Martin Potthast | 3 Apr 2012 15:45
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2nd CFP: Join the competition to unvocer plagiarism, authorship, or text quality flaws

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PAN  <at>  CLEF: Call for Participation
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We invite you to take part in one of the following competitions:

1. Plagiarism Detection
 Subtask: candidate document retrieval from the ClueWeb.
 Subtask: detailed comparison in the cloud.

2. Author Identification
 Subtask: sexual predator identification in chat logs.
 Subtask: authorship attribution in various settings.

3. Quality Flaw Prediction in Wikipedia
 Task: Identification of certain classes of flaws in Wikipedia articles.

Registration is now open, and the competitions have just now started.
Find out about all the details at http://pan.webis.de.

PAN is held in conjunction with the CLEF'12 conference in Roma, Italy.

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Important Dates
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now open          Registration
Mar 16, 2012      Training data release
Jun 01, 2012      Run submission
Aug 10, 2012      Notebook submission
(Continue reading)

@@@ | 7 Apr 2012 22:29
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Call for Participation: Appification of the Web - Workshop at WWW 2012 (Lyon, France - April 16, 2012)

[Apologies for cross-posting. Please forward to interested colleagues.]

CALL FOR PARTICIPATION

Appification of the Web (AppWeb2012)
Workshop at the 21st World Wide Web Conference (WWW 2012)
Main workshop page: http://sites.google.com/site/appweb2012/
Workshop program:   https://sites.google.com/site/appweb2012/home/workshop-program 
April 16, 2012 - Lyon, France

The First Workshop on Appification of the Web will be held on April 16, 2012, in Lyon, France, in conjunction with the 21st World Wide Web Conference (WWW 2012). The workshop will bring together researchers and practitioners from industry and academia to discuss the impact of mobile apps on the Web search and browsing paradigms.

Recent proliferation of smartphones and tablet devices is due at least in part to the advent of apps, which customize and streamline user experience in a variety of usage scenarios. Today, hundreds of thousands of apps exist on the major mobile OS platforms (notably, iOS and Android), and we are witnessing a clear change in the way people consume and interact with information online. Beyond the mobile devices, we are witnessing the increasing availability of OS-level apps (in Mac OS, and forthcoming in Windows) as well as browser apps (notably, in Google Chrome). In many cases, users' information needs can be satisfied by an app or a combination thereof, completely circumventing the heretofore predominant Web search and browsing paradigms. For instance, instead of searching for travel options on the Web, one can directly use one of the popular travel apps. According to a recent survey, typical iPhone users have 108 apps installed on their device, and spend on average 84 minutes a day using them, thus confirming that changes in information consumption patterns on the Web are already well under way.

The primary objective of the workshop is to understand and to quantify the changes in Web usage due to the apps. The secondary objective is to understand the forthcoming changes, e.g., whether the role of Web search is likely to be fundamentally transformed, as apps satisfy an increasing fraction of user's information needs. Please see the Call for Papers for further details.

CONFIRMED INVITED SPEAKERS:
* Patrick Pantel, Senior Researcher, Microsoft Research
* James G. Shanahan, Independent Consultant, Advisor to Quixey

The workshop will feature a mixture of invited talks and contributed talks and papers.

THE FULL WORKSHOP PROGRAM IS AVAILABLE at https://sites.google.com/site/appweb2012/home/workshop-program 

Registration will be open to all WWW 2012 attendees.



WORKSHOP ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

Ed H. Chi, Google (chi-HInyCGIudOg@public.gmane.org) 
Brian D. Davison, Lehigh University (davison-g3RWA3yr5YjOGd22yRDrYQ@public.gmane.org) 
Evgeniy Gabrilovich, Yahoo! Research (gabr-ZXvpkYn067l8UrSeD/g0lQ@public.gmane.org)

WORKSHOP PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Andrei Broder, Yahoo! Research, USA
Anindya Ghose, NYU Stern, USA
Marti Hearst, UC Berkeley, USA
Lars Erik Holmquist, SICS, Sweden
Scott Jenson, Google, USA
Irwin King, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Ronny Lempel, Yahoo! Labs
Chin-Yew Lin, Microsoft Research
Sofus Macskassy, USC/ISI
Donald Metzler, USC/ISI
Filip Radlinski, Microsoft
Chirag Shah, Rutgers
Michael Schwarz, Yahoo! Research
Jaime Teevan, Microsoft Research
ChengXiang Zhai, UIUC

Alan Said | 16 Apr 2012 15:00
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[CFP]: Final Call for the RecSys 2012 Doctoral Symposium

Final Call for the RecSys 2012 Doctoral Symposium.

