WOP:2019

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= Venue and dates =
= Venue and dates =
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The tenth edition of WOP will be held in conjunction with [http://iswc2019.semanticweb.org ISWC 2019] in Auckland, New Zealand, on October 26th or 27th, 2019.
+
The tenth edition of WOP was held in conjunction with [http://iswc2019.semanticweb.org ISWC 2019] in Auckland, New Zealand, on October 27th, 2019.
= WOP 2019 Program =
= WOP 2019 Program =
-
'''Room:''' To be announced.
+
'''Room:''' Case Room 1 (260-005) (poster session in foyer), Owen G. Glenn Building, University of Auckland
== Keynote ==
== Keynote ==
-
To be announced.
+
'''Categories are in flux, but their computational representations are static and isolated. That’s a problem'''
 +
by Mark Gahegan, School of Computer Science and Centre for eResearch, The University of Auckland
-
== Accepted Papers ==
+
'''Abstract:''' Whether we are creating categories of our own, or operationalising categories proposed by somebody else, how we do it, and how well we do it are seldom recorded.  It is therefore usually impossible for another researcher to fully understand how a category came to be, or what it meant to its creator(s).  This makes our science opaque and harder for others to reuse.  When we create and modify categories, our computational systems are not up to the task of representing how they came into being and how they have changed over time, we have falsely separated our ontological representations from the process of analysis.  But they should be tightly coupled to it!  Consequently, ontologies only capture part of this meaning: they describe what we would like our categories to mean, not how exactly they came to be, nor why they ended up the way they are, nor what they evolved from, or later became.  But much of their identity and meaning is unfortunately tied up with the process of their construction and use.  The issue pervades all fields of enquiry where we rely on the human construction of categories to help us understand the world and communicate this understanding with others.
-
 
+
-
'''Pattern Papers'''
+
This talk describes our efforts to represent concepts/categories & relationships (via ontologies), data, analytical methods and workflow all ''within the a single computational environment'', allowing us to explicitly describe the interplay between these research artefacts and how they each shape meaning. It also allows us to keep track of how changes to any one artefact can affect others.  For example, improving a classifier might lead to changes in categorical (intensional) models, but might not change the related ontology.
-
 
+
-
'''Research Papers'''
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== Workshop Schedule ==
== Workshop Schedule ==
=== Morning Session ===
=== Morning Session ===
 +
* '''9:20-10:00''' -- Keynote talk (Mark Gahegan) - [[Media:WOP2019-keynote.pdf|Slides]]
 +
* '''10:10-10:40''' -- Poster session (foyer)
 +
* '''10:40-11:20''' -- Coffee break
 +
* '''11:20-12:20''' -- Paper presentations
 +
** ''11:20-11:40'' -- [http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2459/paper1.pdf OD2WD: From Open Data to Wikidata through Patterns] (Muhammad Faiz, Gibran M.F. Wisesa, Adila A. Krisnadhi and Fariz Darari) - [[Media:WOP2019-slides-paper1.pdf|Slides]]
 +
** ''11:40-12:00'' -- [http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2459/short1.pdf ODPReco - A Tool to Recommend Ontology Design Patterns] (Maleeha Arif Yasvi and Raghava Mutharaju) - [[Media:WOP2019-slides-short1.pdf|Slides]]
 +
** ''12:00-12:20'' -- [http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2459/pattern1.pdf An Ontology Design Pattern for representing Recurrent Events] (Valentina Anita Carriero, Aldo Gangemi, Andrea Giovanni Nuzzolese and Valentina Presutti) - [[Media:WOP2019-slides-pattern1.pdf|Slides]]
=== Afternoon Session ===
=== Afternoon Session ===
 +
* '''14:00-15:20''' -- Paper presentations
 +
** ''14:00-14:20'' -- [http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2459/paper3.pdf Ontology Design Patterns for Representing Context in Ontologies using Aspect Orientation] (Ralph Schäfermeier, Adrian Paschke and Heinrich Herre)
 +
** ''14:20-14:40'' -- [http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2459/paper2.pdf Comparing Approaches for Capturing Repetitive Structures in Ontology Design Patterns] (Christian Kindermann, Bijan Parsia and Uli Sattler)
 +
** ''14:40-15:00'' -- [http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2459/paper4.pdf MODL: a Modular Ontology Design Library] (Cogan Shimizu, Quinn Hirt and Pascal Hitzler)
 +
** ''15:00-15:20'' -- [http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2459/short2.pdf Extensions to the Ontology Design Pattern Representation Language] (Quinn Hirt, Cogan Shimizu and Pascal Hitzler)
 +
* '''15:20-16:00''' -- Coffee break
 +
* '''16:00-17:00''' -- Breakout working groups / discussion: ODP Infrastructure Needs -- Next Steps
 +
* '''17:00-17:20''' -- Closing and summary
-
= Call for Papers - Topics =
+
= Call for Papers and Patterns =
-
Submission of papers is via the [https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=wop2019 WOP 2019 EasyChair] page. Detailed submission instructions can be found on the [[WOP:2019/Submission | WOP 2019 submission page]].
+
-
The main aim of the workshop is to discuss and collect solutions to recurrent problems that matter to researchers and practitioners of the Semantic Web field, and that impact on design and engineering of ontologies, linked data, knowledge extraction, and other semantic web applications. We invite the submission of original research results related to the focus areas of the workshop. '''Research papers (maximum 15 pages LNCS style)''' should present mature work and document established results. '''Short papers (maximum 5 pages LNCS style)''' may present proposed research directions, novel ideas, or more general positions or discussions.
+
We invite the submission of original research results related to the focus areas of the workshop, in one of three categories:
-
We particularly welcome contributions considering how one can develop high-quality ontologies in general, with or without the help of ODPs. The main topics of interest are:
 
