009 |
Author notification | 15 March 2009 |
Camera-ready paper submission | 01 April 2009 |
Workshop dates | 08 June 2009 |
Modern Web Information Systems need to fulfil a large number of
requirements. As a consequence the design of these systems is not a trivial
process. In order to facilitate WIS modeling, WIS design methodologies
propose models in order to describe the specific aspects of these systems.
Recent advances in networking technologies made possible the WIS access
using different devices (e.g., PDA, Smart Phone, PC, Black Berry, etc.). In
addition to the device heterogeneity there is also a heterogeneous audience
(e.g., different backgrounds, different goals, etc.) that wants to access
the same system. In order to improve the user experience, these systems
often need to personalize the content and its presentation based on the
current user needs (e.g., user's browsing platform or user preferences).
Another aspect that can influence the behaviour of a WIS is the context of
use (e.g., the geographical position, the temporal information, the weather
conditions, etc.). Systems that are able to exploit this kind of information
will further improve the application usefulness for its users. Such
information is possibly made available by Web services that need to be
seamlessly integrated in WIS.
As the Web data is very diverse, WIS are seeking efficient and flexible
approaches to provide integrated views over heterogeneous data sources.
These data sources are usually autonomous (maintained by different
organizations), overlapping, frequently changing, and distributed, all these
characteristics making the data integration on the Web a very challenging
research topic.
The increased use of rich-clients applications (e.g., AJAX, OpenLaszlo)
poses new demands to WIS design. The design of these applications needs to
go beyond the server roundtrip paradigm by considering the new functionality
added to clients, an intelligent data-push communication with the server,
interactive-rich graphical interfaces, etc.
Semantic Web technologies (e.g., RDF(S), OWL, etc.) can help in the
representation of the different WIS design models aiming for an improved
interoperability. One example of such a model is the user profile which is
often described using a CC/PP vocabulary. Semantic Web representation
languages prove to be useful also for describing the semantics of data and
the semantics of interfaces in order to facilitate the integration of
heterogeneous databases and Web services, respectively. The inference
mechanisms of the Semantic Web (captured in the semantics of the
representation language or in rule-based languages like RuleML and SWRL) can
be used for deriving new information or building intelligent services on the
Web.
Over the last few years, Web services have offered new opportunities to
deploy WIS. Web services are
independent from specific platforms and computing paradigms and have the
capacity to form composed processes, referred to as composite Web services.
Web services composition fulfills user requests that require the
participation of several component Web services. Several composition
languages are now available (e.g., BPEL, WSFL). A research venue that is
worth pursuing is the modelling of these composite Web services.
The aim of the workshop is to provide a platform for bringing together researchers, practitioners, designers, and users of WIS and discuss how specific issues of WIS design can be addressed by means of modeling. Specifically, we will discuss how the influence of Semantic Web technology can help in a model-driven WIS development. Thus, the workshop should enable a fruitful exchange of ideas in the state-of-the-art of WIS modeling.
The workshop topics include but are not limited to:
- Intelligent WIS
- WIS Ubiquity
- Business Rules in WIS
- WIS Architectures
- Rich Client WIS
- Semistructured Data in WIS
- Methodologies for WIS Design
- Semantic Web Information Systems
- Data Models in WIS
- Web Metadata in WIS
- Query Languages in WIS
- Integration of WIS
- Ontologies in WIS
- Optimization Techniques for WIS
- Security in WIS
- Distributed WIS
Prospective workshop participants are invited to submit a paper related
to one (or more) of the workshop topics. The page limit for workshop papers is 10 pages.
Papers should be formatted
according to
Springer LNCS style
http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html.
They need to be original and not submitted or accepted for publication
in any other workshop, conference, or journal.
The organizers will
oversee a peer-review process for the submitted papers.
Manuscripts not submitted in the LNCS style or having more than 10 pages will not be reviewed and thus automatically rejected. The papers need to be original and not submitted or accepted for publication in any other workshop, conference, or journal. Papers should be submitted to
wism2009@few.eur.nl in PDF format.
Workshop proceedings will be published by the official CAiSE workshop proceedings. Authors of selected papers will be invited to submit extended versions for publication in prestigious international journals.
Flavius Frasincar (Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands)
Geert-Jan Houben (Delft University of Technology & Eindhoven University of Technology, the Netherlands)
Philippe Thiran (Namur University, Belgium)
Djamal Benslimane (University of Lyon 1, France)
Sven Casteleyn (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium)
Virginia Dignum (Utrecht University, the Netherlands)
Martin Dzbor (The Open University, UK)
Flavius Frasincar (Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands)
Martin Gaedke (Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany)
Irene Garrigos (Universidad de Alicante, Spain)
Hyoil Han (Drexel University, USA)
Geert-Jan Houben (Delft University of Technology & Eindhoven University of Technology, the Netherlands)
Manfred Jeusfeld (Tilburg University, the Netherlands)
David Lowe (University of Technology Sydney, Australia)
Zakaria Maamar (Zayed University, UAE)
Michael Mrissa (Namur University, Belgium)
Tommaso Di Noia (Technical University of Bari, Italy)
Moira Norrie (ETH Zurich, Switzerland)
Jose Palazzo Moreira de Oliveira (UFRGS, Brazil)
Philippe Thiran (Namur University, Belgium)
Hajo Reijers (Eindhoven University of Technology, the Netherlands)
Stefan Schlobach (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, the Netherlands)
Riccardo Torlone (Universita di Roma Tre, Italy)
Lorna Uden (Staffordshire University, UK)
Peter Barna (TOPIC, the Netherlands)
wism2009@few.eur.nl
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Download WISM 2009 Poster (pdf)
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