The Recommender Systems 2012 Doctoral Symposium provides an opportunity 
for doctoral students to explore and develop their research interests 
under the guidance of a panel of distinguished research faculty. We 
invite students who feel they would benefit from this kind of feedback 
on their dissertation work to apply for this unique opportunity to share 
their work with students in a similar situation as well as senior 
researchers in the field. The strongest candidates will be those who 
have an idea and an area, and have made some progress, but who are not 
so far along that they can no longer make changes. Typically, this means 
they will have made their dissertation proposal, but still be about a 
year from completion.

Support for Attendees:
- Free conference registration will be offered to successful Doctoral 
Symposium applicants (with the proviso that successful applicants are 
prepared to act as student volunteers for the duration of the conference).

- Funding for selected applicants may be available to offset some 
accommodation expenses - please check the RecSys 2012 website or email 
the chairs for updates.
URL: http://recsys.acm.org/2012/call_for_symposium.html
Email:doctoral2012@...

Important Dates:
- April 23, 2012, 5:00 PM (PST): Submission deadline
- May 21, 2012: Acceptance notifications
- June 25, 2012: Camera-ready version

Please see application details at 
http://recsys.acm.org/2012/call_for_symposium.html

--

-- 
--
***************************************
M.Sc.(Eng.) Alan Said
Competence Center Information Retrieval&  Machine Learning
Technische Universität Berlin DAI-Lab TEL 14
Ernst-Reuter-Platz 7
10587 Berlin / Germany
Phone:  0049 - 30 - 314 74072
Fax:    0049 - 30 - 314 74003
E-mail: alan@...
http://www.dai-lab.de/~alan
***************************************

Pablo Castells | 19 Apr 2012 09:17
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CFP: ACM RecSys 2012 Workshop on Recommendation Utility Evaluation: Beyond RMSE (RUE 2012)

------------------ 1st Call for Papers - RUE 2012 ------------------
                International ACM RecSys Workshop on
      Recommendation Utility Evaluation: Beyond RMSE - RUE 2012
                 Dublin, Ireland, 9 September 2012
                    http://ir.ii.uam.es/rue2012
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* Submission deadline: 8 June 2012 *

Scope
-----

Measuring the error in rating value prediction has been by far the dominant evaluation methodology in the Recommender Systems literature. Yet there seems to be a general consensus that this criterion alone is far from being enough to assess the practical effectiveness of a recommender system in matching user needs. The end users of recommendations receive lists of items rather than rating values, whereby recommendation accuracy metrics -as surrogates of the evaluated task- should target the quality of the item selection, rather than the numeric system scores that determine this selection. Gaps in the adoption of ranking evaluation methodologies (e.g. IR metrics) result in methodological divergences though, which hinder the interpretation and comparability of empirical observations by different authors.  

On the other hand, accuracy is only one among several relevant dimensions of recommendation effectiveness. Novelty and diversity, for instance, have been recognized as key aspects of recommendation utility in many application domains. From the business point of view, the value added by recommendation can be measured more directly in terms of clickthrough, conversion rate, order size, returning customers, increased revenue, etc. Furthermore, web portals and social networks commonly face multiple objective optimization problems related to user engagement, requiring appropriate evaluation methodologies for optimizing along the entire recommendation funnel. Other potentially relevant dimensions of effective recommendations for consumers and providers include confidence, coverage, risk, cost, robustness, etc.

