Ninth IEEE International Conference on
Semantic Computing
Febraury 9-11, 2015
Anaheim, California, USA
http://www.ieee-icsc.org/
The field of Semantic Computing addresses the derivation of semantic
information from content and the connection of semantics to knowledge, where
"content" may be anything including structured data, video, audio, text,
hardware, software, process, etc.
The Ninth IEEE International Conference on Semantic Computing (ICSC 2015)
continues to foster the growth of a new research community. The conference
builds on the success of the past ICSC conferences as an international forum
for researchers and practitioners to present research that advances the state
of the art and practice of Semantic Computing, as well as identifying emerging
research topics and defining the future of the field. The event is located in
Newport Beach, California at Hyatt Regency Newport Beach. The technical program
of ICSC 2015 includes workshops, invited keynotes, paper presentations, panel
discussions, industrial 'show and tells', demonstrations, and more. Submissions
of high‐quality papers describing mature results or ongoing work are
invited.
The main goal of the conference is to foster the dialog between experts in each
sub‐discipline. Therefore we especially encourage submissions of work that is
interesting to multiple areas, such as multimodal approaches.
Note: ICSC will be held in February from 2015.
SUBMISSIONS
Regular Papers, Short Papers, and Industry Papers.
Authors are invited to submit an 8-page (regular),
4-page (short), or 6‐page (industry) technical
paper manuscript in double-column IEEE format
following the guidelines available on the ICSC20104 web page.
Demonstration Papers and Posters.
Authors are invited to submit an 2-page
(demonstration or poster) technical paper
manuscript in double-column
IEEE format following the guidelines available on the
ICSC2014 web page.
Workshops Proposals.
The organizing committee
invites proposals for workshops to be held in
conjunction with the conference. These will focus
on specific topics of the main conference. More
information is available on the ICSC2014 web page.
The Conference Proceedings will be published by IEEE Computer Society Press.
Distinguished quality papers presented at the conference will be selected for
publication in internationally renowned journals.
AREAS OF INTEREST INCLUDE (but are not limited to):
Semantics based Analysis
- Natural language processing
- Image and video analysis
- Audio, music and speech analysis
- Data and web mining
- Behavior of software, systems, and networks
- Services and networks
- Security
- Privacy
- Analysis of social networks
Semantic Integration
- Metadata and other description languages
- Database schema integration
- Ontology integration
- Interoperability and service integration
- Semantic programming languages and software
engineering
- Semantic system design and synthesis
Applications using Semantics
- Big Data
- Search engines and question answering
- Semantic web services
- Content-based multimedia retrieval and editing
- Context-aware networks of sensors, devices and
applications
- Devices and applications
- Digital library applications
- Machine translation
- Music description and meta-creation
- Medicine and Biology
- GIS systems and architecture
Semantic Interfaces
- Natural language interfaces
- Multimodal interfaces and mediation
technology
- Human centered computing
Important Dates:
- Dec
15th, 2013: Workshop Proposals
- Feb
15th, 2014 (midnight, PST): Regular/Short/Poster/Demo
Paper Submission
- Feb
15th, 2014 (midnight, PST): Industry Paper Submission
- TBD:
Notification Date
- TBD:
Camera-Ready & Registration
- June
16th-18th, 2014: Conference
Organizing Committee
General Co-Chairs
Abha Moitra, GE Research, USA
Phillip Sheu, University of California, Irvine, USA
Program Co-Chairs
Robert Mertens, HSW University of Applied Sciences, Hamelin, Germany
Giovanni Pilato, Italian National Research Council, Italy
Mei-Ling Shyu, University of Miami, USA
Nadine Steinmetz, HPI, Germany
Workshop Co-Chairs
Joseph Barr, San Diego State University, USA
Shu-Ching Chen, Florida International University, USA
Lars Knipping, Berlin Institute of Technology, Germany
Newton Lee, IFERS, USA
Joanne Luciano, University of California, Irvine, USA
Industry Co-Chairs
Barbara Starr, SemanticFuse, USA
Tong Zhang, HP Labs, USA
Panel Co-Chairs
Brian Harrington, University of Toronto, Canada
David Ostrowski, Ford, USA
Demo Co-Chair
Anne Hunt, Otto, Inc.
Publicity Co-Chairs (Tentative)
Jeffrey Abbott, Del Rey Systems, USA
Keith Chan, Hong Kong Polytech University
Brian Harrington, University of Toronto, Canada
Wolfgang H�rst, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Wooju Kim, Yonsei University, Korea
Yonghong Tian, Peking University, China
Atsuo Yoshitaka, JAIST, Japan
Chengcui Zhang, University of Alabama at Birmingham, USA
Publication Co-Chairs
Jennifer Kim, University of California, Irvine, USA
Tao Meng, University of Miami, USA
Best Paper Award Co-Chairs
Gerald Friedland, ICSI Berkeley, USA
Roger Zimmermann, National University of Singapore
Finance and Local Arrangement Chair
Taehyung Wang, California State University Northridge, USA
Registration and Web Chair
Shaoting Wang, University of California, Irvine, USA
------------- Accepted Workshops ---------------------
Workshop on Semantic Computing
for Computational Creativity (SCCC 2014)
The Third IEEE International
Workshop on Semantic Multimedia (ICSC-SMM’14)
Tutorial and Workshop on Semantic Computing with Big
Data (SCBD 2014)
The Third IEEE International Workshop on Data Science and
Related Technologies (ICSC-DSRT’14)
CALL FOR WORKSHOP PROPOSALS
IEEE ICSC 2014: The Eighth IEEE International Conference on Semantic Computing
June 16th- 18th, 2014, Newport Beach, California, USA
The IEEE ICSC 2014 organizing committee invites proposals for workshops to be
held in conjunction with the conference.
The workshops will focus on specific topics of the main conference. The
organizer(s) of approved workshops are responsible for advertising the
workshop, distributing the call for papers, gathering submissions, and
conducting the paper review process.
Any general questions regarding ICSC 2014 Workshops and workshop proposals
should be directed to Prof. Shu-Ching Chen at chens@cs.fiu.edu .
Please add [ICSC2014-WS-Proposal] as subject.