 +
# Research papers (maximum 15 pages LNCS style) presenting mature work and established results.
 +
# Short papers (maximum 5 pages LNCS style) presenting proposed research directions, novel ideas, or more general positions or discussions.
 +
# Ontology Design Patterns (described in paper format, 5-12 pages LNCS style) should solve a particular modelling problem, of relevance either to the broader ontology engineering community, or to some specific knowledge domain, in a novel and reusable manner. Note that accepted pattern submissions are presented through a poster session (see below).
 +
 +
== Topics of interest ==
 +
 +
Topics include but are not limited to:
 +
 +
* Methods and tools for developing high-quality ontologies or other knowledge graph schemas, including ontology engineering by domain experts
 +
* Analyses of quality attributes in ontologies and ontology engineering, and quality assurance approaches for ontology engineering
 +
* New ontology design patterns (content patterns, structural patterns, architecture patterns, correspondence patterns, etc.)
 +
* Pattern-based methods and methodologies for development of semantic applications
* Analyses of ODP use, and analyses of pattern-based ontologies
* Analyses of ODP use, and analyses of pattern-based ontologies
-
* Correspondence patterns for ontology matching and integration
 
-
* Knowledge patterns and knowledge reengineering based on patterns
 
* Antipatterns and their relations to ODPs
* Antipatterns and their relations to ODPs
-
* Methods and tools for developing high-quality ontologies, including ontology engineering by domain experts
 
-
* Analyses of quality attributes in ontologies and ontology engineering, and quality assurance approaches for ontology engineering
 
* Pattern-based ontology design and knowledge engineering
* Pattern-based ontology design and knowledge engineering
* Pattern-based ontology evaluation and selection
* Pattern-based ontology evaluation and selection
-
* Ontology pattern extraction
 
* Pattern-based information extraction, ontology learning, and relation to NLP
* Pattern-based information extraction, ontology learning, and relation to NLP
 +
* Correspondence patterns for ontology matching and integration
* Patterns and Linked data (usage, emerging patterns, pattern-driven data publishing, etc.)
* Patterns and Linked data (usage, emerging patterns, pattern-driven data publishing, etc.)
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* Quality assurance for Linked Data vocabularies
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* ODP development and use in specific domains including geosciences, life sciences, digital humanities, cultural heritage, e-history, IoT, smart homes & cities, smart agriculture etc.
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* Web semantics from a pattern perspective
+
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* Reasoning with, or using, patterns
+
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* Contextual reasoning and patterns as context
+
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* Pattern-based methods and methodologies for development of semantic applications
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* Patterns for streaming data and evolving knowledge, as well as processes and services
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* Patterns for Big Data integration, data lakes, conceptual modeling, ontology-based data access, and business intelligence
+
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* Patterns in semantic social networks, semantic wikis, semantic blogs
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* ODPs development and use in specific domains including geosciences, life sciences, digital humanities, cultural heritage, e-history, IoT, smart homes & cities, smart agriculture etc.
+
-
 