While the need for further extension, formalization, clarification and standardization of evaluation methodologies is recognized in the community, this need is still unmet for a large extent. When engaging in evaluation work, researchers and practitioners are still often faced with experimental design questions for which there are currently not always precise and consensual answers. RUE 2012 aims to gather researchers and practitioners interested in developing better, clearer, and/or more complete evaluation methodologies for recommender systems -or just seeking clear guidelines for their experimental needs. The workshop aims to provide an informal setting for exchanging and discussing ideas, sharing experiences and viewpoints, seeking to advance in the consolidation and convergence of experimental methods and practice. 

Topics
------

We invite the submission of papers reporting original research, studies, advances, experiences, or work in progress in the scope of recommender system utility evaluation. The topics the workshop seeks to address include –though need not be limited to– the following:

* Evaluation methodology and experimental design
  - Definition and evaluation of new metrics, studies of existing ones
  - Adaptation of methodologies from related fields: IR, Machine Learning, HCI, etc.
  - Evaluation theory
* Recommendation quality dimensions
  - Effective accuracy, ranking quality
  - Novelty, diversity, unexpectedness, serendipity
  - Utility, gain, cost, risk, benefit
  - Robustness, confidence, coverage, etc.
* Matching metrics to tasks, needs, and goals
  - User satisfaction, human factors
  - Business-oriented evaluation
  - Multiple objective optimization, user engagement
* Practical aspects of evaluation
  - Offline and online experimental approaches
  - Simulation-based evaluation
  - Datasets and benchmarks
  - Validation of metrics

Submission
----------

Two submission types are accepted: technical papers of up to 6 pages, and position papers up to 3 pages. Each paper will be evaluated by at least two reviewers from the Programme Committee. The papers will be evaluated for their originality, contribution significance, soundness, clarity, and overall quality. Within a required quality standard, position papers will be appreciated for presenting new perspectives and insights, and their potential for provoking thought and stimulating discussion.

All submissions shall adhere to the standard ACM SIG proceedings format: http://www.acm.org/sigs/publications/proceedings-templates. The accepted papers will be published in the CEUR Proceedings series. 

Submissions shall be sent as a pdf file through the online submission system is now open at: http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=rue2012.

Important dates
---------------

Paper submission deadline: 8 June 2012
Author notification:       22 June 2012
Camera ready version due:  6 July 2012
DiveRS 2011 workshop:      9 September 2012

Programme Committee
-------------------

Gediminas Adomavicius, University of Minnesota, USA
Iván Cantador, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain
Licia Capra, University College London, UK
Òscar Celma, Gracenote, USA
Charles Clarke, University of Waterloo, Canada
Paolo Cremonesi, Politecnico di Milano, Italy
Juan Manuel Fernández-Luna, Universidad de Granada, Spain
Pankaj Gupta, Twitter, USA
Juan F. Huete, Universidad de Granada, Spain
Dietmar Jannach, University of Dortmund, Germany
Jaap Kamps, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
Neal Lathia, University College London, UK
Jérôme Picault, Bell Labs, Alcatel-Lucent, France
Filip Radlinski, Microsoft, Canada
Francesco Ricci, Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, Italy
Fabrizio Silvestri, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Italy
Harald Steck, Netflix, USA
David Vallet, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain
Paulo Villegas, Telefónica R&D, Spain
Jun Wang, University College London, UK
Yi Zhang, University of California, Santa Cruz, USA

Organizers
----------

Xavier Amatriain, Netflix, USA
Pablo Castells, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain
Arjen de Vries, Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica, Netherlands
Christian Posse, Linkedin, USA


Andrew MacFarlane | 22 Apr 2012 12:00
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Funding for research on multi-lingual/multi-model information access

fyi

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: 	Fwd: [mumia-mc] [mumia-members] IC 1002 MUMIA - STSM
Date: 	Sat, 21 Apr 2012 12:31:52 +0100
From: 	John Tait <john@...>
To: 	cluk@...

MUMIA is an EU Cost Network which promotes and co-ordinates research on 
multi-lingual and multi-modal information access.

The network has funding for Ph.D. students and more senior staff to visit 
institutions in other MUMIA participant countries. See the link below.

Note the call is open to all relevant researchers in MUMIA member 
countries, which includes the UK and most other European Countries, not 
just those at labs with a direct connection to Mumia. Although the current 
call closes on 30 April there are regular calls, so there will be a 
deadline around the end of July for visits later in the year.