Important Dates:
December 15, 2013: Workshop Proposals due
-------------------------------------------------------------
Note:
1. Every paper accepted for publication in the Proceedings of ICSC 2014 MUST be
presented during the conference.
2. Every paper accepted for ICSC 2014 MUST have attached to it at least one
registration at the full member/nonmember rate. Thus, for a paper for which all
authors are students, one student author will be required to register at the
full registration rate.
Fifth International Workshop on
Semantic Computing for Social Networks:
from user information to social knowledge (SCSN 2017)
in conjunction with
Eleventh IEEE International Conference on Semantic Computing
January 30 - February 1, 2017
San Diego, California USA
Call For Papers
Overview
------------
Internet users have become providers of
information through social networks like Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, and so
forth. On the other side organisations may benefit by integrating social
network analysis, for instance, to understand employee innovative behaviour,
as, for instance, integrating social networks and the leader member exchange
perspectives. Still, networks models show how information sharing, models of
social cohesion and mutual goals (i.e. values) make organization social
capital. In this context Semantic Computing plays a chief role because of its
potentiality to turn shapeless crowds information into social and digestible
knowledge.
Furthermore, recent developments in processing, storing, and sharing huge
amount of data become problematic due to the lack of new approaches,
techniques, methods, algorithms and technologies oriented to social networks,
including theoretical notions and insufficient awareness on security,
retrieval, networking, behavioral and social issues.
The workshop, that will take place on
January 30 - February 1, 2017, in conjunction with the 11th IEEE International
Conference on Semantic Computing (ICSC2017), (http://www.ieee-icsc.org) is a
forum for researchers, industry practitioners and domain experts in the field
of semantic computing, social networks, and social interactions and
organisation sciences to exchange the latest advances in the state of the art
and practice of semantic computing applications to the social network
context.
Selected Papers
----------------------
Extended versions of selected papers will be published on the International
Journal of Knowledge Society Research
(http://www.igi-global.com/journal/international-journal-knowledge-society-research/1180)
Topics of interest
----------------------
The topics of interest of the workshop include, but are not limited to:
- What kind of Semantics-driven indexing and retrieval for Social
Media?
- User modeling or social profiling for
business and/or non profit organizations?
- Semantics-based recommender systems for
Social Media: is the dream coming true?
- Web adaptation methods and
techniques
- Content on demand: customization or
personalization?
- Semantic context modeling and
extraction
- Semantic Models generation from social
networks data
- Semantically-enabled data
filtering
- Sentiment analysis in Social
Networks
- Opinion mining in Social
Networks
- Social Web Mining
- Semantics of Collective
Intelligence
- Mobile social networking
- Distributed semantic computing for
social network data analysis
- Collaborative filtering, mining and
prediction
- Social computing applications and case
studies
- Social Data
- Social Networking
- Data Science and Big Data
- Data Security
- Security Risk Analysis, Modelling,
Evaluation and Management
- Social Media Analytics,
- Privacy
- Recent Theory, Trends, Technologies and
Applications
- Future Directions and Challenges in
Information Security System
- Effects of social relationships and
knowledge on organisation innovative behaviour
- Emerging social values and their impact
on organisation leaderships
Important Dates
--------------------
Submission deadline: November 20,
2016 December 8,
2016 (EXTENDED DEADLINE)
Notification of acceptance: December 18,
2016
Camera-Ready Submission: December 25,
2016
Organizing Committee
-----------------------------
Shu-Ching Chen, Florida International University, USA
Ernesto D'Avanzo, University of Salerno, Italy
Giovanni Pilato, Italian National Research Council, Italy
Uraz Yavanoglu, Gazi University, Turkey
Submission Guidelines
----------------------------
Manuscripts must be written (6 pages
maximum, all included) in English and follow the instructions in the Manuscript
Formatting and Templates page given in ICSC 2017 website (http://icsc.eecs.uci.edu/2017/index.html)
at the “Submission” section.
Papers must be original and not be
submitted to or accepted by any other conference or journal.
Only electronic submission will be
accepted. Technical paper authors MUST submit their manuscripts through
EasyChair ( https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=scsn2017
), by following the instructions given on the SCSN website (http://www.pa.icar.cnr.it/scsn17).
Manuscripts may only be submitted in PDF
format.
Each paper will be peer-reviewed. Papers
accepted by the workshop will be published in the conference proceedings
published by IEEE Computer Society Press.
For any question regarding the workshop
please contact the organizers at scsn-ws (at) pa.icar.cnr.it
http://www.ieee-icsc.org/
Keynotes
keynote
Meta-Algorithmic Approaches to Semantic Computing
by Steve Simske,
HP Labs
Abstract
Speaker Bio
keynote
The Roles of Reductionism, Emergence and Functional Equivalence in
Semantic Computing
by Stephen E. Levinson,
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and the Beckman Institute,
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Abstract
Speaker Bio
Meta-Algorithmic Approaches to Semantic Computing
by Steve Simske,
HP Labs
Semantic computing is concerned with the combination of semantic analysis,
natural language processing, and data mining approaches to provide machine
understanding for a variety of applications. This includes the automatic
processing of user intentions, deriving meaning from media, and intelligently
mapping user intentions to important downstream tasks such as search,
retrieval, information management, and information re-purposing/mashing. Each
of these tasks can uniquely benefit from a meta-algorithmic approach.
Meta-algorithmics are a set of more than 20 parallel processing patterns that,
combined, offer a set of approaches to building optimized intelligent systems.
Specific meta-algorithmic patterns, along with a fully generalized hybrid
pattern, allow any intelligent system architect to build robust, accurate and
cost- sensitive intelligent systems. Meta-algorithmic patterns range from
simpler first-order patterns such as Voting and Predictive Selection to
highly-complex third order patterns such as Expert Feedback to provide a
repertoire of means to use two or more algorithms, systems or intelligence
engines to create better systems. Meta-algorithmics take advantage of the
convergent ubiquity of cloud computing, massively parallel processing, and
inexpensive storage to afford previously unimaginable data analysis approaches.
