IEEE Computer Society

ICSC 2013

Seventh IEEE International Conference on Semantic Computing
September 16-18, 2013
Hyatt Regency Irvine
Irvine, California, USA
News:

  • May 31th, 2013 (midnight, PST): Regular/Short/Poster Paper Submission (Extended)
  • May 31th, 2013 (midnight, PST): Demo Descriptions (Extended)

  • Call for Papers (PDF Version)


Seventh IEEE International Conference on Semantic Computing
September 16-18, 2013
Hyatt Regency Irvine
Irvine, California, USA
http://www.ieee-icsc.org/

The field of Semantic Computing addresses the derivation of semantic information from content and the connection of semantics to knowledge, where "content" may be anything including structured data, video, audio, text, hardware, software, process, etc.

The Seventh IEEE International Conference on Semantic Computing (ICSC 2013) continues to foster the growth of a new research community. The conference builds on the success of the past ICSC conferences as an international forum for researchers and practitioners to present research that advances the state of the art and practice of Semantic Computing, as well as identifying emerging research topics and defining the future of the field. The event is located in Irvine, California at Irvine Hyatt. The technical program of ICSC 2013 includes workshops, invited keynotes, paper presentations, panel discussions, industrial 'show and tells', demonstrations, and more. Submissions of high-quality papers describing mature results or ongoing work are invited.

SUBMISSIONS
Authors are invited to submit Regular Papers (8-page technical paper), Short Papers (4-page technical paper), Demonstration Papers and Posters (2 page technical paper), and Workshop and Special Session Proposals. More information is available on the ICSC 2013 web page. The Conference Proceedings will be published by IEEE Computer Society Press. Distinguished quality papers presented at the conference will be selected for publication in internationally renowned journals.

AREAS OF INTEREST INCLUDE (but are not limited to):

Semantics based Analysis
  • Natural language processing
  • Image and video analysis
  • Audio, music and speech analysis
  • Data and web mining
  • Behavior of software, systems, and networks
  • Security
  • Privacy
  • Analysis of social networks

Semantic Integration
  • Metadata and other description languages
  • Database schema integration
  • Ontology integration
  • Interoperability and service integration
  • Semantic programming languages and software engineering
  • Semantic system design and synthesis

Applications using Semantics
  • Search engines and question answering
  • Semantic web services
  • Content-based multimedia retrieval and editing
  • Context-aware networks of sensors, devices and applications
  • Devices and applications
  • Digital library applications
  • Machine translation
  • Music description and meta-creation
  • Medicine and Biology
  • GIS systems and architecture
  • Finance
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Analytics and Business Intelligence
  • Social media
  • Information Technology
  • Big Data

Semantic Interfaces
  • Natural language interfaces
  • Multimodal interfaces and mediation technology
  • Human centered computing


Important Dates:

  • Feb 22nd, 2013: Workshop Proposals
  • March 1st, 2013: Special Session Proposals
  • May 31th, 2013 (midnight, PST): Regular/Short/Poster Paper Submission (Extended)
  • May 31th, 2013 (midnight, PST): Demo Descriptions (Extended)
  • June 10th, 2013 (midnight, PST): Workshop Paper Submission
  • TBD: Notification Date
  • TBD: Camera-Ready & Registration
  • September 16th-18th, 2013: Conference

Organizing Committee

General Co-Chairs

David A. Evans, Evans Research, USA

Mihaela van der Schaar, University of California, Los Angeles, USA

Phillip Sheu, University of California, Irvine, USA


Conference Coordinator

Jeffrey Abbott, Semantic Computing Foundation


Program Co-Chairs

Shlomo Dubnov, University of California, San Diego, USA

Brian Harrington, University of Toronto, Canada

Giovanni Pilato, Italian National Research Council, Italy

Mei-Ling Shyu, University of Miami, USA


Workshop Co-Chairs

Shu-Ching Chen, Florida International University, USA

Robert Mertens, HSW University of Applied Sciences, Hamelin, Germany


Industry Co-Chairs

Abha Moitra, GE Research, USA

David Ostrowski, Ford, USA


Panel Chair

Abha Moitra, GE Research, USA


Demo Chair

Jeffrey Abbott, Semantic Computing Foundation


Summer School Chair

Gerald Friedland, ICSI Berkeley, USA


Publicity Co-Chairs

Zbigniew Gontar, University of Lodz, Poland

Rodrigo Capobianco Guido, University of São Paulo, Brazil

Anne Hunt, Couchsurfing International, Inc. USA

Wolfgang Hurst, Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands

Leszek T. Lilien, Western Michigan University, USA

Klaus Schöffmann, Klagenfurt University, Austria

Chengcui Zhang, University of Alabama at Birmingham, USA


Publications Co-Chairs

Sergio Guadarrama, ICSI Berkeley, USA


Finance and Local Arrangement Chair

Taehyung Wang, California State University Northridge, USA


Registration Co-Chairs

Shaoting Wang, University of California, Irvine, USA

Jennifer Kim, University of California, Irvine, USA


Web Chair

Ke Hao, University of California, Irvine, USA


------------- Accepted Workshops ---------------------

The Second IEEE International Workshop on Semantic Multimedia

Workshop on Semantic Computing for Social Networks




CALL FOR WORKSHOP AND SPECIAL SESSIONS PROPOSALS

IEEE ICSC 2013: The Seventh IEEE International Conference on Semantic Computing September 16th- 18th, 2013, Irvine, California, USA

The IEEE ICSC 2013 organizing committee invites proposals for workshops and special sessions to be held in conjunction with the conference.

