MOVE2020: Measuring Ontologies in Value Seeking Environments (MOVE) 2020 |
Website | https://sites.google.com/view/move-workshop-2020/home |
Submission link | https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=move2020 |
Abstract registration deadline | September 12, 2020 |
Submission deadline | September 20, 2020 |
Submission Guidelines
We invite scientists, researchers and practitioners to exchange and share experiences and research results on Data-Information-Knowledge-Wisdom (DIKW) sharing during periods of rapid and wide-scale social changes. Although we are interested in all aspects of DIKW sharing, we particularly invite submissions on sharing of the DIKW continuum by ontologies and evaluation of DIKW sharing in relation to human adaptation.
The following categories are welcome:
1. Talks
500-word-max submissions that introduce the participant(s) to the workshop and answer the following questions: “What perspective or experience do you want to share? What perspective or experience do you hope to gain at the workshop?” Please include the links to your work (e.g., websites, demos, videos, books, papers). Please submit your proposal through EasyChair.
2. Short Papers
Short papers (2 to 4 pages, not including references) should be submitted before Sept. 20, 2020 (papers submitted before Aug. 31, 2020 will be given earlier consideration). Please submit your paper through EasyChair. We plan to publish the Workshop proceedings.
3. Full Papers
We are considering publishing the post-proceedings. The participant will have an opportunity to enhance their short papers and provide full versions after the workshop. The participants are also invited to share their thoughts on the publishing options.
Submissions should also include a brief biographical sketch that provides for current affiliation and research area.
List of Topics
The goal of this workshop is to examine the sharing of the DIKW continuum in periods of rapid social changes and its impact on human adaptations. We are looking at the DIKW continuum ontologies and their properties. How they may be used to support DIKW sharing and how these ontologies may determine the use and design of social technologies? We aim to broaden enquiry into the social values that drive and determine DIKW sharing during periods of rapid social changes. We invite research that includes (but it is not limited) to matters, such as:
- User-centric ontologies and balancing user-centric concepts (e.g., patient’s description of symptoms) with a target ontology (e.g., clinical descriptions). How user-centric ontologies facilitate DIKW sharing via social technologies contributing to human adaptivity during rapid societal changes (e.g., pandemics). How can we compare the impact of these ontologies?
- Social ontologies that contribute to global problem solving and human adaptation. For example, what are properties of a social ontology relevant to social interaction during global recession? How social ontologies conceptualize social groups that interact during global crises and how social technologies support that interaction? Can we measure their relevance?
- How to extract relevant DIKW from social computing and use it to resolve global crises? Can we measure the extracted DIKW?
- Open data and open platforms. How open data contributes to finding solutions for global crises? Could open data design and content may be more relevant for the facilitation of rapid changes in a society? Could open platforms speed up research and sharing of the DIKW spectrum relevant for finding solutions for global crises and contribute to human adaptation?
- Domain-specific ontologies for rapid or real-time sharing
- Values that drive and determine Data-Information-Knowledge-Wisdom sharing during period of rapid social changes. What are these values? What makes individuals reach out for social technologies and share their expertise during these challenging times?
- Data-Information-Knowledge-Wisdom sharing via social technologies in relation to Human Adaptation
- Impact of the requirements for rapid or real-time DIKW sharing on software development
- What are the properties of domain-specific ontologies of DIKW that have been rapidly shared across all segments of a society (or globally)? Are there any universal properties of these ontologies?
Committees
Program Committee
- Simon Polovina, PhD (Reader in Business Computing within the Department of Computing at Sheffield Hallam University, UK)
- Rubina Polovina, PhD (Principal consultant in Toronto, Ontario, Canada)
- Neil Kemp (Enterprise architect and consultant in Ottawa, Canada)
- Ken Pu, PhD (Associate professor at Ontario Tech University, Canada)
Organizing committee
- Simon Polovina, PhD
- Rubina Polovina, PhD
- Neil Kemp
- Ken Pu, PhD
Publication
All submitted papers will have the opportunity to be considered for the proceedings. The paper selection will be carried out during the peer review process as well as at the workshop presentation stage. The final decision for paper selection will be made based on peer review reports by the workshop Program Committee and Guest Editors.
Depending on the received papers, we will be considering publishing the post-proceedings. These options will be discussed with the participants.
Venue
The MOVE workshop will take place virtually (October 17/18, 2020). The workshop will be co-located with the Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW) 2020 conference.
Contact
All questions about submissions should be emailed to rubina@systemsaffairs.com