In this talk, the application of meta-algorithmic approaches to various
semantic computing challenges – particular those in categorization,
classification, summarization, search, and authentication – will be
described. Meta-algorithmics will be shown to provide a third major form of
parallel processing (supplementing parallelism by task and by component) to
semantic computing scientists, and a new toolkit for improving intelligent
system performance.
back to
keynotes
Steve Simske
HP Labs
Steve Simske is the Director and Chief Technologist for the Content Solutions
Lab in HP Labs. His research areas include image processing, image analysis and
document understanding technologies ranging from automatic book digitization to
and speech recognition. Steve developed the toolset for architecting massive
intelligent systems - meta-algorithmics – which affords the combination of
two or more intelligent systems to create more robust, accurate and often
faster larger systems, or “ecosystems”. This culminated in the recent book,
“Meta-Algorithmics” (Wiley & Sons). Steve has earlier worked on medical
signal processing for portable medicine, including novel means of reducing
biological noise in electrocardiograms (ECGs). Steve created HP’s Security
Printing and Imaging program - image analysis, security, analytics and
forensics to prevent counterfeiting, protect branded products, and provide
investigative support for anti-fraud. This led in part to his invitation to
participate as a Member of the World Economic Forum Global Agenda Council on
Illicit Trade and Organized Crime for the past four years. Steve is an HP
Fellow and has more than 75 US Patents and more than 300 peer-reviewed
publications.
back to
keynotes
The Roles of Reductionism, Emergence and Functional Equivalence in
Semantic Computing
Stephen E. Levinson,
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and the Beckman Institute
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
selevins@illinois.edu
In 1950 Albert Einstein addressed the International College of Surgeons. With
appropriate humility he insisted that all human mental activity ultimately
rests on physics. Twenty-five years ago, the Beckman Institute was conceived as
an interdisciplinary laboratory dedicated to the study of human cognition by
the cooperative efforts of the physical, biological and social sciences.
Cognitive learning is a complex phenomenon peculiar to humans and, to a lesser
extent, higher animals. Since learning is mediated by the central nervous
system, its study by qualitative and empirical methods has traditionally been
the province of neurobiology and psychology. More recently analogies to natural
learning have been drawn to certain information processing technologies
including computing, robotics, machine vision and automatic speech recognition
in which context it has been treated by appeal to detailed abstract (i. e.
non-biological) mathematical models. For historical and organizational reasons,
the two approaches are pursued virtually independently. As biology and
psychology are becoming more quantitative, this is a propitious time to
undertake an interdisciplinary project in which the development of large scale
mathematical models is critically informed by known biological and
psychological principles. Conversely, the abstract models thus generated should
be sufficiently rich to make to make predictions about human behavior that can
be evaluated by experiments on anthropomorphic robots. The goal is the
construction of a detailed quantitative model and a set of formal organizing
principles that together constitute a theory of cognition.
For more than fifteen years, the language acquisition and robotics lab at the
Beckman institute has followed precisely this path. We begin with Einstein's
reductionist hypothesis tempered by the notions of emergence derived from
Gibbs' statistical mechanics and Shannon's information theoretic
interpretation. Also invoked are ideas about functional equivalence expressed
by Turing's model of thought as formal computation, Wiener's model of
homeostasis as stochastic adaptive control and von Neumann's characterization
of behavior as utility maximization in social games. Our work is not about
robotics or speech or vision. It is about all of them working together to
produce intelligent behavior because, we believe, cognitive functions do not
exist in isolation and there is no such thing as a disembodied mind. As a
cognitive model of reality is acquired, a linguistic image of it is formed
primarily in response to sensorimotor perception. When the language is fully
acquired, most mental processes are mediated linguistically and we appear to
think in our native language which we hear as our mind's voice.
Several examples are given of learned behavior including fine motor control
tasks and language acquisition.
back to
keynotes
Stephen E. Levinson
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and the Beckman Institute
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Stephen E. Levinson was born in New York City on September 27, 1944. He
received the B. A. degree in Engineering Sciences from Harvard in 1966, and the
M. S. and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical Engineering from the University of Rhode
Island, Kingston, Rhode Island in 1972 and 1974, respectively. From 1966-1969
he was a design engineer at Electric Boat Division of General Dynamics in
Groton, Connecticut. From 1974-1976 he held a J. Willard Gibbs Instructorship
in Computer Science at Yale University. In 1976, he joined the technical staff
of Bell Laboratories in Murray Hill, NJ where he conducted research in the
areas of speech recognition and understanding. In 1979 he was a visiting
researcher at the NTT Musashino Electrical Communication Laboratory in Tokyo,
Japan. In 1984, he held a visiting fellowship in the Engineering Department at
Cambridge University. In 1990, Dr. Levinson became head of the Linguistics
Research Department at AT&T Bell Laboratories where he directed research in
Speech Synthesis, Speech Recognition and Spoken Language Translation. In 1997,
he joined the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering of the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign where he teaches courses in Speech
and Language Processing and leads research projects in speech synthesis and
automatic language acquisition. He is also a full-time faculty member of the
Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology where he serves as the
head of the Artificial Intelligence group. Dr. Levinson is a member of the
Association for Computing Machinery, a fellow of the Institute of Electrical
and Electronic Engineers and a fellow of the Acoustical Society of America. He
is a founding editor of the journal Computer Speech and Language and a former
member and chair of the Industrial Advisory Board of the CAIP Center at Rutgers
University. He is the author of more than 100 technical papers and holds seven
patents. His book, published in 2005 by John Wiley and Sons, Ltd., is entitled
"Mathematical Models for Speech Technology"
back to
keynotes
Complex event handling with Semantic Technology
by Jans Aasman,
Franz Inc.
Enterprises collect large bodies of data that describe interactions between
their customers. Think of phone calls, text messages, financial transactions,
auctions, emails, etc. Each of these interactions can be described as an event
object with two or more actors, a start time and possibly an end-time, almost
always an location and then other properties to describe the event. A
collection of events will inevitably result in a large graph on which we can do
interesting computations that include graph analytics, geospatial and temporal
reasoning. Relational databases are fundamentally unfit to explore the graph
within these networks and Big Data solutions (Hadoop, etc) are usually not
meant to work with sparse graphs, rules and geospatial and temporal reasoning.
The maturing capabilities of RDF Graph Databases have made them the optimal
approach to mine these networks that have temporal and geospatial features.