The workshops will focus on specific topics of the main conference. The organizer(s) of approved workshops are responsible for advertising the workshop, distributing the call for papers, gathering submissions, and conducting the paper review process.

Any general questions regarding ICSC 2013 Workshops and workshop or special session proposals should be directed to the Workshop Co-Chairs by using the following email address:

icsc.ws.2013@gmail.com

Please add [ICSC2013-WS-Proposal] as subject.

Important Dates:

Feb 22nd, 2013: Special Session Proposals
Feb 22nd, 2013: Workshop Proposals

-------------------------------------------------------------

Note:
1. Every paper accepted for publication in the Proceedings of ICSC 2013 MUST be presented during the conference.
2. Every paper accepted for ICSC 2013 MUST have attached to it at least one registration at the full member/nonmember rate. Thus, for a paper for which all authors are students, one student author will be required to register at the full registration rate.

International Workshop on

Semantic Search Engines (SSE2010)

in conjunction with
Fourth IEEE International Conference on Semantic Computing
September 22-24, 2010


While traditional search technologies were designed based on textual data using a keyword search approach, we define a “Semantic Search Engine” (SSE) to be a search (including problem solving) engine of heterogeneous sources addressing computational content of all types, and is accessed by the user via a natural interface.

Authors are invited to submit original and research papers addressing technical issues, solutions and technologies related to Semantic Search Engines. All submissions will be peer-reviewed by members of an international program committee. It is expected that the proceedings of the workshop programs will be published together with the main conference proceedings by IEEE CS press.

Submission: Manuscripts must be sent to psheu@uci.edu by June 15. Regular Papers should be no longer than six (6) pages.

Organizers of the workshop include:

Gerald Friedland, ICSI, Berkeley
Arif Ghafoor, Purdue University
Atsushi Kitazawa, NEC, Japan
Sang-goo Lee, Seoul National University, Korea
Max Mühlhäuser, Darmstadt University, Germany
Raymond Paul, U.S. Department of Defense
Phillip Sheu, University of California, Irvine
Mei-Ling Shyu, University of Miami
Jaideep Shrivastava, University of Minnesota
Jeffrey Tsai, University of Illinois, Chicago
Hiroshi Yamaguchi, Chuo University, Japan

The conference will take place at the University Center of CMU – west of the stadium

Campus Map


Travel:
http://www.cmu.edu/about/visit/directions-parking.shtml

Pittsburgh Airport Flyer:
http://www.portauthority.org/PAAC/tabid/241/default.aspx



Keynotes

keynote
Making Search Smarter: Semantics, Google’s Knowledge Graph, and the Future of Search
by Aaron Brown,
Google Inc.

Abstract
Speaker Bio


keynote
TBD
by Dennis E. Wisnosky,
formerly, U.S. Department of Defense

Speaker Bio


Making Search Smarter: Semantics, Google’s Knowledge Graph, and the Future of Search

by Aaron Brown,
Google Inc.

Ever since the Starship Enterprise first took to the skies decades ago, many of us have dreamed of realizing the “Star Trek Computer” -- the perfect assistant that provides the right information at the right time (sometimes without even having to ask), answers questions in context, and helps you arrive at deeper insights about the world -- all in a fluent natural-language conversation. At Google, we’ve taken this vision to heart, and are working to transform search from its origins as an index of web links and text strings to an interactive, semantically-aware knowledge engine that understands the real world and starts to show the kind of contextual understanding and natural interaction of a truly intelligent computer.

In this talk we’ll describe our vision of the future of search and how we’re getting closer to achieving it: how we’re modeling the semantics of real-world entities with Google’s Knowledge Graph; how we’re using the Knowledge Graph to create a practical application of semantic understanding that operates at the scale of hundreds of millions of searches per day; how we’re extending search with question-answering and natural-language conversational interfaces that take us closer to that Star Trek computer vision; and how we’re making search more proactive, so it anticipates needs rather than just reacting to them. We’ll also discuss some of the challenges we’ve had to overcome of building semantic technologies that meet our users’ expectations and work at Google’s scale.

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Aaron Brown
Google Inc.

Aaron Brown, PhD is a senior product manager for Google, where he leads key aspects of the Knowledge Graph initiative that is bringing an understanding of real-world people, places, and things to Google Search. Previously, Dr. Brown was the senior product manager for Google’s healthcare-related products including Google Health and health-related search features, and for other initiatives in the Google product portfolio. Before joining Google in 2010, he was a director at IBM responsible for IBM's portfolio of information access, search, and text analytic software products and solutions. At IBM, Dr. Brown also held roles in strategic alliance development for IBM Software Group and as a research staff member at the IBM T.J. Watson Research Center. He received his PhD and MS in Computer Science from the University of California, Berkeley, and an AB in Computer Science from Harvard College.

