Andrew MacFarlane | 5 Jul 2012 07:28
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Re: "I think, therefore I classify" - ISKO UK and BCS IRSG seminar and workshop on 16 July 2012

Dear members

This event is proving to be very popular, If you are interested in
attending I strongly recommend that you register as soon as possible.

http://www.iskouk.org/events/classification_july2012.htm 

cheers
andy 

-----------------------------------------------------------
!     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/           !
-----------------------------------------------------------

Jaap Kamps | 5 Jul 2012 13:35
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CFP CIKM'12 WS on Exploiting Semantic Annotations: Deadline July 27 (extended)

Fifth Workshop on
Exploiting Semantic Annotations for Information Retrieval (ESAIR'12)

CIKM 2012, November 2, Maui, Hawaii
http://staff.science.uva.nl/~kamps/esair12/

Submissions due: July 27 (extended!)

* Updates:

- Deadline extended to July 27 -- start writing your 2 page paper now!
- Generous sponsoring from EU FP7 Parlance project!
- Planning an exceptional beach BBQ after the workshop -- don't miss this!

* Second Call for Papers

There is an increasing amount of structure on the Web as a result of 
modern Web languages, micro-formats and linked data, user tagging and 
annotation, and emerging robust NLP tools.  These meaningful, semantic, 
annotations hold the promise to significantly enhance information 
access, by enhancing the depth of analysis of today's systems. 
Currently, we have only started exploring the possibilities and only 
begin to understand how these valuable semantic cues can be put to 
fruitful use.  To complicate matters, standard text search excels at 
shallow information needs expressed by short keyword queries, and here 
semantic annotation contributes very little, if anything.

The main questions for the workshop are how to leverage the rich context 
currently available, especially in a mobile search scenario, giving 
powerful new handles to exploit semantic annotations.  And how can we 
(Continue reading)

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CFP: CIKM'12 BooksOnline Workshop

BooksOnline'12 Workshop:
Online Books, Complementary Social Media and their Impact

CIKM 2012, October 29, 2012, Maui, USA

http://www.hci.usi.ch/BooksOnline12/

Call for Papers

Goals
The BooksOnline workshops aim to foster research initiatives that are focused on innovation
opportunities and challenges created by large collections of digital books. This year, BooksOnline'12
aims to offer a forum for bringing together expertise from academia, industry, libraries and archives to
facilitate the exchange of research and application of social media and collaboratively shared content
in the field of digital libraries with specific focus on online books. This requires solving a range of KM,
IR, DB, DL and HCI challenges applied to large collections of online books and related social media. These
include mechanisms for fast access to semi-structured data, methods to mine and enrich content and
analyze usage data, algorithms, user interfaces and interaction models for searching and
recommendation in rich social contexts, and designs for engaging reading experiences that readers
would want to share. One of the main themes for this year is the impact of this technology on young users, the
so called Native Digital, and on their social engagements. BooksOnline'12 will encourage strong
exploitation of the incentives and benefits of such major forms of massive on-line collaborations for
digital libraries.

Keynote Speakers tbc
Similarly to previous years, we plan to host keynote speakers, who are prominent in the area. Previous
keynote speakers included Adam Farquhar (The British Library), Ville Miettinnen (Microtask), James
Crawford (Google Books), John Ockerbloom (University of Pennsylvania), and Brewster Kahle (Internet Archive).

Workshop format
(Continue reading)

Mikhail Ageev | 9 Jul 2012 16:50
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ECIR 2013 Mentoring Program

ECIR 2013 (http://ecir2013.org/) is offering a mentoring program,
which aims to assist authors in preparing papers for submission to the
ECIR 2013 conference, and improve quality of submissions. If you would
like help with your submission, you may ask for a mentor: a person who
will help you with your submission to the ECIR audience through
one-to-one advising, usually via e-mail. A mentor will help you
understand how to align your paper with the expectations of the
typical ECIR reviewer. Mentors are volunteers familiar with successful
submissions.