+
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= Call for Patterns =
+
-
Submissions should be made via the [https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=wop2019 WOP 2019 EasyChair] page. Detailed instructions for submitting your pattern can be found at the [[WOP:2019/Submission | WOP 2019 submission page]].
+
-
 
+
-
We invite the submission of research results in the form of ontology design patterns (ODPs). Patterns submitted should have a general relevance to the ontology engineering field, or specific interest within a knowledge domain. Patterns should solve some particular modelling problem, and be of significant interest for discussion at the workshop. Patterns should be original, in the sense that they are the intellectual product of the author(s), however they may still be based on the collective experience of a community.
+
-
 
+
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Pattern submissions for the pattern session will be collected:
+
-
 
+
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* through the [http://ontologydesignpatterns.org/wiki/Submissions:SubmitAPattern ODP portal] and
+
-
* by submitting a description of the pattern (pattern description) via EasyChair.
+
-
Detailed instructions for patterns submission, including how to submit via the ontologydesignpatterns.org portal, are found at the [[WOP:2019/Submission | submission page]]. Note that an account in the ODP portal is needed for submitting patterns; thus, authors should take care to request an account at least one week before their intended submission.
+
== Submitting ==
-
Pattern submissions can be made in any type of ODPs. Currently, portal templates for submission are provided for the following types of patterns (see general [[OPTypes|typology]] for explanation of the types):
+
Submissions should be made via the [https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=wop2019 WOP 2019 EasyChair page]. Detailed instructions can be found at [[WOP:2019/Submission|the submission page]]. Note that design pattern submissions also need to be submitted to the ontologydesignpatterns.org community portal, as described on that page.
-
* Content patterns
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== Posters ==
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* Structural patterns: logical and architecture patterns.
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* Correspondence patterns: re-engineering and alignment patterns.
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For other types of patterns, the author is welcome to submit only a pattern description.
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Accepted pattern submissions will be expected to present a poster describing the pattern at the workshop poster session.  
-
= Submission and Important Dates =
+
Accepted research or short papers may also be presented in this manner if the authors would like to, but posters are not mandatory for such submissions.
-
Submissions should be made via the [https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=wop2019 WOP 2019 EasyChair] page.  Submissions should be in the Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) format.  [ftp://ftp.springer.de/pub/tex/latex/llncs/latex2e/llncs2e.zip Latex] and [ftp://ftp.springer.de/pub/tex/latex/llncs/word/splnproc1703.zip Word] templates are available.  Detailed submission requirements can be found on the [[WOP:2019/Submission | WOP 2019 submission page]].
+
-
== Important dates ==
+
== Important Dates ==
-
* Abstract submission (required): <strike>June 21st, 2019</strike>
+
-
* Submission date: <strike>June 28th, 2019</strike>
+
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* Author notifications: <strike>July 24th, 2019</strike>
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* Camera-ready papers: <strike>August 29th, 2019</strike>
+
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* Workshop will be held on: October 26th or 27th, 2019
+
-
== Best Poster Award  ==
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* <del>Abstract submission (recommended): June 21th, 2019</del>
-
The best poster award for WOP 2019 is awarded based on voting by the workshop chairs (excluding those workshop chairs who themselves authored or co-authored a poster). The best poster award takes into account criteria such as the quality of the submission, the relevance and significance of patterns or pattern usages presented, the presentation of the poster during the session, and the level of involvement of the author during the revision phase and poster session discussions during the workshop.
+
* <del>Submission date (strict, no extensions allowed): June 28th, 2019</del>
 +
* <del>Author notifications: July 24th, 2019</del>
 +
* <del>Camera-ready submissions: August 29th, 2019</del>
 +
* <del>Workshop will be held on: October 27th, 2019</del>
= Proceedings =
= Proceedings =
-
WOP 2019 proceedings will be published via CEUR Workshop Proceedings.
+