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TBD

by Dennis E. Wisnosky,
Chief Architect and Chief Technical Officer of the Department of Defense

TBD

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Dennis E. Wisnosky
Chief Architect and Chief Technical Officer of the Department of Defense

Mr. Dennis E. Wisnosky is the Chief Architect and Chief Technical Officer (CTO) of the Department of Defense (DoD) Business Mission Area (BMA) within the Office of the Deputy Chief Management Officer (DCMO).

As Chief Architect and CTO, Mr. Wisnosky is responsible for providing expert guidance and oversight in the design, development, and modification of the federated architectures supporting the Department's Business Mission Area. This role incorporates oversight of the DoD Business Enterprise Architecture (BEA); the corporate level systems, processes, and data standards that are common across the DOD, in addition to the business architectures of the services and defense agencies.

Mr. Wisnosky is leading the transformation of architecture-driven business systems and services development, and deployment. He ensures that Business Process Models are based on a standardized representation, enabling the analysis and comparison of end-to-end business processes leading to the re-use of the most efficient and effective process patterns and elements throughout the DoD Business Mission Area. A key principle in DoD business transformation is its focus on data ontology and semantic web methods. Mr. Wisnosky also serves as an advisor on the development of requirements and extension of DoD net-centric enterprise services in collaboration with the office of the DOD Chief Information Officer (CIO).

Mr. Wisnosky has over 25 years of experience in manufacturing, Information Technology (IT), engineering, consulting and training, including extensive experience in business process reengineering and enterprise architecture efforts. His specialty is deriving solutions to effectively move organizations from their "as-is" state of inefficiency to their "to-be" state of achieving strategic and tactical objectives. Mr. Wisnosky is recognized as a creator of the Integrated Definition (IDEFs) language, the standard for modeling and analysis in management and business improvement efforts. In addition, he is the author of several books including DoDAF Wizdom, considered the decisive source within DoD and other government organizations for managing enterprise architecture projects. Mr. Wisnosky holds a bachelor's degree in Physics and Mathematics from California University of Pennsylvania, a master's in Electrical Engineering from the University of Pittsburgh, and a master's in Management Science from the University of Dayton. Mr. Wisnosky has received numerous awards and honors for his work. In 2007 Mr. Wisnosky was a recipient of Federal Computer Week’s, Federal 100 Award.

Mr. Wisnosky is a PADI certified Rescue Diver, and an Instrument Rated Private Pilot in Multiengine Aircraft. He and his wife live in Naperville, Illinois; they have three daughters and eight grandchildren.

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Neural Representations of Word Meanings

by Tom M. Mitchell,
E. Fredkin University Professor and Department Head
Machine Learning Department
Carnegie Mellon University

How does the human brain represent meanings of words and pictures in terms of underlying neural activity? This talk will present our research using machine learning methods together with fMRI and MEG brain imaging to study this question. One line of our research has involved training classifiers that identify which word a person is thinking about, based on their observed neural activity. A second line involves training a computational model that predicts the neural activity associated with arbitrary English words, including words for which we do not yet have brain image data.

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What I Learned About Semantics from Textual Question Answering

by Sanda Harabagiu,
University of Texas, Dallas

Natural Language Processing (NLP) techniques employed in textual Question Answering (QA) rely on many forms of semantic information. Questions have a semantic focus and they convey an information need through a variety of semantic forms. On-line documents can be annotated with rich semantic structures to enable superior search for answers. Answers are validated by textual inference techniques that operate on knowledge encoding many semantic frameworks. In addition, semantic resources such as WordNet, FrameNet, PropBank, NomBank and TimeBank provide a multitude of semantic encodings useful for QA. Wikipedia allows researchers to mine for additional semantic information, in their quest to develop answer ranking and extraction methods.

During a decade of envisioning and developing QA systems, I ventured often on the path of exploring semantic information, either readily available or, mostly mined with NLP methods from large on-line text collections. Semantic information was selected on-demand, to serve several inference tasks required in the process of understanding a question, capturing the context in which it may be answered and pinpointing and justifying its answers.

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Challenges at the Intersection of Semantic Computing with Law, Legal Reasoning, and Legal Practice

by Kevin D. Ashley
University of Pittsburgh

This talk will briefly consider the intersection of semantic computing with law, legal reasoning, and legal practice. Based on the definition of semantic computing in the materials for the fourth IEEE International Conference on Semantic Computing (ICSC2010), the intersection of semantic computing with law, legal reasoning, and legal practice addresses the derivation and matching of the semantics of computational content to that of naturally expressed user intentions relating to legal problem-solving or analysis in order to retrieve, manage, manipulate or create content based on its significance to the legal problem-solving or analysis, where "content" includes text, video, audio, services, networks, etc.

The talk will illustrate some challenges of addressing the pressing needs for new ways to relate the semantics of computational content to users’ intentions relating to legal problem-solving or analysis. The needs are inherent in many developments in high tech legal practice, e-government, and research in Artificial Intelligence and Law. For example:

  • In evidentiary discovery, the need to process enormous numbers of electronic documents in terms of their meaning and significance relative to litigators’ intentions concerning clients’ legal claims and strategies

  • In business compliance, the need to relate computationally-manipulable norms to regulators’ intentions embodied in the natural language legal codes the norms are meant to represent and implement and in the principles and policies underlying the regulations

  • In legal information retrieval and modeling legal reasoning, the need to relate computationally-processable ontological representations of legal concepts and their meanings to the intentions of legal researchers and users in retrieving, comparing, and drawing inferences from relevant legal rules, cases, and commentaries

  • In e-Commerce and semantic web-based legal services, the need to relate computationally-accessible resources to the intentions of electronically contracting parties

  • In automated rights management of privacy and intellectual property rights in data, the need to relate proposed data access to the intentions of data rights owners and users

  • In e-government and legal education, the need to relate computationally-processable argument diagrams and the meanings and intentions of legal arguers.


