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BenchmarX 2009 : 1st International Workshop on Benchmarking of XML and Semantic Web Applications | |||||||||||||||||
Link: http://ulita.ms.mff.cuni.cz/ws/BenchmarX09 | |||||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||||
1st International Workshop on Benchmarking of XML and Semantic Web Applications
(BenchmarX'09) - April 20, 2009 - Brisbane, Australia http://ulita.ms.mff.cuni.cz/ws/BenchmarX09/ to be held in conjunction with DASFAA 2009 http://www.itee.uq.edu.au/~dasfaa/ XML and semantic data formats (RDF) are currently in the main focus of many researchers who propose and develop more and more efficient techniques for their processing. Consequently, being users, we need to know which of the existing approaches is the most sufficient for our particular application. On the other hand, being vendors who develop a new SW or researchers proposing a new approach, we need to test its correctness and performance and, especially, to compare its main advantages with competing representatives. And being analysts, we are especially interested in comparison of various aspects of existing systems and methods from different points of view. Consequently, standardized approaches to testing the developed techniques and their mutual comparing need to be proposed and developed as well. It is very common, however, that suitable testing data are not easily available and, hence, they need to be synthesized. Therefore, not only predefined fixed XML and semantic data sets but also methods for their synthesis on the basis of user-specified constraints are essential. They can involve physical parameters such as size, depth, fan-out etc. as well as more complex ones such as integrity constraints. Another problem related to XML and semantic data processing is that the techniques often require a kind of structural or semantic description of the processed data, such as XML schema or ontology. However, in real-world situations the schema is often missing or, if it exists, the data are not fully valid. Hence, the techniques must be accompanied with methods for inferring schemas as well as integrity constraints. And, finally, a true benchmark involves not only data, but also respective operations, such as queries, XSL transformations etc. Therefore another set of open problems related to specification of reasonable benchmarking operations opens. We invite submission from research communities dealing with different theoretical and applied aspects of XML and semantic data benchmarking. The papers can cover results and experiences with benchmarking selected applications, proposals of benchmarking projects, approaches to synthesis of data sets and/or operations, as well as other related topics such as analyses of real-world data collections, schema inference, integrity constraints inference etc. Areas of interests include, but are not limited to: * XML benchmarking projects * Synthesis of XML data * Inference of XML schemas * Inference of XML integrity constraints * Analysis of real-world XML data, schemas and queries * Analysis and/or performance comparison of XML-related applications (parsers, validators, XML managements systems, query engines, XSLT processors, XML archivers, ...) * Semantic web benchmarking projects * Synthesis of semantic web data (RDF, OWL, ...) * Ontology inference * Analysis of real-world semantic web data, ontologies and queries * Analysis and/or performance comparison of semantic web-related applications (reasoners, semantic data management systems, mappers, query engines, ...) * Benchmarking and testing of (semantic) web services Important Dates * Abstract submission: 4 January, 2009 * Full paper submission: 11 January, 2009 * Author notification: 1 March, 2009 * Camera-ready paper submission: 15 March, 2009 * Workshop: 20 April, 2009 Program Committe Chairs and Organizers * Ji?? Dokulil, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic * Irena Ml?nkov?, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic * Martin Ne?ask?, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic Program Committee * Radim Baca, Technical University of Ostrava, Czech Republic * Martine Collard, INRIA Sophia Antipolis, France * Jiri Dokulil, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic * Peter Gursky, Pavol Jozef Safarik University in Kosice, Slovakia * Tomas Horvath, Pavol Jozef Safarik University in Kosice, Slovakia * Jana Katreniakova, Comenius University in Bratislava, Slovakia * Markus Kirchberg, Institute for Infocomm Research, A*STAR, Singapore * Agnes Koschmider, Institute AIFB, Universit?t Karlsruhe, Germany * Michal Kratky, Technical University of Ostrava, Czech Republic * Sebastian Link, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand * Pavel Loupal, Czech Technical University in Prague, Czech Republic * Mary Ann Malloy, the MITRE Corporation, USA * Marco Mevius, Institute AIFB, Universit?t Karlsruhe, Germany * Irena Mlynkova, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic * Martin Necasky, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic * Alexander Paar, Universit?t Karlsruhe, Germany * Incheon Paik, The University of Aizu, Japan * Eric Pardede, La Trobe University, Bundoora, Australia * Jorge Perez, Pontificia Universidad Catolica, Chile * Dmitry Shaporenkov, University of Saint-Petersrburg, Russia * Michal Valenta, Czech Technical University in Prague, Czech Republic Proceedings Authors should submit papers reporting original works that are currently not under review or published elsewhere. The paper should be submitted in PDF format, with maximum length fifteen (15) pages, following Springer-Verlag's LNCS manuscript submission guidelines, available at http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html. All papers accepted by BenchmarX '09 will be published in a combined volume of Lecturer Notes in Computer Science series published by Springer (Approved). |
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