Requests
=============================
To request a mentor, please send an email to
Mikhail Ageev (mageev@...), and include:
  -  Your name and affiliation (for academia, this would include the
     name of your department and university; for industry or
     government this would include your company or agency and your job
     title), and the name(s) and affiliation(s) of any planned
     co-authors.
  -  The title and abstract for your planned paper in plain text (not
     as an attachment). You must have completed a draft paper at the
     time you apply for mentoring, but do not send your draft paper
     with your application — you should send it to your mentor once
     you have been notified who they are.
  -  Any specific questions or areas on which you would like help.

Reasonable expectations for a mentor include giving advice as to the
most appropriate forum for your work, suggesting improvements to your
submission, or referring you to relevant research of which you might
not have been aware. Typically, a mentor might spend 3-7 hours on a
(Continue reading)

Jaap Kamps | 12 Jul 2012 07:30
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CfP: 35th European Conference on Information Retrieval (ECIR'13)

CALL FOR PAPERS/POSTERS/DEMOS
35th European Conference on Information Retrieval (ECIR 2013)
Moscow, Russia, 24-27 March 2013
http://ecir2013.org/

Important dates:
-  1 Oct 2012: full paper abstract deadline
-  8 Oct 2012: full paper deadline
- 22 Oct 2012: posters/demos deadline
- 30 Nov 2012: notification of acceptance

Call for Papers

The conference encourages the submission of high-quality research papers 
reporting original and innovative research in Information Retrieval. 
Submissions will be reviewed by experts on the basis of the originality 
of the work, the validity of the results, chosen methodology, writing 
quality and the overall contribution to the field of Information 
Retrieval.  We accept not only full-papers, but also poster and demo 
short papers.  Posters should present work in progress or leading-edge 
work.  Demo papers should describe first-hand experiences with research 
prototype systems.

ECIR has traditionally had a strong student focus, and papers whose sole 
or main author is a postgraduate student or postdoctoral researcher are 
especially welcome.  Papers that demonstrate a high level of research 
adventure or which break out of the traditional IR paradigms are also 
particularly welcome.

All submissions must be written in English following the LNCS author 
(Continue reading)

Pablo Castells | 17 Jul 2012 10:04
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CFP: ACM TIST Special Issue on Diversity and Discovery in Recommender Systems and Exploratory Search

--------------------------- Call for Papers ---------------------------
   ACM Transactions on Intelligent Systems and Technology (ACM TIST)
                            Special Issue on
 Diversity and Discovery in Recommender Systems and Exploratory Search
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

* Submission deadline: 20 September 2012 *

Overview
--------

Most research and development efforts in information access technologies have been focused on the accuracy in predicting and matching user information needs. Moreover, accuracy has been defined as a property that considers individual delivered items in isolation, or even more narrowly, as the ability to reduce the errors between predicted user preference values and explicit user votes. However there is a growing realization that there is more than accuracy to the practical effectiveness and added-value of delivered information. In particular, diversity and discovery have been identified as key dimensions of information utility in real scenarios, and a fundamental research direction to keep making progress in the field. The importance of novelty anddiversity is particularly manifest in scenarios such as automatic recommendation and exploratory search, in which user needs involve some degree of uncertainty and/or underspecification, leaving room for the system's initiative to complete and predict these needs on behalf of –or in collaboration with– the user.

The intelligence to discover something novel is indeed essential to a recommender system: in many, if not most scenarios, the whole point of recommendation is inherently linked to the provision of discovery, as recommendation makes most sense when it exposes the user to a relevant experience that she would not have found, or thought of by herself –obvious, however accurate, recommendations are generally of little use. Not only does a varied recommendation provide in itself for a richer user experience. Given the inherent uncertainty in user interest prediction –since it is based on implicit, incomplete evidence of past interests, where the latter are moreover subject to change– avoiding a too narrow array of choice is generally a good approach to enhance the chances that the user is pleased by at least some recommended item. Sales diversity may enhance businesses as well, leveraging revenues from market niches.

The value of diversity has likewise been acknowledged in exploratory retrieval scenarios where information needs have a specific orientation, but involve a degree of flexibility, generality and open-endedness comparable to user needs in recommendation tasks. Discovery is indeed a fundamental drive –and an inherent part of user goals– in informational and exploratory search, where new theories and methods are being developed that model novelty and relevance as two sides of the same coin.