Regards,

John

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: 	[mumia-mc] [mumia-members] IC 1002 MUMIA - STSM
Date: 	Fri, 20 Apr 2012 09:14:23 +0200
From: 	Michail Salampasis (TUW) <salampasis@...>
To: 	<members@...>

Dear all,

Â

I would like to bring to your attention that there is an open call for 
STSMs (you can find more details here 
http://www.mumia-network.eu/index.php/activities/stsm).

Â

Please disseminate this funding opportunity between members of your lab 
(especially young researchers) or other colleagues

who they would like to execute a short term scientific visit which is in 
line with the aims and objectives of MUMIA.

Â

Best regards,

Mike

-----------------------------------------------------------
!     Dr. A. MacFarlane, Senior Lecturer, Room A304E,     !
!       Centre for Interactive Systems Research           !
!               City University London                    !
!         Northampton Square, LONDON EC1V 0HB             !
!   Tel:+44 (0)20 7040 8386   Fax:+44 (0)20 7040 8584     !
!       URL: http://www.city.ac.uk/informatics            !
!       Twitter: http://twitter.com/unixspiders           !
!       Blog: http://unix-spiders.blogspot.com/           !
-----------------------------------------------------------
Tony Russell-Rose | 1 May 2012 22:16

Informer - Spring 2012

Informer: Spring 2012 Issue Out Now!

http://irsg.bcs.org/informer/

_____________________________________________________________________

Editorial
By Udo Kruschwitz

Welcome back! What a busy period this has been since our winter issue had come out, and what a lot of
activities. Most of the editorial team has just returned from an excellent ECIR 2012 in Barcelona and you
can read more about the conference in this issue (a small challenge: spot the editors in the photos in this
issue of Informer). Just a quick subjective two-word summary of the conference’s main theme: social networks.

::: Read more at: http://irsg.bcs.org/informer/2012/04/editorial-2/
_____________________________________________________________________

Conference Review: ECIR 2012 Industry Day
By Franco Maria Nardini 

The annual BCS IRSG European Conference on Information Retrieval (ECIR 2012) was held in Barcelona,
Spain, this year. The 34th edition of the conference has been organized by Yahoo! Research, Universitat
Pompeu Fabra and Barcelona Media, supported by BCS IRSG and ACM SIGIR.

The conference represented a valuable moment for researchers to share their results. Very interesting
papers have been presented during the three days of the conference.

::: Read more at: http://irsg.bcs.org/informer/2012/04/conference-review-ecir-2012-industry-day/
_____________________________________________________________________

Book Review: Search Analytics for Your Site
By Tyler Tate 

Financial services company The Vanguard Group had just purchased a shiny new search engine to improve
search for their 12,000 employees. There was only one problem: the search results were worse than what
they had before.

John Ferrara, an information architect who had helped select the new search platform, blew the whistle,
asking the project to be delayed so that relevancy could be improved before the search engine went live.
Unfortunately, he failed to make a convincing case to his IT colleagues.Technically, the new platform
was running just fine. Besides, the search vendor undoubtedly new more about this kind of stuff than the
internal guys.

::: Read more at: http://irsg.bcs.org/informer/2012/04/book-review-search-analytics-for-your-site/
_____________________________________________________________________

Conference review: ECIR 2012
By Claudia Hauff 

ECIR 2012 took place in Barcelona at a campus of the Pompeu Fabra University which is situated not far from
the city centre. Despite the size of the city, most ECIR participants stayed around the same area and
wherever you went, you inadvertently bumped into a few other fellow attendees every day & night.

The conference started off with the tutorials and workshops on Sunday, though at 9:30am a lot of people
still looked a bit bleary-eyed. It proved to be a popular day, a large number of people attended and the
workshop organizers did their best to make it a fun and interactive event.