WOP 2019 proceedings are published as [http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2459/ CEUR Workshop Proceedings Volume 2459].
= WOP Organisation =
= WOP Organisation =
Line 105: Line 102:
* Chairs:  
* Chairs:  
** [https://geog.ucsb.edu/~jano/ Krzysztof Janowicz], University of California Santa Barbara, USA (general chair)
** [https://geog.ucsb.edu/~jano/ Krzysztof Janowicz], University of California Santa Barbara, USA (general chair)
-
** [http://krisnadhi.github.io/ Adila Alfa Krisnadhi], Universitas Indonesia, Indonesia (papers co-chair)
+
** [https://krisnadhi.github.io/ Adila Alfa Krisnadhi], Universitas Indonesia, Indonesia (papers co-chair)
-
** [http://w3id.org/people/mpoveda María Poveda Villalón], Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain (papers co-chair)
+
** [https://w3id.org/people/mpoveda María Poveda Villalón], Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain (papers co-chair)
** [https://karlhammar.com/ Karl Hammar], Jönköping University, Sweden (patterns co-chair)
** [https://karlhammar.com/ Karl Hammar], Jönköping University, Sweden (patterns co-chair)
-
** [https://coganshimizu.com/ Cogan Shimizu], Wright State University, USA (patterns co-chair)
+
** [http://coganshimizu.com/ Cogan Shimizu], Kansas State University, USA (patterns co-chair)
-
For general inquiries, please contact [http://www.cs.put.poznan.pl/alawrynowicz Agnieszka Ławrynowicz]
+
For general inquiries, please contact [mailto:wop2019@easychair.org wop2019@easychair.org]
== Steering Committee ==
== Steering Committee ==
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The WOP Steering committee - the [http://ontologydesignpatterns.org/wiki/ODPA Board of the Association of Ontology Design and Patterns] - consists of:
The WOP Steering committee - the [http://ontologydesignpatterns.org/wiki/ODPA Board of the Association of Ontology Design and Patterns] - consists of:
-
Regular members:
+
=== Managing committee ===
-
* Eva Blomqvist, Linköping University (chair)
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* [http://www.ida.liu.se/~evabl45/ Eva Blomqvist], Linköping University (chair - elected 2017-2019)
-
* Pascal Hitzler, Wright State University (vice chair)
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* [http://www.pascal-hitzler.de/ Pascal Hitzler], Wright State University (vice chair - elected 2017-2019)
-
* Valentina Presutti, ISTC-CNR (vice chair)
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* [http://www.istc.cnr.it/people/valentina-presutti Valentina Presutti], ISTC-CNR (vice chair - elected 2016-2018, re-elected 2018-2020)
-
* Aldo Gangemi, ISTC-CNR
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-
* Krzysztof Janowicz, University of California, Santa Barbara
+
-
* Agnieszka Lawrynowicz, Poznan University of Technology
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-
* Adila Krisnadhi, Wright State University
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-
Members with special appointments:
+
=== Other board members ===
-
* Andrea Nuzzolese, ISTC-CNR  
+
* Aldo Gangemi, ISTC-CNR (elected 2016-2018, re-elected 2018-2020)
-
* Karl Hammar, Jönköping University  
+
* Karl Hammar, Jönköping University (elected as executive member 2016-2018, elected as regular member 2018-2020)
 +
* Krzysztof Janowicz, University of California, Santa Barbara (elected 2016-2018, re-elected 2018-2020)
 +
* Agnieszka Lawrynowicz, Poznan University of Technology (elected 2017-2019)
 +
* Adila Krisnadhi, Universitas Indonesia (elected 2017-2019)
 +
* Andrea Nuzzolese, ISTC-CNR (elected as executive member 2016-2018, elected as regular member 2018-2020)
 +
* Jim Salmons, Citizen Scientist at FactMiners.org and The Softalk Apple Project (elected 2018-2020)
== Program Committee ==
== Program Committee ==
-
To be completed.
+
* Luigi Asprino, University of Bologna and STLab (ISTC-CNR)
 +
* Eva Blomqvist, Linköping University
 +
* Marilena Daquino, University of Bologna
 +
* Chen-Chieh Feng, National University of Singapore
 +
* Alba Fernandez, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
 +
* Raúl García-Castro, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
 +
* Karl Hammar, Jönköping University
 +
* Krzysztof Janowicz, University of California, Santa Barbara
 +
* Tomi Kauppinen, Department of Computer Science, Aalto University School of Science
 +
* Johan W. Klüwer, DNV
 +
* Adila A. Krisnadhi, Universitas Indonesia
 +
* Piotr Kulicki, John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin
 +
* Steffen Lohmann, Fraunhofer
 +
* María Poveda Villalón, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
 +
* Idafen Santana-Pérez, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
 +
* Cogan Shimizu, Wright State University
 +
* Gem Stapleton, University of Brighton
 +
* Mari Carmen Suárez-Figueroa, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
 +
* He Tan, Jönköping University
 +
* Dalia Varanka, U.S. Geological Survey
 +
* Jennifer Warrender, Newcastle University
[[Category:Event]]
[[Category:Event]]