Diversity and discovery represent a cutting-edge research area in intelligent information access and delivery, eliciting increasing attention from researchers and practitioners in the recommender systems, information retrieval, and machine learning communities. This special issue seeks to gather a selection of papers reporting leading research on diversity and discovery perspectives in recommender systems and exploratory search, providing a view of the latest advances in this scope.

Topics of interest
------------------

We invite the submission of high-quality manuscripts reporting relevant research in the area of diversity, discovery, and novelty in recommender systems and exploratory search. The special issue welcomes submissions presenting theoretical, technical, experimental, methodological and/or applicative contributions in this scope, addressing –though not limited to– the following topics:

Diversity and discovery modeling in recommender systems
  - Theoretical foundation for novelty and diversity
  - Recommendation novelty and diversity models
  - Popularity, risk, unexpectedness, surprisal, serendipity, freshness
  - Link to diversity models in Information Retrieval
Diversity and discovery enhancement in recommender systems
  - Diversification methods
  - Recommendation of long-tail and difficult items, cold-start problem
  - Individual vs. global diversity
  - Machine Learning for diversity and discovery
Diversity and discovery across recommendations
  - Diversity and discovery in sequential recommendation
  - Diversity and discovery in interactive recommendation
  - Aggregate diversity
  - Diversity and discovery in time and context
  - Novelty and trust
Diversity and discovery in exploratory search
  - Novelty and diversity in informational search and exploratory browsing
  - Diversity and discovery in interactive search
  - Novelty, diversity and personalization
  - Novelty, learning and knowledge gain
Diversity and discovery evaluation
  - Experimental methodologies and design
  - Novelty and diversity metrics
  - Datasets
  - User studies
* Applications
  - Discovery-oriented domains, applications, and scenarios
  - Business perspective on diversity and discovery
  - Domain-specific studies

Submissions
-----------

Manuscripts shall be sent through the ACM TIST electronic submission system at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/tist (please select "Special Issue: Diversity and Discovery in Recommender Systems and Exploratory Search" as the manuscript type). Submissions shall adhere to the ACM TIST instructions and guidelines for authors available at the journal web site:http://tist.acm.org

Each paper will be evaluated by at least two reviewers. The papers will be evaluated for their originality, contribution significance, soundness, clarity, and overall quality. The interest of contributions will be assessed in terms of technical and scientific findings, contribution to the knowledge and understanding of the problem, methodological advancements, and/or applicative value. 

Important Dates
---------------

- Deadline for submission: 20 September 2012
- Review notification: 15 November 2012
- Revised manuscript due: 20 December 2012

Guest Editors
-------------

Pablo Castells, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid
Jun Wang, University College London
Ruben Lara, Telefonica, Investigacion y Desarrollo
Dell Zhang, Birkbeck, University of London
Stefan Rueger | 17 Jul 2012 18:31
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PhD studentship in UK "Linking Nature to Databases with your Smartphone"

Fully funded PhD studentship opportunity at The Open University, UK, on

   Linking nature to databases with your smartphone

in the context of an OpenScience Laboratory that will provide students
and the public with opportunities to carry out science experiments and
observations online.

You will research and develop analysis tools that recognise natural
objects that your smartphone sees, e.g., rocks, plants, butterflies, etc.

Imagine you collect rock samples during a field trip, from which you hope
to learn about geological formations millions of years ago. Your next step
is to take a photograph with your smart-phone and upload it into your
analysis tool that extracts relevant colour histograms and texture
features. These return a group of possible rock sample matches from a
pre-indexed image database. You are now able to use the known properties
of these rocks to validate or challenge prevailing theories of formations
based on your very own observations. This mechanism provides a link from a
physical object, here the rock sample, to the database world of knowledge
about rock samples via pressing the shutter on a smartphone and
intelligent data processing. This PhD project will explore and research
the underlying paradigm of indexing sensor data by suitable summary
statistics and how this mechanism can be used to access scientific
databases without the help of the traditional method classification
schemes. The work will be carried out within the Multimedia and
Information Systems research area of the OU's Knowledge Media Institute.
kmi.open.ac.uk

Interested? Please see 

  http://www.open.ac.uk/blogs/openscience/?page_id=79

for an application.

