Workshop on Negative or Inconclusive rEsults in Semantic Web

Event Dates

Jun 01, 2015 - Jun 01, 2015

Location

ESWC, Portoroz, Slovenia

Submission Deadline

Mar 15, 2015

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Call For Participation: NoISE 2015

Workshop on Negative or Inconclusive rEsults in Semantic Web

@ESWC2015, Portoroz, Slovenia – 31st May or 1st June, 2015

“Those who fail to learn from the mistakes of their predecessors are destined to repeat them.” ‒ George Santayana

http://www.noise-workshop.org – noise15@easychair.org – #NoISE2015

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Every Semantic Web researcher has been there: you spend days of work, but the results just don not give the answer you were hoping for. The work ends up, like so many, part of the File Drawer Effect: they never get reported because of negative or inconclusive outcome. This occurs as a result of a publication bias towards positive results in Semantic Web. However, negative or inconclusive results are fundamental to the research process and can be just as valuable. This workshop provides a forum for such attempted approaches, methodologies, or implementations. Researchers are urged to report null, disappointing, or inconclusive attempts in the Semantic Web and Linked Open Data research field.

=== What will be discussed? ===

This workshop specifically targets sound works, thus, scientifically or technically relevant contributions, with negative or inconclusive results after an evaluation. We welcome submissions in, but not limited to, the following categories:

– Applied research methodology in the context of Semantic Web and Linked Data that produces unexpected, inconclusive, provocative, or negative results.

– Mismatches between theoretical designs (or properties) and experimental results.

• Theoretical sound approaches that fail in implementation

• Approaches with wrong assumptions regarding Semantic Web technology

– Generality limitations of solutions that help to advance the state of the art.

• Solutions that only outperform the state-of the-art in a very specific context

• Papers that verify or refute results published in the past

• Verified hypotheses from other areas (e.g., Databases, AI) that cannot be verified or equally good replicated using Semantic Web technologies

– Novel groundbreaking ideas related to Semantic Web technologies whose implementation risks can not be estimated.

=== How can I participate? ===

We encourage both experienced community members and newcomers to share their insights, best practices, anecdotes, examples, and concrete experiences, while others provide questions, problems, use cases and experiences in this area.

We offer various forms to participate in the workshop:

**Glorious failures**:

Short or extended papers, up to 6 and 12 pages, respectively.

These papers should include:

a) description of used datasets;

b) research questions and hypotheses;

c) applied evaluation protocol, benchmarks or gold standards; and

d) the practiced statistical methods for result analysis.

Authors are encouraged to explain the properties of the approach that support the observed negative results, and show that the results falsify the hypotheses.

The focus is on methodology, rather than on problematic implementations.

**Confessions**:

Extended abstracts up to 2 pages that describe testimonies, short stories, experiences in a more informal fashion or technical/development issues that prevent the progress of the Semantic Web research.

**Position Papers**: Extended abstracts up to 2 pages.

Short essays describing your position on issues related to the workshop’s topic

**Abstracts** up to 1 page

A short, but otherwise, free submission format that could include questions, proposals or or any other discussion topic relevant to be discussed during the workshop.

All submissions need to explicitly discuss their relevance to the field. A focus on contributions to related works is desired.

=== Submission Guidelines and Publication ===

All papers will be formatted according to the LNCS format. Submissions can be realized through the easychair system at https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=noise15. Accepted papers will be published online. More information about proceedings of the workshop will be announced soon.

Important Dates

Submission deadline: March 15, 2015

Notifications: April 10, 2015

Camera ready version: April 17, 2015

Workshop: 31 May or 1 June 2015

=== Workshop Chairs ===

Anastasia Dimou – Ghent university, iMinds, Multimedia Lab

Jacco van Ossenbruggen – CWI & VU Amsterdam

Maria-Esther Vidal – Universidad Simón Bolívar

Miel Vander Sande Ghent university – iMinds, Multimedia Lab

=== Programme Committee ===

Oscar Corcho – Universidad Politécnica de Madrid

Emanuele Della Valle – Politecnico di Milano

Stefan Dietze – L3S Research Center, Leibniz University Hanover

Yolanda Gil, University of Southern California.

Paul Groth – VU Amsterdam

Aidan Hogan – Universidad de Chile

Kjetil Kjernsmo – University of Oslo, Norway

Dimitris Kontokostas – AKSW, Leipzig

Spyros Kotoulas – IBM research

Christoph Lange – University of Bonn

Axel-C Ngonga Ngomo – AKSW

Rudi Studer – KIT

Pedro Szekely – ISI, USC

Frank Van Harmelen – VU Amsterdam

Ruben Verborgh – Ghent university, iMinds, Multimedia Lab

Eva Blomqvist – Linköping University

Jerome Euzenat – INRIA Grenoble Rhône-Alpes