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Tom M. Mitchell
E. Fredkin University Professor and Department Head
Machine Learning Department
Carnegie Mellon University

Tom M. Mitchell is the E. Fredkin University Professor and head of the Machine Learning Department at Carnegie Mellon University. His research interests lie in cognitive neuroscience, machine learning, natural language processing, and artificial intelligence. Mitchell is a member of the US National Academy of Engineering, a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), and Fellow and Past President of the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI). Mitchell believes the field of machine learning will be the fastest growing branch of computer science during the 21st century. His home page is www.cs.cmu.edu/~tom

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Sanda Harabagiu
University of Texas, Dallas

Sanda Harabagiu is Associate Professor and Erik Jonsson School Research Initiation Chair in the Computer Science Department of the University of Texas at Dallas. She is also the Director of the Human Language Technology Research Institute at the University of Texas at Dallas. Dr. Harabagiu has earned a PhD from University of Southern California in 1997 and a Doctorate from University of Rome Tor Vergata in 1994. She has been on the faculty of Southern Methodist University, University of Texas at Austin and University of Texas at Dallas. Her research spans Natural Language Processing, Information Retrieval, Knowledge Processing and Artificial Intelligence.

In her work, Dr. Harabagiu combines knowledge extracted from the World Wide Web with knowledge coerced from large lexical databases (e.g. WordNet or FrameNet) to be able to model the semantics of language in texts. In 2006 she co-edited a book entitled "Advances in Open Domain Question Answering". Dr. Harabagiu is a past recipient of an NSF CAREER award for studying reference resolution. Additional information is available from www.hlt.utdallas.edu/~sanda.

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Kevin D. Ashley
Professor of Law and Intelligent Systems
University of Pittsburgh

Dr. Kevin Ashley holds interdisciplinary appointments as a faculty member of the Graduate Program in Intelligent Systems at the University of Pittsburgh, a Senior Scientist at the Learning Research and Development Center, a Professor of Law, and Adjunct Professor of Computer Science. He received a B.A. in philosophy (magna cum laude) from Princeton University in 1973, J.D. (cum laude) from Harvard Law School in 1976, and Ph.D. in computer science in 1988 from the University of Massachusetts.

An expert on computer modeling of legal reasoning and cyberspace legal issues, he has reported his research in conference proceedings of the American Association for Artificial Intelligence, the International Association for Artificial Intelligence and the Law, and the Cognitive Science Society. He has also published in journals such as Jurimetrics, IEEE Expert, International Journal of Man/Machine Studies, and Journal of Artificial Intelligence and the Law, of which he is an editor. Professor Ashley has been a Principal Investigator of a number of National Science Foundation grants to study reasoning with cases in law and professional ethics. Professor Ashley is also author of Modeling Legal Argument: Reasoning with Cases and Hypotheticals (MIT Press/Bradford Books, 1990).

A former National Science Foundation Presidential Young Investigator, Professor Ashley was also a visiting scientist at the IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, and a recipient of an IBM Graduate Research Fellowship. He is a Fellow of the American Association for Artificial Intelligence, and a past President of the International Association of Artificial Intelligence and Law.

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Bhavani Thuraisingham
Professor
University of Texas, Dallas

Dr. Bhavani Thuraisingham is the Louis A. Beecherl, Jr. I Distinguished Professor in the Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and Computer Science at the University of Texas at Dallas (UTD) effective September 2010. She joined UTD in October 2004 as a Professor of Computer Science and Director of the Cyber Security Research Center which conducts research in data security and privacy, secure networks, secure languages, secure social media, data mining and semantic web. She is an elected Fellow of three prestigious organizations: the IEEE (Institute for Electrical and Electronics Engineers), the AAAS (American Association for the Advancement of Science) and the BCS (British Computer Society). She is the recipient of numerous awards including the IEEE Computer Society’s 1997 Technical Achievement Award for “outstanding and innovative contributions to secure data management” and the 2010 Research Leadership Award for Outstanding and Sustained Leadership Contributions to the field of Intelligence and Security Informatics” presented jointly by the IEEE Intelligent and Transportation Systems Society Technical Committee on Intelligence and Security Informatics in Transportation Systems and the IEEE Systems, Man and Cybernetics Society Technical Committee on Homeland Security. She served as served as an IEEE Distinguished Lecturer between 2002 and 2005. She was also quoted by Silicon India magazine as one of the seven leading technology innovators of South Asian origin in the USA in 2002.

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Using Semantics to Improve Interactive Information Access

by Lynda Hardman
Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica

Many methods have been developed to extract human-interpretable semantics from signals present in individual media assets. Ensuring that these human-interpretable semantics are also machine processable allows us to identify, describe and connect together fragments of media assets in a rich information environment. Users requiring information are then faced with the problem of finding out what information is available, and obtaining sufficient fragments to successfully carry out their task. Systems supporting these tasks can use the fragments, descriptions of them and relationships among them, to improve both the selection and presentation of information.