--
Stefan Rüger                          s.rueger@...
Knowledge Media Institute           tel: +44-1908-655 945
The Open University                 fax: +44-1908-653 169
Milton Keynes MK7 6AA, UK      http://kmi.open.ac.uk/mmis

--

-- 
The Open University is incorporated by Royal Charter (RC 000391), an exempt charity in England & Wales and a
charity registered in Scotland (SC 038302).

Andrew MacFarlane | 18 Jul 2012 12:31
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Presentations from "I think therefore I classify" meeting Monday 16th Julye

Dear members,

The slide presentations from the meeting are now available on the meeting
web site, <http://www.iskouk.org/events/classification_july2012.htm>, and
MP3 recordings will be added soon.

Enjoy!

cheers
andy 

Chair, BCS IRSG

-----------------------------------------------------------
!     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/           !
-----------------------------------------------------------

Andreas Holzinger | 19 Jul 2012 06:25
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HCI & Knowledge Discovery <at> AMT 2012, December, 4-7, Final Deadline Springer LNCS, September, 7, 2012

We are really excited to inform you that, before in Vienna 2013, we are organizing a further HCI-KDD Special Session,
in Macau, December, 4-7, 2013, in the context of Active Media Technology AMT 2012:
A Special Event of the Alan Turing Year as part of World Intelligence Congress 2012 including five intelligent informatics related conferences: Active Media Technology 2012 (AMT'12), Brain Informatics 2012 (BI'12), Methodologies for Intelligent Systems 2012 (ISMIS'12), IEEE/WIC/ACM Web Intelligence 2012 (WI'12), and IEEE/WIC/ACM Intelligent Agent Technology 2012 (IAT'12).

We cordially invite you to submit a paper to our Special Session HCI-KDD
http://www.hci4all.at/?page_id=670

The final deadline for the ready-to-print Springer LNCS is Friday, September, 7, 2012
Please send your papers via e-Mail as pdf directly to a.holzinger-j5b9KNZbQb6zZXS1Dc/lvw@public.gmane.org
so that we have reasonable time for handling the review process and provide you with relevant feedback as soon as possible!

Accepted papers will be published in the conference proceedings by Springer as a volume of the series of Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS).
A selected number of the best papers will be published in special issues, see conference page:
http://www.fst.umac.mo/wic2012/AMT/?category=participants&node=4

We are confronted with increased masses of data – across all domains (e.g in biomedicine and health care) – and especially on the Web and Social Media. Research in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI), Information Retrieval (IR), Knowledge Discovery in Databases and Data Mining (KDD), has long been working to develop methods that help end users to identify, extract, visualize and understand useful information from huge masses of high dimensional and often weakly structured and/or non-standardized data. Our goal is to combine those efforts to support professional end users to interactively analyse information properties and to visualize the most relevant parts without getting overwhelmed. Ideally we speak of HI-CI – Human intelligence (HI) “meets” Computational intelligence (CI) by making computational methodologies and approaches interactively accessible to the domain expert to solve complex problems in the real world.

The challenge is to enable effective human control over powerful machine algorithms and to integrate statistical methods and information visualization, so as to support human insight, breakthrough discoveries and innovations, and decision making – primary research objectives in the field of Human-Computer Interaction.

Some hot topics include:

* … Multimedia Data Mining & Knowledge Discovery from big data

* … Opinion Mining, Sentiment Analysis and Opinion Extraction (e.g. in the context of reputation management)

* … Swarm Intelligence (collective intelligence) and collaborative Knowledge Discovery/Data Mining/Decision Making

* … Intelligent, interactive multivariate Information Visualization and Visual Analytics

* … Multimedia Data Exploration and interactive Knowledge Visualization

* … Time-Oriented Data and Information (e.g. longitudinal data and complex noisy time series data)

* … Novel Search User Interaction Techniques

* … Future Interaction Techniques (Note: science fiction of today is science fact of tomorrow)

* … Modeling of Human Search Behavior and Understanding Human Information Needs

* … Methods and Methodologies (e.g. Support Vector Machines, Boltzmann machines, Entropy Modeling, …)

* … Text Mining , Web Mining and Intelligent Information Extraction.