This presentation will discuss an application of Semantic Graph Mining using
anonymized information from an on-line bank in Asia. The data includes all
payments from account to account along with details about links to each other
through IP addresses, goods traded, location, etc. We will show how we can
detect, in real time, whether an account executing a transaction is part of a
group of accounts that is somehow linked to fraudulent activity.
back to
keynotes
Jans Aasman
Franz Inc.
Dr. Jans Aasman started his career as an experimental and cognitive
psychologist, earning his PhD in cognitive science with a detailed model of car
driver behaviorr. He has spent most of his professional life in
telecommunications research, specializing in intelligent user interfaces and
applied artificial intelligence projects. From 1995 to 2004, he was also a
part-time professor in the Industrial Design department of the Technical
University of Delft. Jans is currently the CEO of Franz Inc., the leading
supplier of commercial, persistent, and scalable RDF database products that
provide the storage layer for powerful reasoning and ontology modeling
capabilities for Semantic Web applications.
Dr. Aasman has gained notoriety as a conference speaker at such events as
Semantic Technologies Conference, International Semantic Web Conference, Java
One, Enterprise Data World, Semantics in Healthcare and Life Sciences, Linked
Data Planet, INSA, GeoWeb, AAAI, NoSQLNow, Graph Data Management, RuleML, IEEE
conferences, and DEBS to name a few.
back to
keynotes
A “Kansei” Multimedia Computing System for Environmental Analysis
and Cross-Cultural Communication
by Yasushi Kiyoki,
Graduate School of Media and Governance, Keio University
In the design of multimedia computing systems, one of the most important issues
is how to search and analyze media data (images, music, movies and documents),
according to user's impressions and contexts. We introduce a "Kansei" and
semantic associative search method based on the “Mathematical Model of
Meaning (MMM)”. The concept of "Kansei" includes several meanings on
sensitive recognition, such as “emotion”, "impression", "human senses",
"feelings", "sensitivity", "psychological reaction" and "physiological
reaction". This model realizes "Kansei" processing and semantic associative
search for media data, according to user's impressions and contexts and is
applied to compute semantic correlations between keywords, images, music movies
and documents dynamically in a context-dependent way. The main feature of our
system based on this model is to realize semantic associative search in the
2000 dimensional orthogonal semantic space with semantic projection functions.
This space is created for dynamically computing semantic equivalence or
similarity between keywords and media data.
We have designed "Kansei-Multimedia Computing System” for realizing
international and collaborative research environments, as a new platform of
multimedia semantic computing system. This system consists of two subsystems:
(1) “Kansei” image and music search and analysis system for cooperative
creation and manipulation of multimedia objects and (2) Cross-cultural
Collaboration System with images databases.
As an important global environmental system, we have also designed a multimedia
semantic computing system for global environmental analysis. One of the
important applications of this system is “Global Environment-Analysis,”
which aims to evaluate various influences caused by natural disasters in global
environments. Our experimental results have shown the feasibility and
effectiveness of our semantic associative computing system based on “MMM”
in global environmental analyses.
back to
keynotes
Challenges at the Intersection of Semantic Computing with Law, Legal
Reasoning, and Legal Practice
by Kevin D. Ashley
University of Pittsburgh
This talk will briefly consider the intersection of semantic computing with
law, legal reasoning, and legal practice. Based on the definition of semantic
computing in the materials for the fourth IEEE International Conference on
Semantic Computing (ICSC2010), the intersection of semantic computing with law,
legal reasoning, and legal practice addresses the derivation and matching of
the semantics of computational content to that of naturally expressed user
intentions relating to legal problem-solving or analysis in order to retrieve,
manage, manipulate or create content based on its significance to the legal
problem-solving or analysis, where "content" includes text, video, audio,
services, networks, etc.
The talk will illustrate some challenges of addressing the pressing needs for
new ways to relate the semantics of computational content to users’
intentions relating to legal problem-solving or analysis. The needs are
inherent in many developments in high tech legal practice, e-government, and
research in Artificial Intelligence and Law. For example:
- In
evidentiary discovery, the need to process enormous numbers of electronic
documents in terms of their meaning and significance relative to
litigators’ intentions concerning clients’ legal claims and
strategies
- In
business compliance, the need to relate computationally-manipulable norms
to regulators’ intentions embodied in the natural language legal codes
the norms are meant to represent and implement and in the principles and
policies underlying the regulations
- In
legal information retrieval and modeling legal reasoning, the need to
relate computationally-processable ontological representations of legal
concepts and their meanings to the intentions of legal researchers and
users in retrieving, comparing, and drawing inferences from relevant
legal rules, cases, and commentaries
- In
e-Commerce and semantic web-based legal services, the need to relate
computationally-accessible resources to the intentions of electronically
contracting parties
- In
automated rights management of privacy and intellectual property rights
in data, the need to relate proposed data access to the intentions of
data rights owners and users
- In
e-government and legal education, the need to relate
computationally-processable argument diagrams and the meanings and
intentions of legal arguers.
back to
keynotes
Yasushi Kiyoki
Graduate School of Media and Governance, Keio University
Yasushi Kiyoki received his B.E., M.E. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical
engineering from Keio University in 1978, 1980 and 1983, respectively. From
1984 to 1996, he was with Institute of Information Sciences and Electronics,
Univ. of Tsukuba, as an assistant professor and then an associate professor.
Since 1996, he has been with Graduate School of Media and Governance, where he
is currently a professor. His research addresses multi-database systems,
knowledge base systems, semantic associative processing, and multimedia
database systems. He serves as the editor-in-chief on Information Modeling and
Knowledge Bases (IOS Press). He also served program chairs for several
international conferences, such as 7th International Conference on Database
Systems for Advanced Applications and European-Japanese Conferences on
Information Modeling and Knowledge bases (2004-Present).
back to
keynotes
Kevin D. Ashley
Professor of Law and Intelligent Systems
University of Pittsburgh
Dr. Kevin Ashley holds interdisciplinary appointments as a faculty member of
the Graduate Program in Intelligent Systems at the University of Pittsburgh, a
Senior Scientist at the Learning Research and Development Center, a Professor
of Law, and Adjunct Professor of Computer Science. He received a B.A. in
philosophy (magna cum laude) from Princeton University in 1973, J.D. (cum
laude) from Harvard Law School in 1976, and Ph.D. in computer science in 1988
from the University of Massachusetts.