This talk will address two issues. Where can semantics play a role in supporting information oriented tasks, and how can they be used to improve support.

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Lynda Hardman
head of the Interactive Information Access group
at Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica

Lynda Hardman (http://www.cwi.nl/~lynda/) is head of the Interactive Information Access group at CWI (Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica) and professor by special appointment of Multimedia Interaction in the Faculty of Science at the University of Amsterdam. She obtained her PhD from the University of Amsterdam in 1998, having graduated in Mathematics and Physics from Glasgow University in 1982. During several years of working in the software industry she was the development manager for Guide - the first hypertext authoring system for personal computers (1986).

Her early experiences in industry with the development of hypertext authoring tools inspired her towards underlying questions of combining time-dependent documents (such as video sequences) along with interaction through links into a single model. She was a member of the W3C working group that developed the first SMIL recommendation.

Since the development of the semantic web, she has dedicated herself to improving human access to the ever-expanding 'linked data cloud'. Her current research efforts are focused on improving design methods for human-based interfaces in relation to developing technology.

She is a member of the editorial board for the Journal of Web Semantics, and the New Review of Hypermedia and Multimedia, and was co-programme chair for SAMT 2008 and ACM Hypertext 2003.

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Foto Jeroen Oerlemans
Music Understanding, Music Semantics, and the Future of Music

by Roger B. Dannenberg
School of Computer Science, Art, and Music
Carnegie Mellon University

Music understanding is the automatic recognition of pattern and structure in music. Music understanding problems include matching, searching, and parsing problems related to music recognition and music classification. Music semantics is a more difficult subject. Music, like abstract art, rarely denotes anything specific, and one can argue that music semantics is an oxymoron. Nevertheless, music can be associated with emotions and many other terms or tags, leading to representations similar to those used for semantic computation in other domains. We are at a time of music revolution where old practices of publishing and recording are being challenged by new technologies and consumer expectations. I believe this revolution will continue with the advance of music computation, which will enable new forms of music practice. Music understanding and semantic computing will play an important role in the future of music.

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Manuela Veloso
Herbert A. Simon Professor
Computer Science Department
Carnegie Mellon University

Manuela M. Veloso is Herbert A. Simon Professor of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University. She directs the CORAL research laboratory, for the study of agents that Collaborate, Observe, Reason, Act, and Learn, www.cs.cmu.edu/~coral. Professor Veloso is a Fellow of the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence, and the President of the RoboCup Federation. She recently received the 2009 ACM/SIGART Autonomous Agents Research Award for her contributions to agents in uncertain and dynamic environments, including distributed robot localization and world modeling, strategy selection in multiagent systems in the presence of adversaries, and robot learning from demonstration. Professor Veloso is the author of one book on "Planning by Analogical Reasoning" and editor of several other books. She is also an author in over 200 journal articles and conference papers.

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Rebecca Crowley
Associate Professor
Biomedical Informatics at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
Director of the Pittsburgh Graduate Training Program in Biomedical Informatics

Rebecca Crowley is an Associate Professor of Biomedical Informatics at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and Director of the Pittsburgh Graduate Training Program in Biomedical Informatics. She received her MD and MS in Information Science from the University of Pittsburgh, and her post-graduate training in Pathology and Neuropathology at Stanford University. Dr. Crowley was a National Library of Medicine (NLM) Fellow in Biomedical Informatics, and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Fellow in Molecular Neuroendocrinology. Her research interests include applications of semantic technologies to clinical teaching and translational biomedical research as well as the sociotechnical requirements and consequences of sharing biomedical data. Dr. Crowley has also contributed to several large scale biomedical data sharing consortia focused on semantic interoperability including the Cancer Biomedical Informatics Grid (caBIG).

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Roger B. Dannenberg
Associate Research Professor
School of Computer Science, Art, and Music
Carnegie Mellon University

Dr. Roger B. Dannenberg is an Associate Research Professor in the Schools of Computer Science, Art, and Music at Carnegie Mellon University, where he is also a fellow of the Studio for Creative Inquiry. Dannenberg is well known for his computer music research, especially in real-time interactive systems. His pioneering work in computer accompaniment led to three patents and the SmartMusic system now used by tens of thousands of music students. He also played a central role in the development of the Piano Tutor, an intelligent, interactive, automated multimedia tutor that enables a student to obtain first-year piano proficiency in less than 20 hours. Dannenberg held a patent for large-scale interactive games controlled by crowd noise, and these "stadium games" have entertained many NFL fans. Other innovations include the application of machine learning to music style classification and the automation of music structure analysis. As a trumpet player, he has performed in concert halls ranging from the historic Apollo Theater in Harlem to the Espace de Projection at IRCAM, and he is active in performing jazz, classical, and new works. His compositions have been performed by the Pittsburgh New Music Ensemble, the Pittsburgh Symphony, and at festivals such as the Foro de Musica Nueva, Callejon del Ruido, Spring in Havana, and the International Computer Music Conference.