Workflow:

Paper Submission: July, 31, 2012 (please contact the special session chairs for special arrangements)
Camera-ready of accepted papers: September, 7, 2012

Best regards
Andreas Holzinger & Andreas Auinger
(Organizers Special Session HCI-KDD in the context of AMT 2012)
-- Science is to test ideas - Engineering is to bring these ideas into practice ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Assoc.Prof.Dr.Andreas HOLZINGER, PhD, MSc, MPh, BEng, CEng, DipEd, MBCS Head Research Unit Human-Computer Interaction Institute for Medical Informatics, Statistics and Documentation (IMI) Medical University Graz (MUG) Auenbruggerplatz 2/V, A-8036 Graz (Austria) Phone: ++43 316 385 13883, Fax: ++43 316 385 13590 http://hci4all.at http://user.meduni-graz.at/andreas.holzinger http://www.meduni-graz.at/imi/usab2011 Enjoy Thinking. Taming Information. Support Knowledge. --------------------------------------------------------------------
Buchanan, George | 19 Jul 2012 16:46
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Call for Participation/Registration - TPDL 2012

Call for Participation - TPDL 2012: 16th European Conference on Digital Libraries
Digital Libraries (Pafos, Cyprus - 23-27 September 2012)

Over the last years, Digital Libraries have taken over a central role in our society. As the volume of
digital material grows, and its use becomes more ubiquitous, the challenge of combining our digital
futures and digital past becomes more important. Innovative methods, collaborative working and new
forms of content challenge established digital library methods. Similarly, the need for increasingly
sophisticated means for supporting the analysis of digital content by humanists and scientists,
practitioners and academics, leads to new difficulties for the infrastructure and interface of
information repositories.

The International Conference on Theory and Practice of Digital Libraries is the successor of the European
Conference on Research and Advanced Technology for Digital Libraries (ECDL). TPDL/ECDL has been the
leading European scientific forum on digital libraries for 15 years. The conference continues to bring
together researchers, developers, content providers and users in the field of digital libraries. TPDL
2012 is organised by the Department of Multimedia and Graphic Arts of the Cyprus University of Technology
(CUT) in collaboration with the University of Cyprus and the City University London. It will take place in
Pafos, Cyprus on 23-27 September 2012

General Chair: Panayiotis Zaphiris (Cyprus University of Technology)
Program Chair: George Buchanan (City University London)
               Edie Rasmussen (University of British Columbia)

The conference program is now online at http://www.tpdl2012.org/program.php

Our keynote speakers include Cathy Marshall (Microsoft Research), Andreas Lanitis (Cyprus University
of Technology) and Mounia Lalmas (Yahoo Research), all of whom are seen as unquestioned leaders in their
fields. Papers cover a range of up-to-date topics from the accessibility of library sites on mobile
phones, through the systematic evaluation of online library services, to technical fundamentals on
indexing and extracting data from library content. The programme also includes a variety of tutorials,
including digital preservation and building digital collections, and workshops on topics such as
knowledge organisation and semantic archives.

Whether your interests are in human-computer interaction, information retrieval or library science,
our program will contain much of interest. This year's conference is located in Pafos, Cyprus. Cyprus
possesses a rich cultural heritage, with 17 World Heritage sites, and blessed with a warm climate and
beautiful scenery.

Registration Details:
Early registration (ends 31st July 2012)
Full Conference - 500 euro
Half Day Tutorial - 85 euro
Full Day Tutorial - 130 euro
Workshop - 170 euro

Normal registration (ends 22nd September 2012)
Full Conference - 570 euro
Half Day Tutorial - 105 euro
Full Day Tutorial - 150 euro
Workshop - 190 euro

One-day and student registrations also available.

For full details, see our website at www.tpdl2012.org

Gmane