Revision as of 01:30, 29 October 2019

10th Workshop on Ontology Design and Patterns - WOP2019

This is the tenth edition in a series of workshops addressing the topic of ontology and semantic web patterns as best practices, related to the ontologydesignpatterns.org initiative.

The workshop series covers issues related to quality in ontology design and ontology design patterns (ODPs) for data and knowledge engineering in Semantic Web. The increased attention to ODPs in recent years through their interaction with emerging trends of Semantic Web such as knowledge graphs can be attributed to their benefit for knowledge engineers and Semantic Web developers. Such benefits come in the form of direct link to requirements, reuse, guidance, and better communication. The workshop’s aim is thus not just: 1) providing an arena for discussing patterns, pattern-based ontologies, systems, datasets, but also 2) broadening the pattern community by developing its own "discourse" for discussing and describing relevant problems and their solutions.

For more background on the workshop series, see the main page.

WOP2019 is a full-day workshop consisting of three parts: paper presentations, a poster session, and an interactive breakout discussion session.

Contents


Venue and dates

The tenth edition of WOP was held in conjunction with ISWC 2019 in Auckland, New Zealand, on October 27th, 2019.

WOP 2019 Program

Room: Case Room 1 (260-005) (poster session in foyer), Owen G. Glenn Building, University of Auckland

Keynote

Categories are in flux, but their computational representations are static and isolated. That’s a problem by Mark Gahegan, School of Computer Science and Centre for eResearch, The University of Auckland

Abstract: Whether we are creating categories of our own, or operationalising categories proposed by somebody else, how we do it, and how well we do it are seldom recorded. It is therefore usually impossible for another researcher to fully understand how a category came to be, or what it meant to its creator(s). This makes our science opaque and harder for others to reuse. When we create and modify categories, our computational systems are not up to the task of representing how they came into being and how they have changed over time, we have falsely separated our ontological representations from the process of analysis. But they should be tightly coupled to it! Consequently, ontologies only capture part of this meaning: they describe what we would like our categories to mean, not how exactly they came to be, nor why they ended up the way they are, nor what they evolved from, or later became. But much of their identity and meaning is unfortunately tied up with the process of their construction and use. The issue pervades all fields of enquiry where we rely on the human construction of categories to help us understand the world and communicate this understanding with others.

This talk describes our efforts to represent concepts/categories & relationships (via ontologies), data, analytical methods and workflow all within the a single computational environment, allowing us to explicitly describe the interplay between these research artefacts and how they each shape meaning. It also allows us to keep track of how changes to any one artefact can affect others. For example, improving a classifier might lead to changes in categorical (intensional) models, but might not change the related ontology.

Workshop Schedule

Morning Session

Afternoon Session

Call for Papers and Patterns

We invite the submission of original research results related to the focus areas of the workshop, in one of three categories:


  1. Research papers (maximum 15 pages LNCS style) presenting mature work and established results.
  2. Short papers (maximum 5 pages LNCS style) presenting proposed research directions, novel ideas, or more general positions or discussions.
  3. Ontology Design Patterns (described in paper format, 5-12 pages LNCS style) should solve a particular modelling problem, of relevance either to the broader ontology engineering community, or to some specific knowledge domain, in a novel and reusable manner. Note that accepted pattern submissions are presented through a poster session (see below).