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Shih-Fu Chang
Professor,
Digital Video and Multimedia Lab
Columbia University

Shih-Fu Chang is Director of Digital Video and Multimedia Lab and Professor and Chairman of Electrical Engineering and at Columbia University. He has also led the ADVENT research consortium at Columbia University with the participation of more than 25 industry sponsors. He has made significant contributions in multimedia search, media forensics, mobile media adaptation, and international standards. He has been recognized with several awards, including IEEE Kiyo Tomiyasu Technical Field Award, IBM Faculty Award, Navy ONR Young Investigator Award, ACM Recognition of Service Award, and NSF CAREER Award. He and his students have received four Best Paper Awards and seven Best Student Paper Awards from IEEE, ACM, and SPIE. Many video indexing technologies developed by his group have been licensed to companies. He was elected to IEEE Fellow in 2004 and was Editor-in-Chief for IEEE Signal Processing Magazine during 2006-8.

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Towards Semantic-Level Visual Search

by Prof. Shih-Fu Chang
Digital Video and Multimedia Lab, Columbia University

With the explosive growth of multimedia content online, researchers have been racing to develop novel solutions for searching images and videos. The Holy Grail has always been a seamless way of accessing multimedia information at the semantic level. However, two major barriers remain in the way – the semantic gap and the intention gap. The former refers to the large difference between machine recognizable information from raw image data and the user desired descriptions at the semantic level. To address this, recently there have been major efforts in developing multimedia ontologies for describing visual concepts, training large resources for automatic concept categorization, and new image search interfaces directly in the visual concept space. The other challenge associated with the intention gap lies in the difficulty in expressing user search targets through the conventional keyword-based methods. In response to this, I will describe two new paradigms. One explores efficient methods (lexical, statistical, and Web) to map keywords to visual detectors and adds real-time interfaces for manipulating queries in the visual concept space. The other completely foregoes the textual query input, instead relies on novel brain machine interfaces and data mining techniques to decode user’s search targets. I will survey on-going research in the above directions aiming towards a semantic-level visual search engine.

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Industry Session Call for Papers

IEEE ICSC 2013: The Seventh IEEE International Conference on Semantic Computing
September 16-18, 2013
Irvine, CA

Program Goals and Format:

The goals of the ICSC 2013 Industry Session are to foster exchanges between practitioners and the academics, to promote novel solutions to today's challenges in the area of Semantic Computing and applications, to provide practitioners in the field an early opportunity to evaluate leading-edge research, and to identify new issues and directions for future research and development efforts. Similar to regular papers, the papers in the industry session will undergo a review process and will appear in the conference proceedings. However, the selection criteria for industry papers are slightly different. In particular, papers should describe technologies, methodologies, applications, prototypes or experiences of clear industry relevance. A main goal of this session is to present research work that exposes the academic and research communities to challenges and issues important for the industry. Therefore, the papers in this session will be evaluated primarily by the novelty and applicability of the insights from its industrial solutions, instead of the originality of its algorithmic content.

Topics of Interest:

Topics of particular interest include but are not limited to those identified in the main conference CFP, as well as those listed below:

1. Development of new semantic systems, architecture, and standards
2. Employment of semantic computing tools and interfaces
3. Employment of large-scale semantic systems
4. Benchmarking and performance evaluation of semantic systems
5. Innovative solutions for performance optimization
6. Mobile semantic systems and services
7. Multimedia semantic content analysis and retrieval systems
8. Modeling issues and case studies of semantic computing
9. Game and entertainment applications
10. e-Business and other applications
11. Analysis of industry-specific trends and challenges

Important Dates:
Submission: June 10, 2013
Notification: June 28, 2013
Conference: September 16-18, 2013

Industrial Paper Submission:
Industrial papers should be submitted via the ICSC 2013 online paper submission system. Industry Session papers should be no longer than 8 pages with the same submission guidelines available on the ICSC 2013 web page. Only electronic submission will be accepted. All industrial papers will be peer-reviewed and published in the conference proceedings, which will be published by the IEEE Computer Society Press. Submissions must not be published or submitted for another conference.

Industry Session Co-Chairs:
Abha Moitra, GE Research, USA
David Ostrowski, Ford, USA

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Note:
1. Every paper accepted for publication in the Proceedings of ICSC 2013 MUST be presented during the conference.
2. Every paper accepted for ICSC 2013 MUST have attached to it at least one registration at the full member/nonmember rate. Thus, for a paper for which all authors are students, one student author will be required to register at the full registration rate.

