SAAW2006

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SAAW2006
Semantic Authoring and Annotation Workshop
Subevent of ISWC2006
Start November 6 2006 8:00 (iCal)
End November 6 2006 12:00
Homepage: Homepage
Location
City: Athens, Georgia
Country: USA
Important dates
Abstracts due: August 2 2006
Papers due: August 10 2006
Notification: September 5 2006
Camera ready due: September 18 2006
Event in series SAAW

Contents

[edit] SUMMARY

The workshop aims to combine the "traditional" paradigm of Semantic Web (SW) annotation with SW technologies in the authoring domain (e.g. Blogs and Wikis, Semantic Word, etc). Together with the popular collaborative tagging paradigm, these three application domains make up what can collectively be called Semantic Authoring and Annotation.

[edit] MOTIVATION, AIM AND SCOPE

The "traditional" paradigm of Semantic Web (SW) annotation - annotating existing web sites with the help of external tools - has been established for a number of years now, e.g. in the form of tools such as OntoMat or tools based on Annotea, and is continuously being developed and improved.

At the same time, core technologies of the SW - the common, open data-model of the Resource Description Framework and the use of shared vocabularies - are now gradually being introduced into mainstream publishing and authoring channels such traditional online publications or office software, as well as in new and "hip" technologies such as Blogs and Wikis. Regardless of the medium, SW technologies in the authoring domain aim at aiding human content producers to author, structure, annotate and publish text and other media right from the start, rather than enriching them with metadata at a later stage.

The collaborative tagging paradigm, which has its roots in social bookmarking and folksonomies, is now becoming popular. Unfortunately, it is often very centralized and does not take users needs for different levels of sharing into account. Many services would benefit their users by offering them SW based bookmarks and topics such as in Annotea bookmarking and topic framework.

Together these three application domains make up what can collectively be called Semantic Authoring and Annotation, the result of which are documents with formal, machine-understandable semantics, partly created by authors and partly by collaborators examining the work in different angles and in different contexts. An important aspect in all these technologies is that they are human-centric, target non-computer experts and aim at making various kinds of content more visible, better accessible, easier to find, reuse, share, organize, and examine from different viewpoints. Furthermore, Semantic Annotation and the introduction of SW technologies into mainstream authoring domains will result in an increased amount of relevant SW data, and help to achieve a broader success of the SW.

Finally, various technologies to implement semantic annotation and the authoring of semantic documents (e.g. GRDDL for deriving formal metadata or RDFa and Microformats for embedding it) have entered the scene recently, and are being endorsed by standards bodies such as the W3C.

The SAAW workshop will be organized as a half-day workshop and will investigate technical and methodological, as well as social issues surrounding all aspects of Semantic Web Authoring and Annotation.

[edit] TOPICS OF INTEREST

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

RDFa or Microformats), or for deriving such metadata from documents (e.g. GRDDL):

Annotation - the Next generation collaboration infrastructure:

Semantic Web applications

[edit] SUBMISSIONS

Format requirements for the submission of papers are:

Although not required for the initial submission, we recommend following the ACM format guidelines http://www.acm.org/sigs/pubs/proceed/template.html, as this will be the required format for accepted papers. Also please note that papers in ACM format tend to have fewer pages, compared to the same paper in other styles.

[edit] ORGANISING COMMITTEE

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