An expert on computer modeling of legal reasoning and cyberspace legal issues,
he has reported his research in conference proceedings of the American
Association for Artificial Intelligence, the International Association for
Artificial Intelligence and the Law, and the Cognitive Science Society. He has
also published in journals such as Jurimetrics, IEEE Expert, International
Journal of Man/Machine Studies, and Journal of Artificial Intelligence and the
Law, of which he is an editor. Professor Ashley has been a Principal
Investigator of a number of National Science Foundation grants to study
reasoning with cases in law and professional ethics. Professor Ashley is also
author of Modeling Legal Argument: Reasoning with Cases and Hypotheticals (MIT
Press/Bradford Books, 1990).
A former National Science Foundation Presidential Young Investigator, Professor
Ashley was also a visiting scientist at the IBM Thomas J. Watson Research
Center, and a recipient of an IBM Graduate Research Fellowship. He is a Fellow
of the American Association for Artificial Intelligence, and a past President
of the International Association of Artificial Intelligence and Law.
back to keynotes
Bhavani Thuraisingham
Professor
University of Texas, Dallas
Dr. Bhavani Thuraisingham is the Louis A. Beecherl, Jr. I Distinguished
Professor in the Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and Computer Science at the
University of Texas at Dallas (UTD) effective September 2010. She joined UTD in
October 2004 as a Professor of Computer Science and Director of the Cyber
Security Research Center which conducts research in data security and privacy,
secure networks, secure languages, secure social media, data mining and
semantic web. She is an elected Fellow of three prestigious organizations: the
IEEE (Institute for Electrical and Electronics Engineers), the AAAS (American
Association for the Advancement of Science) and the BCS (British Computer
Society). She is the recipient of numerous awards including the IEEE Computer
Society’s 1997 Technical Achievement Award for “outstanding and innovative
contributions to secure data management” and the 2010 Research Leadership
Award for Outstanding and Sustained Leadership Contributions to the field of
Intelligence and Security Informatics” presented jointly by the IEEE
Intelligent and Transportation Systems Society Technical Committee on
Intelligence and Security Informatics in Transportation Systems and the IEEE
Systems, Man and Cybernetics Society Technical Committee on Homeland Security.
She served as served as an IEEE Distinguished Lecturer between 2002 and 2005.
She was also quoted by Silicon India magazine as one of the seven leading
technology innovators of South Asian origin in the USA in 2002.
back to keynotes
Using Semantics to Improve Interactive Information Access
by Lynda Hardman
Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica
Many methods have been developed to extract human-interpretable semantics from
signals present in individual media assets. Ensuring that these
human-interpretable semantics are also machine processable allows us to
identify, describe and connect together fragments of media assets in a rich
information environment. Users requiring information are then faced with the
problem of finding out what information is available, and obtaining sufficient
fragments to successfully carry out their task. Systems supporting these tasks
can use the fragments, descriptions of them and relationships among them, to
improve both the selection and presentation of information.
This talk will address two issues. Where can semantics play a role in
supporting information oriented tasks, and how can they be used to improve
support.
back to keynotes
Lynda Hardman
head of the Interactive Information Access group
at Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica
Lynda Hardman (http://www.cwi.nl/~lynda/) is head of
the Interactive Information Access group at CWI (Centrum Wiskunde &
Informatica) and professor by special appointment of Multimedia Interaction in
the Faculty of Science at the University of Amsterdam. She obtained her PhD
from the University of Amsterdam in 1998, having graduated in Mathematics and
Physics from Glasgow University in 1982. During several years of working in the
software industry she was the development manager for Guide - the first
hypertext authoring system for personal computers (1986).
Her early experiences in industry with the development of hypertext authoring
tools inspired her towards underlying questions of combining time-dependent
documents (such as video sequences) along with interaction through links into a
single model. She was a member of the W3C working group that developed the
first SMIL recommendation.
Since the development of the semantic web, she has dedicated herself to
improving human access to the ever-expanding 'linked data cloud'. Her current
research efforts are focused on improving design methods for human-based
interfaces in relation to developing technology.
She is a member of the editorial board for the Journal of Web Semantics, and
the New Review of Hypermedia and Multimedia, and was co-programme chair for
SAMT 2008 and ACM Hypertext 2003.
back to keynotes
Foto Jeroen Oerlemans
Music Understanding, Music Semantics, and the Future of Music
by Roger B. Dannenberg
School of Computer Science, Art, and Music
Carnegie Mellon University
Music understanding is the automatic recognition of pattern and structure in
music. Music understanding problems include matching, searching, and parsing
problems related to music recognition and music classification. Music semantics
is a more difficult subject. Music, like abstract art, rarely denotes anything
specific, and one can argue that music semantics is an oxymoron. Nevertheless,
music can be associated with emotions and many other terms or tags, leading to
representations similar to those used for semantic computation in other
domains. We are at a time of music revolution where old practices of publishing
and recording are being challenged by new technologies and consumer
expectations. I believe this revolution will continue with the advance of music
computation, which will enable new forms of music practice. Music understanding
and semantic computing will play an important role in the future of music.
back to keynotes
Manuela Veloso
Herbert A. Simon Professor
Computer Science Department
Carnegie Mellon University
Manuela M. Veloso is Herbert A. Simon Professor of Computer Science at Carnegie
Mellon University. She directs the CORAL research laboratory, for the study of
agents that Collaborate, Observe, Reason, Act, and Learn,
www.cs.cmu.edu/~coral. Professor Veloso is a Fellow of the Association for the
Advancement of Artificial Intelligence, and the President of the RoboCup
Federation. She recently received the 2009 ACM/SIGART Autonomous Agents
Research Award for her contributions to agents in uncertain and dynamic
environments, including distributed robot localization and world modeling,
strategy selection in multiagent systems in the presence of adversaries, and
robot learning from demonstration. Professor Veloso is the author of one book
on "Planning by Analogical Reasoning" and editor of several other books. She is
also an author in over 200 journal articles and conference papers.