Program Committee

Sören Auer, University of Leipzig, Germany
Agnese Augello, University of Palermo, Italy
Ramazan Aygun, University of Alabama, Huntsville, USA
Kathy Baker, US Government, USA
Srinivas Bangalore, AT&T Research, USA
Stephen Beale, University of Maryland Baltimore (UMBC), USA
Michael Bloodgood, Johns Hopkins University, USA
Joel Booth, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
Nicoletta Calzolari, Istituto di Linguistica Computazionale del CNR, Italy
Marco Casassa Mont, HP Laboratories, Bristol, UK
Kasturi Chatterjee, Florida International University, USA
Matt Cooper, FXPAL, USA
Jason Corso, SUNY at Buffalo, USA
Alfredo Cuzzocrea, Italian National Research Council, Italy
Barbara Di Eugenio, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
Nicola Fanizzi, Universita 'di Bari, Italy
David Farwell, Universitat Polytecnica de Catalunya (UPC), Spain
Margaret Fleck, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Stefania Galizia, INNOVA S.p.A., Italy
William I. Grosky, University of Michigan-Dearborn, USA
Yuanbo Guo, Microsoft, USA
Brian Harrington, Keble College, Oxford
Melanie Hartmann, Darmstadt University of Technology, Germany
Takako Hashimoto, Chiba University of Commerce 1-3-1, Japan
Johannes Heinecke, FT/IMG/RD/TECH/ACTS/FAST, France
Stacie Hibino, Eastman Kodak Company, USA
Graeme Hirst, University of Toronto, Canada
Ed Hovy, University of Southern California, USA
Eero Hyvönen, Aalto University and University of Helsinki, Finland
Maria Jose Ibanez, University of Zaragoza, Spain
Carsten Jacob, TU Berlin / Fraunhofer FOKUS, Germany
Hasan Jamil, Wayne State University, USA
Cliff Joslyn, PNNL, USA
Artem Katasonov, VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland, Finland
Tracy Holloway King, Microsoft, USA
Leonid Kof, Technische Universitat Munich, Germany
Reto Krummenacher, University of Innsbruck, Austria
Martha Larson, University of Delft, Netherlands
Freddy Lecue, University of Manchester, UK
Ying Li, IBM T.J. Watson, USA
Lin Lin, University of Miami, USA
Alexander Loui, Eastman Kodak Company, USA
Rabinarayan Mahapatra, Texas A&M, USA
Stephane Marchand-Maillet, University of Geneva, Switzerland
Lluís Màrquez, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Spain
Dennis McLeod, University of Southern California, USA
Marge McShane, University of Maryland Baltimore (UMBC), USA
Farid Meziane, University of Salford, UK
Adrian Mocan, SAP AG, Germany
Shinichi Nagano, Toshiba Corporation, Japan
Costanza Navarretta, Center for Sprogteknologi, Denmark
Sergei Nirenburg, University of Maryland Baltimore (UMBC), USA
Jyotishman Pathak, Mayo Clinic, USA
Carlos Pedrinaci, The Open University, UK
Nick Pendar, Uptake Networks, USA
Christine Piatko, Johns Hopkins University, USA
Antonio Picariello, Universita` di Napoli "Federico II", Italy
Matthew Purver, Stanford University, USA
James Pustejovsky, Brandeis University, USA
Ellen Riloff, University of Utah, USA
William Schuler, University of Minnesota, USA
Alkis Simitsis, HP, USA
Heiko Stoermer, University of Trento, Italy
Ioan Toma, University of Innsbruck, Austria
Thanh Duc Tran, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT), Germany
Clare Voss, Army Research Lab, USA
Marilyn Walker, University of California at Santa Cruz (UCSC), USA
Yorick Wilks, University of Sheffield, UK
Theresa Wilson, University of Edinburgh, UK
Rene Witte, Concordia University, Canada
Jack Xie, Yahoo!, USA
Rong Yan, Facebook, USA
Ziming Zhuang, Yahoo! Labs, USA
Roger Zimmermann, National University of Singapore
Hotel accommodations are available at a discounted rate. Please see the information below for details.

Reservations must be made via phone to ensure the group rate – mention “ICSC 2010 – CMU,” unless otherwise specified.*

Wyndham Hotel - University Place
3454 Forbes Ave
Pittsburgh, PA 15213
Phone: 412. 683.2040
Fax: 412.683.3934

Hotel SiteLink
Room rate per night: $122
Deadline: Sunday, August 22, 2010





Residence Inn by Marriott
3896 Bigelow Boulevard
Pittsburgh, PA 15213
Phone: 412-621-2200
Fax: 412-621-0955

Hotel Site Link
Room rate per night: $124
Deadline: Tuesday, August 31, 2010


Courtyard by Marriott Shadyside/Oakland
5308 Liberty Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15224
Phone: 412.683.3113
Fax: 412.992-5077



Hotel SiteLink
Room rate per night: $149
Deadline: Tuesday, August 24, 2010



Springhill Suites
by Marriott Bakery Square
134 Bakery Square Drive
Pittsburgh, PA 15206
Phone: 412.362.8600
Fax: 412.362.8601

Hotel Site Link
Room rate per night: $114
Deadline: Tuesday, August 31, 2010


Shadyside Inn
5405 Fifth Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15232
Phone: 800-767-8483



Hotel SiteLink
Room rate per night: $99 Studio/ $139 One-bedroom
Deadline: Tuesday, August 31, 2010
* Mention code: 6847CM

For more hotel choices, please visit:
http://www.cmu.edu/about/visit/accommodations.shtml

Call for Demonstration

IEEE ICSC 2013: The 7th IEEE International Conference on Semantic Computing
September 16-18, 2013
Irvine, CA

The IEEE ICSC 2013 organizing committee invites proposals for demonstrations to be given at the conference. The demonstrations provide a forum for researchers as well as industry participants to demonstrate working systems, applications, tools or showcases of base technologies to the conference attendees. The goal of the demonstrations is to show a spectrum ranging from research prototypes to pilots developed and even products that use semantic technology and provide functionality based on semantics in the context of semantic computing. For submissions to this event, it is very important to describe the demonstration setup, functionality and benefit to the viewer of the demonstration. Technical background discussion can be presented at the actual demonstration or can be submitted as an industry track or regular conference paper; the focus of the demonstration themselves should be to show the functionality to viewers. It is expected that the demonstrations are highly interactive.

