Workshop on Ubiquitous Personal Data

Event Dates

Oct 08, 2012 - Oct 09, 2012

Location

Galway, Ireland

Submission Deadline

Aug 20, 2012

Call for Papers

Workshop on Ubiquitous Personal Data: PUD2012

http://semanticweb.org/wiki/PUD2012

co-located with EKAW2012

8-9 October, Galway, Ireland

Personal Data is Ubiquitous.

While our time and energy resources remain constant, the amount of information

that needs our attention grows exponentially with the advances in communications

and information sharing tools. This explains why personal information management

(PIM) is a domain of utmost importance and an active area of interest for

research and industry alike. The tools that we use to manage our personal

information have evolved over time from the pen and paper day planners to their

numerous digital replacements. The desktop used to be at the centre of the

users’ PIM universe. However, the transition is made more and more towards

mobile devices (the majority of which have Internet connectivity) and the Cloud.

As more online services and applications become available to users and gain

popularity, the boundaries between the desktop and the Web become less clear.

The desktop is no longer the single access point to personal information, but

one of many personal information sources. Together with easier access to the

information, continuous availability, hassle free backups and many other

benefits, this split also led to increased fragmentation in personal data across

multiple devices, as well as duplication and inconsistency. Desktop and online

data silos add to the ever-increasing difficulty of managing such personal

information. Social networks and online storage raise many privacy issues, and

bring up problems of provenance, trust and security. Consequently, personal

information requires more effort by the individual to synchronize, search

through and browse – in short, it becomes harder to manage.

Personal data is ubiquitous – scattered over several devices, online or offline.

While semantic technologies are already successfully deployed on the Web as well

as on the desktop, data integration is not always straightforward.

The transition from the desktop to a distributed system for PIM raises new (and

old) challenges, which represent the subject of this workshop.

The focus of this workshop series is on how technology can improve the user’s

experience and relieve some of the stress associated with managing disparate

information, online, as well as offline.

== TOPICS ==

Within the general topic of ubiquitous data, the focus of this edition of the

workshop is on privacy and security when managing personal data on multiple

heterogeneous environments, devices and platforms as well as the related areas

of provenance and establishing trust.

The topics of interest include, but are not restricted to:

* Privacy and Security of personal data

– Trust, Security and Reputation

– Data ownership, re-use rights

– Data sharing

– Issues of privacy and security of personal data in distributed environments

– Trade-offs between preserving privacy and providing useful functionality

– Collaboration and team information management

* Data integration

– Automatic mashups

– Synchronization and update

– Inconsistency handling

– Entity matching on personal data

* Usability

– User studies

– User evaluations

– Usage mining

– Visualization

* BIG data / small data

– Enhancing personal data with Linked Data

– OLAP and Analytic tools

– Visualization of Big Data

– Stream Data Processing

– Evaluation Technologies

* Context

– Context Modeling, Representation, Recognition, Detection and Acquisition

within Activities

– Context-aware Adaptation

– Issues of time, dynamics and information ageing

– Contextual User Profiles

* Applications

– Usage and processing of personal data in real-world applications (e.g.,

social networking, enterprise solutions, etc.)

– Project and experience reports

== IMPORTANT DATES ==

* 20 August 2012 – Submission deadline (extended)

* 31 August 2012 – Author notification

* 10 September 2012 – Camera-ready version

* 8-9 October 2012 – Full day workshop

== SUBMISSION GUIDELINES ==

We encourage full papers (up to 12 pages), short paper (up to 6 pages) and short

demo papers (up to 2 pages) describing significant work in progress, late

breaking results or ideas / challenges for the domain. Submissions should follow

the LNCS guidelines.

Papers should be submitted in pdf format to

https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=pud2012

no later than midnight Pacific Daylight Time on 15 August 2012.

== PROCEEDINGS ==

Accepted papers will be published in the workshop proceedings (CEUR).

In addition, the best paper describing a system or application which will be

shown during the workshop, will receive a prize.

== WORKSHOP ORGANIZERS ==

* Laura Dragan – Digital Enterprise Research Institute (DERI), National

University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland (laura.dragan@deri.org)

* Bernhard Schandl – Gnowsis.com, Vienna, Austria

* Tudor Groza – School of ITEE, The University of Queensland, Australia

* Gunnar Grimnes – DFKI GmbH, Kaiserslautern, Germany

* Charlie Abela – Department of Intelligent Computer Systems, University of

Malta, Malta

* Stefan Decker – Digital Enterprise Research Institute (DERI), National

University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland

== FURTHER INFORMATION ==

Further information is available on the workshop website

http://semanticweb.org/wiki/PUD2012

or by emailing the workshop organizers.