back to keynotes
Rebecca Crowley
Associate Professor
Biomedical Informatics at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
Director of the Pittsburgh Graduate Training Program in Biomedical
Informatics
Rebecca Crowley is an Associate Professor of Biomedical Informatics at the
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and Director of the Pittsburgh
Graduate Training Program in Biomedical Informatics. She received her MD and MS
in Information Science from the University of Pittsburgh, and her post-graduate
training in Pathology and Neuropathology at Stanford University. Dr. Crowley
was a National Library of Medicine (NLM) Fellow in Biomedical Informatics, and
a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Fellow in Molecular Neuroendocrinology. Her
research interests include applications of semantic technologies to clinical
teaching and translational biomedical research as well as the sociotechnical
requirements and consequences of sharing biomedical data. Dr. Crowley has also
contributed to several large scale biomedical data sharing consortia focused on
semantic interoperability including the Cancer Biomedical Informatics Grid
(caBIG).
back to keynotes
Roger B. Dannenberg
Associate Research Professor
School of Computer Science, Art, and Music
Carnegie Mellon University
Dr. Roger B. Dannenberg is an Associate Research Professor in the Schools of
Computer Science, Art, and Music at Carnegie Mellon University, where he is
also a fellow of the Studio for Creative Inquiry. Dannenberg is well known for
his computer music research, especially in real-time interactive systems. His
pioneering work in computer accompaniment led to three patents and the
SmartMusic system now used by tens of thousands of music students. He also
played a central role in the development of the Piano Tutor, an intelligent,
interactive, automated multimedia tutor that enables a student to obtain
first-year piano proficiency in less than 20 hours. Dannenberg held a patent
for large-scale interactive games controlled by crowd noise, and these "stadium
games" have entertained many NFL fans. Other innovations include the
application of machine learning to music style classification and the
automation of music structure analysis. As a trumpet player, he has performed
in concert halls ranging from the historic Apollo Theater in Harlem to the
Espace de Projection at IRCAM, and he is active in performing jazz, classical,
and new works. His compositions have been performed by the Pittsburgh New Music
Ensemble, the Pittsburgh Symphony, and at festivals such as the Foro de Musica
Nueva, Callejon del Ruido, Spring in Havana, and the International Computer
Music Conference.
back to keynotes
Shih-Fu Chang
Professor,
Digital Video and Multimedia Lab
Columbia University
Shih-Fu Chang is Director of Digital Video and Multimedia Lab and Professor and
Chairman of Electrical Engineering and at Columbia University. He has also led
the ADVENT research consortium at Columbia University with the participation of
more than 25 industry sponsors. He has made significant contributions in
multimedia search, media forensics, mobile media adaptation, and international
standards. He has been recognized with several awards, including IEEE Kiyo
Tomiyasu Technical Field Award, IBM Faculty Award, Navy ONR Young Investigator
Award, ACM Recognition of Service Award, and NSF CAREER Award. He and his
students have received four Best Paper Awards and seven Best Student Paper
Awards from IEEE, ACM, and SPIE. Many video indexing technologies developed by
his group have been licensed to companies. He was elected to IEEE Fellow in
2004 and was Editor-in-Chief for IEEE Signal Processing Magazine during
2006-8.
back to keynotes
Towards Semantic-Level Visual Search
by Prof. Shih-Fu Chang
Digital Video and Multimedia Lab, Columbia University
With the explosive growth of multimedia content online, researchers have been
racing to develop novel solutions for searching images and videos. The Holy
Grail has always been a seamless way of accessing multimedia information at the
semantic level. However, two major barriers remain in the way – the semantic
gap and the intention gap. The former refers to the large difference between
machine recognizable information from raw image data and the user desired
descriptions at the semantic level. To address this, recently there have been
major efforts in developing multimedia ontologies for describing visual
concepts, training large resources for automatic concept categorization, and
new image search interfaces directly in the visual concept space. The other
challenge associated with the intention gap lies in the difficulty in
expressing user search targets through the conventional keyword-based methods.
In response to this, I will describe two new paradigms. One explores efficient
methods (lexical, statistical, and Web) to map keywords to visual detectors and
adds real-time interfaces for manipulating queries in the visual concept space.
The other completely foregoes the textual query input, instead relies on novel
brain machine interfaces and data mining techniques to decode user’s search
targets. I will survey on-going research in the above directions aiming towards
a semantic-level visual search engine.
back to keynotes
Industry Session Call for
Papers
IEEE ICSC 2014: The Eighth IEEE International Conference on Semantic
Computing
September 16-18, 2013
Irvine, CA
Program Goals and Format:
The goals of the ICSC 2014 Industry Session are to foster exchanges between
practitioners and the academics, to promote novel solutions to today's
challenges in the area of Semantic Computing and applications, to provide
practitioners in the field an early opportunity to evaluate leading-edge
research, and to identify new issues and directions for future research and
development efforts. Similar to regular papers, the papers in the industry
session will undergo a review process and will appear in the conference
proceedings. However, the selection criteria for industry papers are slightly
different. In particular, papers should describe technologies, methodologies,
applications, prototypes or experiences of clear industry relevance. A main
goal of this session is to present research work that exposes the academic and
research communities to challenges and issues important for the industry.
Therefore, the papers in this session will be evaluated primarily by the
novelty and applicability of the insights from its industrial solutions,
instead of the originality of its algorithmic content.
Topics of Interest:
Topics of particular interest include but are not limited to those identified
in the main conference CFP, as well as those listed below:
1. Development of new semantic systems, architecture, and standards
2. Employment of semantic computing tools and interfaces
3. Employment of large-scale semantic systems
4. Benchmarking and performance evaluation of semantic systems
5. Innovative solutions for performance optimization
6. Mobile semantic systems and services
7. Multimedia semantic content analysis and retrieval systems
8. Modeling issues and case studies of semantic computing
9. Game and entertainment applications
10. e-Business and other applications
11. Analysis of industry-specific trends and challenges
Important Dates:
Submission: June 10, 2013
Notification: June 28, 2013
Conference: September 16-18, 2013
Industrial Paper Submission:
Industrial papers should be submitted via the ICSC 2014 online paper submission
system. Industry Session papers should be no longer than 8 pages with the same
submission guidelines available on the ICSC 2014 web page. Only electronic
submission will be accepted. All industrial papers will be peer-reviewed and
published in the conference proceedings, which will be published by the IEEE
Computer Society Press. Submissions must not be published or submitted for
another conference.