Topics for demonstrations include but are not limited to:
* Content and Information Management
* Knowledge Engineering
* Data Mining
* Semantic Database Theory and Systems
* Service-oriented Architectures and Computing
* Semantic Web and Semantic Web Services
* Multimedia Semantics
* Audio and Speech Processing
* Natural Language Processing
* Semantic Search Technologies and Applications
* User Interfaces

Demonstrations are ideally demonstrating a system or application that clearly shows the benefit of using and deploying semantics and semantic technologies. In addition, tools and base technologies that implement or use semantic technology or semantic approaches are invited for demonstration.

Demonstration Setup
The demonstrations are planned to be a single event during a conference reception function, open to all conference attendees, with the goal of open and constructive discussions. One table will be provided with power as well as an Internet connection. Posters can be put up behind or next to the tables (depending on the space) either on pin boards or the wall. Demonstrators must bring any additional equipment they require as no equipment will be provided by the conference.

Demonstration Submissions
Authors submitting papers to the demonstrations must submit a 2-page paper that clearly outlines the demonstration that will be set up and the functionality a visitor to the demonstration can observe. The technical background, such as the architecture or algorithms, should not be described in detail; such a description would be better submitted to the industry track or main conference paper track. Including links to supporting material, e.g. a video on the web or a web-based demo itself, is highly encouraged. All submissions must be in double-column IEEE format and follow the specific submission guidelines on the ICSC2012 web page. The Conference Proceedings will be published by the IEEE Computer Society Press and the accepted demonstration submissions will be included in the conference proceedings.

Important Dates
Demo Submission: June 10, 2013
Notification: June 28, 2013
Conference: September 16-18, 2013

Submissions
Researchers and practitioners are invited to submit demo proposals to the demo co-chair

Please include "[ICSC2013-DEMO]" in the subject of your emails.

Call for Applications

2nd International Summer School on Semantic Computing
July 25-31, 2010
University of California, Berkeley
co-sponsored by IEEE, Institute of Semantic Computing and STI International

Semantic Computing is currently emerging as a new field that integrates methods from multimedia (computer vision, speech processing), natural language processing, semantic web and ontology engineering, software engineering, and other fields with the goal of creating new applications that connect intuitively formulated user-intentions with the content of data.

The summer school will provide an introduction to the field to senior undergraduate and graduate students. A mix of young and well-established researchers and educators will present recent research results, as for example presented in the IEEE conferences on Semantic Computing. The tutorials will be complemented by keynote talks by renowned experts in the areas of Semantic Technologies, Ontologies, Multimedia or Natural Language Processing.

The 6-day event is taking place on the campus of the University of California, Berkeley and the curriculum will include the following topics:
- Formal Semantics
- Semantic Web
- Ontology Engineering
- Multimedia
- Natural Language Processing

Important Dates:
* May, 1: Application deadline
* May, 15: Notification of acceptance/Registration opens
* June, 15: Registration completed
* July, 25: School starts

For instruction on how to apply and other information, please visit the following website: http://sssc2010.org

Technical Paper Preparation Instructions

Manuscripts must be written in English and follow the instructions in the Manuscript Formatting and Templates page

Document templates are located at:
Regular Papers should be no longer than eight (8) pages, Short Papers should be no longer than four (4) pages, Demonstration Papers and Posters should be no longer than two (2) pages.

All paper submissions will be carefully reviewed by at least three experts and reviews will be returned to the author(s) with comments to ensure the high quality of the accepted papers. The authors of accepted papers must guarantee that their paper will be presented at the conference. Please only submit original material where copyright of all parts is owned by the authors declared and which is not currently under review elsewhere. Please see the IEEE policies for further information.

Technical Paper Submission Instructions

Only electronic submission will be accepted. Technical paper authors MUST submit their manuscripts through EasyChair. Please follow this link (please register if not an EasyChair user). Manuscripts may only be submitted in PDF format.

A copyright form needs to be submitted upon acceptance of the paper and is not required at this stage.

-------------------------------------------------------------
Note:
1. Every paper accepted for publication in the Proceedings of ICSC 2013 MUST be presented during the conference.
2. Every paper accepted for ICSC 2013 MUST have attached to it at least one registration at the full member/nonmember rate. Thus, for a paper for which all authors are students, one student author will be required to register at the full registration rate.
ICSC Registration Contact Information

Please download the registration form here.
FAX or mail your form with check to the following address:

Registration Chair:
Qi Wang c/o Prof. Phillip Sheu
FAX: +1 949/824-2228 (new number)

Department of EECS

University of California, Irvine

Irvine, CA 92697

USA


Email any question regarding registration to Qi Wang at qiw@uci.edu
Author Kit:

ICSC2010 Author Kit Link

Important Date:

  • July 15, 2010: Deadline for Camera-ready and Copyright Form Submissions

© IEEE-ICSC 2013