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X-Schemas 2009 : 1st International Workshop on Schema Languages for XML

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Link: http://ulita.ms.mff.cuni.cz/ws/X-Schemas09
 
When Sep 7, 2009 - Sep 10, 2009
Where Riga, Latvia
Submission Deadline Apr 20, 2009
Notification Due May 18, 2009
Final Version Due Jun 1, 2009
Categories    databases   XML
 

Call For Papers

1st International Workshop on Schema Languages for XML
(X-Schemas?09) September 7 - 10, 2009, Riga, Latvia
http://ulita.ms.mff.cuni.cz/ws/X-Schemas09/

to be held in conjunction with ADBIS 2009
http://www.adbis2009.org/



A schema can provide invaluable information about the structure of the
legal instances of the application domain under consideration. For XML
documents several schema languages have been proposed. In a nutshell,
the many advantages of using and widely distributing XML schemas must
be balanced against the risk of narrowing the flexibility and
extensibility of XML.

XML schemas are mainly exploited for validation, i.e., to test whether
an XML document conforms to the structure that is specified by the
schema. Validation reduces the possibility of erroneous interpretation
but also creates the opportunity to add "value" to the document by
creating interpretations not apparent from an examination of the document
itself. Schema languages often make a judgment on "good" and "bad"
practices in order to limit the complexity and consequent validation
processing times. Such limitations also reduce the set of possibilities
offered to XML designers. Reducing the set of possibilities offered by
a still relatively young technology is a risk, since these "good" or
"bad" practices are still pre-mature and rapidly evolving.

The presence of a schema is crucial to data exchange, and can facilitate
the automation and optimization of integration, processing, search and
translation of XML data. Despite these numerous advantages, XML schemata
are still rare in practice, and even if they do exist, they have a
tendency to be faulty.

Features of different schema languages are usually more complementary
than overlapping. Consequently, there is room for interesting combinations
and new endevours. Currently, no best XML schema language exists.

This workshop is intended to bring together researchers and practitioners
that are interested in sharing new ideas or experiences that are related
to XML schema languages. We therefore invite original contributions that
deal with any theoretical or applied aspects of XML schemas. Areas of
interests include, but are not limited to:

* Modelling and visualization of XML schemas
* Reverse engineering of XML schemas
* Design patterns for XML schemas
* Integration and exchange of XML schemas
* Similarity of XML schemas, XML schema matching
* Inference of XML schemas
* XML grammars and automata
* New languages for XML schema specification
* Analyses of real-world XML schemas
* XML schema evolution and versioning
* Schema driven optimization
* XML type checking and validation


Important Dates

* Abstract and paper submission: April 20, 2009
* Author notification: May 18, 2009
* Camera-ready paper submission: June 1, 2009
* Workshop: September 7 - 10, 2009


Organizers

* Jiri Dokulil, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic
* Irena Mlynkova, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic
* Martin Necasky, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic


Program Committee Chairs

* Michal Kratky, Technical University of Ostrava, Czech Republic
* Sebastian Link, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
* Martin Necasky, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic


Program Committee

* Radim Baca, Technical University of Ostrava, Czech Republic
* Geert Jan Bex, Hasselt University, Belgium
* Jiri Dokulil, Charles University, Czech Republic
* Sven Hartmann, Clausthal University of Technology, Germany
* Kazuhiro Inaba, The University of Tokyo, Japan
* Tomasz Kaczmarek, University of Poznan, Poland
* Agnes Koschmider, Institute AIFB, Universitat Karlsruhe, Germany
* Michal Kratky, Technical University of Ostrava, Czech Republic
* Dongwon Lee, Penn State University, United States of America
* Philipp Liegl, Vienna University of Technology, Austria
* Sebastian Link, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
* Pavel Loupal, Czech Technical University in Prague, Czech Republic
* Sebastian Maneth, University of New South Wales, Australia
* Marco Mevius, Institute AIFB, Universitat Karlsruhe, Germany
* Irena Mlynkova, Charles University, Czech Republic
* Martin Necasky, Charles University, Czech Republic
* Alexander Paar, Universitat Karlsruhe, Germany
* Eric Pardede, La Trobe University, Bundoora, Australia
* Dmitry Shaporenkov, University of Saint-Petersrburg, Russia
* Michal Valenta, Czech Technical University in Prague, Czech Republic
* Stijn Vansummeren, Hasselt University, Belgium
* Philip Wadler, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom
* Ingo M. Weber, SAP Research, Germany

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 X-Schemas'09 will be published in a combined
volume of Lecturer Notes in Computer Science series published by
Springer.

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