Industry Session Co-Chairs:
Abha Moitra, GE Research, USA
David Ostrowski, Ford, USA
-------------------------------------------------------------
Note:
1. Every paper accepted for publication in the Proceedings of ICSC 2014 MUST be
presented during the conference.
2. Every paper accepted for ICSC 2014 MUST have attached to it at least one
registration at the full member/nonmember rate. Thus, for a paper for which all
authors are students, one student author will be required to register at the
full registration rate.
Program Committee
S�ren Auer, University of Leipzig, Germany
Agnese Augello, ICAR-CNR
Ramazan Aygun, University of Alabama, Huntsville, USA
Kathy Baker, US Government, USA
Lamberto Ballan, University of Florence, Italy
Roberto Basili, Univ. of Roma Tor Vergata, Italy
Ivan Bedini, Bell Labs
Marco Bertini, Universita' degli Studi di Firenze, Italy
Michael Bloodgood, University of Maryland, USA
David Bracewell, Language Computer Corporation
Volha Bryl, Fondazione Bruno Kessler
Nicoletta Calzolari, Istituto di Linguistica Computazionale del CNR, Italy
Yu Cao, The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, USA
Kasturi Chatterjee, TechnoratiMedia Inc., USA
Chao Chen, Capital One Bank, USA
Matthew Cooper, FXPAL, USA
Jason Corso, SUNY at Buffalo, USA
Claudia D'Amato, University of Bari, Italy
Ernesto D'Avanzo, Universit� degli Studi di Salerno, Italy
Stamatia Dasiopoulou, Informatics and Telematics Institute, Greece
Thierry Declerck, DFKI GmbH, Germany
Alexiei Dingli, University of Malta
Massimo Esposito,ICAR-CNR, Italy
Alex Chengyu Fang, The City University of Hong Kong, China
Nicola Fanizzi, Dipartimento di Informatica, Universit� di Bari, Italy
Luigi Gallo, ICAR-CNR, Italy
Jose Manuel Gomez-Perez, Intelligent Software Components (iSOCO) S.A.
Thomas Gottron, University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany
William I. Grosky, University of Michigan-Dearborn, USA
Rodrigo Guido, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil
Sanda Harabagiu, University of Texas at Dallas, USA
Choochart Haruechaiyasak, National Electronics and Computer Technology Center,
Thailand
Takako Hashimoto, Chiba University of Commerce, Japan
Johannes Heinecke, France Telecom
Ed Hovy, University of Southern California, USA
Zifang Huang, Western Union, USA
Eero Hyv�nen, Aalto University and University of Helsinki, Finland
Maria Jose Ibanez, University of Zaragoza, Spain
Nancy Ide, Vassar College
Hasan Jamil, Wayne State University, USA
Cliff Joslyn, PNNL, USA
Artem Katasonov, VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland, Finland
Lars Knipping, Berlin Institute of Technology, Germany
Shuichi Kurabayashi, Keio University SFC, Japan
Marco La Cascia, University of Palermo, Italy
Freddy Lecue, University of Manchester, UK
Ying Li, IBM T.J. Watson, USA,
Lin Lin, American National Standards Institute, USA
Dianting Liu, University of Miami, USA
Alexander Loui, Eastman Kodak Company, USA,
Hongli Luo, Indiana University - Purdue University Fort Wayne, USA
Mathias Lux, University of Klagenfurt, Austria
Rabi Mahapatra, Texas A&M University, USA
Umberto Maniscalco, CNR, Italy
Elio Masciari, ICAR-CNR, Italy
David Mcdonald, SIFT LLC
Dennis McLeod, University of Southern California, USA
Marge McShane, University of Maryland Baltimore (UMBC), USA
Farid Meziane, University of Salford, UK,
Adrian Mocan, SAP AG, Germany,
Fionn Murtagh, Royal Holloway University of London, UK
Shinichi Nagano, Toshiba Corporation, Japan
Costanza Navarretta, Center for Sprogteknologi,Denmark
Matthias Nickles, Technical University of Munich
Antonio Picariello, Universita` di Napoli "Federico II"
Roberto Pirrone, DINFO - Universita' di Palermo, Italy
Luigi Pontieri, ICAR-CNR, Italy
Sameer Pradhan, BBN Technologies
Alessandro Provetti, University of Messina, Italy
Matthew Purver, Queen Mary University of London, UK
Riccardo Rizzo, ICAR-CNR, Italy
Marco Rospocher, Fondazione Bruno Kessler
Dylan Seychell, University of Malta
Alkis Simitsis, HP Labs
Nadine Steinmetz, Hasso Plattner Institute of Software Systems Engineering,
Germany
Heiko Stoermer, University of Trento, Italy
Matthias Thimm, Universit�t Koblenz-Landau, Germany
Marc Tomlinson, Language Computer Corporation
Alfonso Maurizio Urso, ICAR-CNR, Italy
Filippo Vella, ICAR-CNR, Italy
Marc Verhagen, Brandeis University, USA
Ren� Witte, Concordia University, Canada
Jianhua Yan, PayPal, an eBay company, USA
Ziming Zhuang, Yahoo! Labs, USA
The conference group rate for Irvine Hyatt is
$149.00 for single/double with complimentary wireless internet.
Please make your reservation online HERE.
Call for
Demonstration
IEEE ICSC 2014: The 8th IEEE International Conference on Semantic Computing
September 16-18, 2013
Irvine, CA
The IEEE ICSC 2014 organizing committee invites proposals for demonstrations to
be given at the conference. The demonstrations provide a forum for researchers
as well as industry participants to demonstrate working systems, applications,
tools or showcases of base technologies to the conference attendees. The goal
of the demonstrations is to show a spectrum ranging from research prototypes to
pilots developed and even products that use semantic technology and provide
functionality based on semantics in the context of semantic computing. For
submissions to this event, it is very important to describe the demonstration
setup, functionality and benefit to the viewer of the demonstration. Technical
background discussion can be presented at the actual demonstration or can be
submitted as an industry track or regular conference paper; the focus of the
demonstration themselves should be to show the functionality to viewers. It is
expected that the demonstrations are highly interactive.