::: Read more at: http://irsg.bcs.org/informer/2012/04/conference-review-ecir-2012/
_____________________________________________________________________

Call for Book Reviews
By Cathal Gurrin

Periodically we will be sending out a Call for Reviews in which we seek reviewers for a number of recently
published books that may be of interest to the IR community. Instead of including book reviews in this
issue of Informer, we would like to issue a call for interested parties to review one of the books listed
below. Books will be allocated for review on a first-come-first-served basis and you would have about one
month to carry out the review. If you are interested in reviewing one of these books, please let Cathal know
(cgurrin@...) which book you are interested in reviewing and
we will arrange for a copy (paper or online format) to be sent to you along with review guidelines. For
examples of previous book reviews, see the most recent issues of Informer. The currently available books
(courtesy of our good friends at Springer) are:

::: Read more at: http://irsg.bcs.org/informer/2012/04/call-for-book-reviews/
_____________________________________________________________________

Conference Review: ECIR 2011
By Cathal Gurrin 

ECIR 2011, the 33rd European Conference on Information Retrieval and the BCS IRSG’s flagship annual
conference was organised by Dublin City University in cooperation with the University of Sheffield, and
was supported by the Information Retrieval Specialist Group at the British Computer Society (BCS-IRSG)
and the Special Interest Group on Information Retrieval (ACM SIGIR). It was held during four days (18-21)
of April 2011 in Dublin, during a week that was uncharacteristically warm and sunny.

::: Read more at: http://irsg.bcs.org/informer/2012/04/conference-review-ecir-2011/
_____________________________________________________________________

The Information Needs of Mobile Searchers
By Tyler Tate 

We live in a post-desktop era. In the UK alone, 45% of Internet users used a mobile phone to connect to the
Internet in 2011 [7], and Morgan Stanley predicts that by 2014 there will be more mobile Internet users
than desktop Internet users globally [6]. Not only are more people connecting with mobile devices, but
they’re also consuming more and more data. Mobile data usage more than doubled every year between 2008
and 2011, and is predicted to grow from 0.6 exabytes per month in 2011 to 6.3 EB/month in 2015 [3]. The
numbers are impressive, but all it really takes is a quick glance at the people around us to recognize that
mobile Internet is pervasive.

::: Read more at: http://irsg.bcs.org/informer/2012/04/the-information-needs-of-mobile-searchers/
_____________________________________________________________________

Designing Faceted Search: Getting the basics right (pt 2)
By Tony Russell-Rose 

In our last post we looked at some of the fundamental issues in designing faceted search such as layout (e.g.
where to place the faceted navigation menus) and state (e.g. whether they should be open or closed by
default). In this post, we continue the mini-series with a review of the various formats for displaying
facets and the key principles for choosing between them.

::: Read more at: http://irsg.bcs.org/informer/2012/04/designing-faceted-search-getting-the-basics-right-pt-2/
_____________________________________________________________________

Events Diary
By Andy Macfarlane 

::: Read more at: http://irsg.bcs.org/informer/2012/03/events-spring-2012/
_____________________________________________________________________

::: Opportunities for Authors :::

If you are an expert in information retrieval or any aspect of search who has strong writing skills, we
invite you to contribute to Informer. Please send an article proposal to us at: irsg@...

For more information about the BCS IRSG, please go to:

::: http://irsg.bcs.org/about.php

_____________________________________________________________________

::: About Informer :::

Informer is the quarterly newsletter of the BCS Information Retrieval Specialist Group (IRSG). Its aim is
to provide insights and inspiration to researchers and professionals working in all aspects of search
and information retrieval. Our articles provide accessible and timely coverage of important topics,
ranging from focused, practical advice, to concise overviews of broader topics, and to deeper,
research-oriented articles and opinion pieces.

The IRSG is a Specialist Group of BCS. Its mission is to provide a focus for the European IR community,
facilitate communication between researchers and practitioners and promote the adoption of IR
research within industry. We host a major European conference (ECIR) and provide an assopciated
programme of workshops, seminars and events. The IRSG is free to join via the BCS website, which provides
access to further IR articles, events and resources.

BCS is the industry body for IT professionals. With members in over 100 countries around the world, BCS is
the leading professional and learned society in the field of computers and information systems.

_____________________________________________________________________

::: Visit Informer at http://irsg.bcs.org/informer/

::: If you have comments, questions, or suggestions for Informer, please contact us at irsg@...


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