
I am pleased to announce the 3rd GGF Semantic Grid Workshop, to be held at GGF16 which is in Athens, Greece, February 13-16, 2006. The workshop will be on Wednesday February 15, with a "Semantic Grid 101" on Tuesday 14. You are invited to submit short position papers, which need to be received by January 12 to be considered for presentation in the workshop programme. All positions will be published on the Web. Please circulate the Call for Papers, which is included below and available on http://www.semanticgrid.org/GGF/ggf16/GGF16semgridCFP.html Text and PDF versions are also available from the workshop website http://www.semanticgrid.org/GGF/ggf16/ Many thanks - we look forward to receiving your papers. -- Dave Semantic Grid Workshop at GGF16 Call for Position Papers ------------------------ GGF16 Athens, Greece. February 13-16, 2006. Semantic Grid Workshop Wednesday Feb 15 1:30pm-7:00pm (with a preparatory Semantic Grid 101 session Tuesday Feb 14 10:30am-12pm) Building on the experiences of the current Semantic Grid activities and on the latest challenges in Grid computing, the 3rd GGF Semantic Grid Workshop aims to broaden discussion and awareness of Semantic Grid activities and set the scene for future work. This is an exciting opportunity for people to present their work and for others to discover the state of the art in Semantic Grid. All uses of Semantic Web technologies (such as RDF for metadata representation), in both Grid middleware and applications, are in scope. The workshop is based around position papers, which are invited under the themes described below. All position papers will be published on the Web, and the Programme Committee will select a subset for presentation at the workshop in order to provide a balanced programme of interest to a wide range of participants. At the end of the workshop there will be a panel session looking at future challanges to set an agenda for the GGF Semantic Grid Research Group. Before the workshop we will hold a Semantic Grid 101 session which will provide a quick introduction to Semantic Web and Semantic Grid for newcomers, so that everyone can gain maximum benefit from the workshop. This session is open to everyone whether or not they attend the workshop. The themes are as follows: * Use cases. Real examples which demand a Semantic Grid approach (whether or not a Semantic Grid approach has been attempted so far!) These are wide-ranging, from information services in semantic datagrids to service discovery and negotiation in Grid middleware to social networks and distributed collaboration to novel applications. * Experience reports. What worked and what didn't when you used Semantic Web technologies in your Grid middleware and applications (e.g. semantically described services and resources, knowledge services, semantic datagrid, RDF triplestores and query languages, ontologies such as OWL-S). Where did your metadata come from? What was the reaction of your users? What lessons did you learn? * Ontologies. Tell us about the ontologies (and folksomonies) you are using, in whatever representation (e.g. RDFS or OWL), whether new or whether you've imported existing schemas representation; e.g. CIM in OWL. How might the community benefit from your ontologies? * Tools and technologies. Especially for "technology innovators", tell us about the approaches you wish to promote to address the challenges and to realise the opportunities arising from the semantically-enabled Grid. This includes Semantic Web tools and technologies but also agent-based systems, peer-to-peer and other approaches that utilize machine processable metadata. * Open Laptop Demonstrations. Short demos you can do informally on your laptop in a coffee break (interactive or videos). Note that individuals and projects may submit multiple position papers (plus a demo) if you wish; e.g. a Grid project using semantic technologies may wish to present both use cases and experiences. The Workshop will be open to all GGF attendees but is limited to 50 participants - priority will be given to those who have submitted position papers. All workshop materials, including papers and presentations, will be made available to the community via the Web. Submission details Papers should be 2-5 pages in length and be submitted in Word or PDF format to Nicky Harding nch@ecs.soton.ac.uk. To be considered for presentation these must be received by 12 January 2006. We will acknowledge receipt of your submission. The preliminary programme will be announced on 16th January, four weeks before the event. Programme Committee David De Roure University of Southampton, UK Geoffrey Fox Indiana University, USA Carole Goble University of Manchester, UK Jonathan Dale Fujitsu, USA Jane Hunter University of Queensland, Australia Jim Myers National Center for Supercomputing Applications, USA Enquiries If you have any queries or seek further information, please contact Nicky Harding by email on nch@ecs.soton.ac.uk or by phone on +44 23 8059 4474. Web page maintained by David De Roure, dder@ecs.soton.ac.uk Last updated Monday, 12-Dec-2005 23:06:56 GMT