Topics for demonstrations include but are not limited to:
* Content and Information Management
* Knowledge Engineering
* Data Mining
* Semantic Database Theory and Systems
* Service-oriented Architectures and Computing
* Semantic Web and Semantic Web Services
* Multimedia Semantics
* Audio and Speech Processing
* Natural Language Processing
* Semantic Search Technologies and Applications
* User Interfaces
Demonstrations are ideally demonstrating a system or application that clearly
shows the benefit of using and deploying semantics and semantic technologies.
In addition, tools and base technologies that implement or use semantic
technology or semantic approaches are invited for demonstration.
Demonstration Setup
The demonstrations are planned to be a single event during a conference
reception function, open to all conference attendees, with the goal of open and
constructive discussions. One table will be provided with power as well as an
Internet connection. Posters can be put up behind or next to the tables
(depending on the space) either on pin boards or the wall. Demonstrators must
bring any additional equipment they require as no equipment will be provided by
the conference.
Demonstration Submissions
Authors submitting papers to the demonstrations must submit a 2-page paper that
clearly outlines the demonstration that will be set up and the functionality a
visitor to the demonstration can observe. The technical background, such as the
architecture or algorithms, should not be described in detail; such a
description would be better submitted to the industry track or main conference
paper track. Including links to supporting material, e.g. a video on the web or
a web-based demo itself, is highly encouraged. All submissions must be in
double-column IEEE format and follow the specific submission guidelines on the
ICSC2012 web page. The Conference Proceedings will be published by the IEEE
Computer Society Press and the accepted demonstration submissions will be
included in the conference proceedings.
Important Dates
Demo Submission: June 10, 2013
Notification: June 28, 2013
Conference: September 16-18, 2013
Submissions
Researchers and practitioners are invited to submit demo proposals to the demo
co-chair
Please include "[ICSC2013-DEMO]" in the subject of your emails.
Call for Applications
2nd International Summer School on Semantic Computing
July 25-31, 2010
University of California, Berkeley
co-sponsored by IEEE, Institute of Semantic Computing and STI International
Semantic Computing is currently emerging as a new field that integrates methods
from multimedia (computer vision, speech processing), natural language
processing, semantic web and ontology engineering, software engineering, and
other fields with the goal of creating new applications that connect
intuitively formulated user-intentions with the content of data.
The summer school will provide an introduction to the field to senior
undergraduate and graduate students. A mix of young and well-established
researchers and educators will present recent research results, as for example
presented in the IEEE conferences on Semantic Computing. The tutorials will be
complemented by keynote talks by renowned experts in the areas of Semantic
Technologies, Ontologies, Multimedia or Natural Language Processing.
The 6-day event is taking place on the campus of the University of California,
Berkeley and the curriculum will include the following topics:
- Formal Semantics
- Semantic Web
- Ontology Engineering
- Multimedia
- Natural Language Processing
Important Dates:
* May, 1: Application deadline
* May, 15: Notification of acceptance/Registration opens
* June, 15: Registration completed
* July, 25: School starts
For instruction on how to apply and other information, please visit the
following website: http://sssc2010.org
Technical Paper Preparation Instructions
Manuscripts must be written in English and follow the instructions in the
Manuscript Formatting and Templates page
Document templates are located at:
Regular Papers should be no longer than eight (8) pages, Short Papers should be
no longer than four (4) pages, Demonstration Papers and Posters should be no
longer than two (2) pages.
All paper submissions will be carefully reviewed by at least three experts and
reviews will be returned to the author(s) with comments to ensure the high
quality of the accepted papers. The authors of accepted papers must guarantee
that their paper will be presented at the conference. Please only submit
original material where copyright of all parts is owned by the authors declared
and which is not currently under review elsewhere. Please see the
IEEE policies
for further information.
Technical Paper Submission Instructions
Only electronic submission will be accepted. Technical paper authors MUST
submit their manuscripts through EasyChair. Please
follow this
link (please register if not an EasyChair user). Manuscripts may only be
submitted in PDF format.
A copyright form needs to be submitted upon acceptance of the paper and is not
required at this stage.
-------------------------------------------------------------
Note:
1. Every paper accepted for publication in the Proceedings of ICSC 2014 MUST be
presented during the conference.
2. Every paper accepted for ICSC 2014 MUST have attached to it at least one
registration at the full member/nonmember rate. Thus, for a paper for which all
authors are students, one student author will be required to register at the
full registration rate.
ICSC Registration Information
The registration deadline is July 21 for authors and July 31 for general
participants.
At least one author each paper has to pay a full registration.
We accept online credit card payment. Please access Online Registration
System to register.
If you are not in U.S., you might need to ask your credit card bank first to
allow foreign transaction.
Email any question regarding registration to Shao-Ting Wang at shaotinw@uci.edu
Visa Instructions
Those who need to apply for Visa, please send an email to Dr. George Wang twang@csun.edu as follows:
* In the subject line write "Visa Letter for IEEE ICSC 2014"
* Provide the full title of the paper including the author list and affiliation
and the name of the presenter seeking the letter for Visa.
* Indicate the relevant information regarding "Regular", "Short", "Poster",
"Industry", etc.
Author Kit:
ICSC2013
Author Kit Link
Important Date:
- July
21, 2013: Deadline for Camera-ready and Copyright Form
Submissions
Tutorials and Special Workshops
Schedule
1. Monday 9/16 (10:20AM - 12:50PM): Semantic Computing in Financial Industry
2. Monday 9/16 (2PM - 5PM): Semantic Computing in Healthcare Industry
3. Tuesday 9/17 (2PM - 5PM): Semantic Computing for Edutainment
4. Wednesday (2PM - 5PM): Semantic Computing in Social Media
5. Wednesday (7PM - 9:30PM): Human Systems Integration (HSI) in Semantic
Computing and Graph Analytics
6. Thursday (9AM - 4PM): Data Science
Conference and Workshop Program
Contacts
Phillip Sheu (psheu@uci.edu): Administrative
Mei-Ling Shyu (shyu@miami.edu): Technical program
George Wang (twang@csun.edu): Local Arrangement
Shao-Ting Wang (shaotinw@uci.edu): Registration
Coming Soon...