Topics of interest

Topics include but are not limited to:

  • Methods and tools for developing high-quality ontologies or other knowledge graph schemas, including ontology engineering by domain experts
  • Analyses of quality attributes in ontologies and ontology engineering, and quality assurance approaches for ontology engineering
  • New ontology design patterns (content patterns, structural patterns, architecture patterns, correspondence patterns, etc.)
  • Pattern-based methods and methodologies for development of semantic applications
  • Analyses of ODP use, and analyses of pattern-based ontologies
  • Antipatterns and their relations to ODPs
  • Pattern-based ontology design and knowledge engineering
  • Pattern-based ontology evaluation and selection
  • Pattern-based information extraction, ontology learning, and relation to NLP
  • Correspondence patterns for ontology matching and integration
  • Patterns and Linked data (usage, emerging patterns, pattern-driven data publishing, etc.)
  • ODP development and use in specific domains including geosciences, life sciences, digital humanities, cultural heritage, e-history, IoT, smart homes & cities, smart agriculture etc.

Submitting

Submissions should be made via the WOP 2019 EasyChair page. Detailed instructions can be found at the submission page. Note that design pattern submissions also need to be submitted to the ontologydesignpatterns.org community portal, as described on that page.

Posters

Accepted pattern submissions will be expected to present a poster describing the pattern at the workshop poster session.

Accepted research or short papers may also be presented in this manner if the authors would like to, but posters are not mandatory for such submissions.

Important Dates

  • Abstract submission (recommended): June 21th, 2019
  • Submission date (strict, no extensions allowed): June 28th, 2019
  • Author notifications: July 24th, 2019
  • Camera-ready submissions: August 29th, 2019
  • Workshop will be held on: October 27th, 2019

Proceedings

WOP 2019 proceedings are published as CEUR Workshop Proceedings Volume 2459.

WOP Organisation

WOP2019 Chairs

For general inquiries, please contact wop2019@easychair.org

Steering Committee

The WOP Steering committee - the Board of the Association of Ontology Design and Patterns - consists of:

Managing committee

Other board members

  • Aldo Gangemi, ISTC-CNR (elected 2016-2018, re-elected 2018-2020)
  • Karl Hammar, Jönköping University (elected as executive member 2016-2018, elected as regular member 2018-2020)
  • Krzysztof Janowicz, University of California, Santa Barbara (elected 2016-2018, re-elected 2018-2020)
  • Agnieszka Lawrynowicz, Poznan University of Technology (elected 2017-2019)
  • Adila Krisnadhi, Universitas Indonesia (elected 2017-2019)
  • Andrea Nuzzolese, ISTC-CNR (elected as executive member 2016-2018, elected as regular member 2018-2020)
  • Jim Salmons, Citizen Scientist at FactMiners.org and The Softalk Apple Project (elected 2018-2020)

Program Committee

  • Luigi Asprino, University of Bologna and STLab (ISTC-CNR)
  • Eva Blomqvist, Linköping University
  • Marilena Daquino, University of Bologna
  • Chen-Chieh Feng, National University of Singapore
  • Alba Fernandez, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
  • Raúl García-Castro, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
  • Karl Hammar, Jönköping University
  • Krzysztof Janowicz, University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Tomi Kauppinen, Department of Computer Science, Aalto University School of Science
  • Johan W. Klüwer, DNV
  • Adila A. Krisnadhi, Universitas Indonesia
  • Piotr Kulicki, John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin
  • Steffen Lohmann, Fraunhofer
  • María Poveda Villalón, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
  • Idafen Santana-Pérez, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
  • Cogan Shimizu, Wright State University
  • Gem Stapleton, University of Brighton
  • Mari Carmen Suárez-Figueroa, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
  • He Tan, Jönköping University
  • Dalia Varanka, U.S. Geological Survey
  • Jennifer Warrender, Newcastle University


WOP 2019 | Start date: 2019/10/26 | End date: 2019/10/27


TBA

Personal tools
Quality Committee
Content OP publishers