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Present CFP : 2010 | ||||||||||||||||||
Third International Workshop on
Active Conceptual Modeling of Learning ACM-L 2010 Vancouver, BC, Canada, 1-4 November 2010 [to be held in conjunction with the 29th International Conference on Conceptual Modeling, ER 2010] http://www.er2010.sauder.ubc.ca/ http://www.cs.uta.fi/conferences/acm-l-2010/ Workshop Description and Call for Papers We will study a framework for the active conceptual modeling of learning based on the Entity-Relationship (ER) approach and human cognition paradigm for developing a learning- base to support and develop complex applications, act on inevitable "surprises" and cognitive capability development. The goal is to develop new technology for building computer systems that help us learn from the past, cope with the present and plan for the future. A need for active conceptual modeling for information systems rises from several sources: active modeling, emergency management, learning from surprises, data provenance, modification of the events/conditions/actions as the system evolves, actively evolving conceptual models, schema changes in conceptual models, historical information in conceptual models, ontological modeling in domain-aware systems, spatio-temporal and multi-representation modeling, etc. The most important needs are perhaps emergency management and learning from surprises, because they often appear in big disasters and catastrophes. In these kinds of situations, information systems must collect large amounts raw data, analyze it, conceptualize it, map it to the domain, distribute it, make conclusions, make plans for new activities, and manage cooperation of active officials. This effort aims to enhance our fundamental understanding of how to capture knowledge from transitions between system states, model continual learning from past experiences, and construct new interpretations on the basis of evolution of recognized system states. Problem: The advent of information technology allows us to model the world by mapping real-world scenarios onto information systems and applications in a more sophisticated way. However, today's databases and knowledge bases only reflect the static characteristics of the intended Universe of Discourse, captured by the conceptual model as distinct snapshots. The information system, which provides us with "almost recent" information, neither supports applications that require historical information nor provides information for projecting the future based on past experience and lessons learned. Without the relationships between snapshots, it is difficult to simulate the "what if" scenarios. Temporal and spatial relationships between entity behaviors and uncertainty cannot be fully modeled. Temporal concepts are not taken into account properly. Therefore, historical information and their changes cannot be managed, and the certainty of information cannot be assessed. Inadequate dynamic modeling constructs result in incomplete representation of the changing real-world domain. Approach: To achieve active information processing, learning from our past experience is essential. Learning is a continuous process by which relatively permanent behavioral changes occur, potentially as a result of an experience. Lessons learned are knowledge gained by reflecting on experiences that can avoid the repetitions of past mishaps to share observations and to improve future actions. While learning is an ongoing process that transfers knowledge from one state to another, a lesson learned summarizes knowledge at a point in time. To describe an experience is to model past events and associated knowledge from a different perspective. The domain can be described in terms of topic, time/space, people, scenarios/events, cause/effect and general knowledge about the situation or domain. Active conceptual modeling is a continual process of describing all concepts and aspects of a domain, its activities, and changes under different perspectives. The model is viewed as a multilevel (e.g. strategic, tactical, operational) and multi-perspective high-level abstraction of reality. Our effort focuses on relationships between past knowledge/data and current knowledge/data from different perspectives. We propose a framework for active conceptual modeling of learning. Topics: Technical Areas: Accomplishing our goal will require investigation of the following basic and exploratory research areas. Some other relevant areas may also be found. ? Integrating time, space, and perspective dimensions in a theoretical framework of conceptual models - Theory of human concepts, human cognition - ER theory - Mathematical active conceptual models - Multi-level conceptual modeling - Multi-perspective conceptual modeling - Multi-media information modeling - Mapping of constructs among conceptual models ? Management of continuous changes and learning - Conceptual change - Continuous knowledge acquisition - Experience modeling and management - Learning from experience - Representation and management of changes - Transfer learning in time dimension - Lessons learned capturing - Information extraction, discovery, and summarization ? Behaviors of evolving systems ? including model evolution, patterns, interpretation, uncertainty, integration - Time and events in evolving systems - Situation monitoring (system- and user-level) - Schema evolution and version management - Content awareness and context awareness - Modeling of context changes - Information integration and interpretation - Pattern recognition over a time period - Uncertainty management WRT integrity - Reactive, proactive, adaptive, deductive capability in support of active behavior - Combined episodic and semantic memory paradigm for structuring of historical information ? Executable conceptual models for implementation of active systems - Dynamic reserve modeling - Storage management - Security - User interface - Bench marking for Test & Evaluation - Languages for information manipulation - Architectures for information system based on the active conceptual model Capability: The active model can only be realized by integrating technology (e.g. AI, software engineering, information/knowledge management, cognitive science, philosophy, etc.) and combining modeling techniques. We will provide an enhanced situational awareness and monitoring capability through the following services ( See more: http://www.cs.uta.fi/conferences/acm-l-2010/): Applications: The ACM-L capability can be applied to a large class of applications including the following ( See more: http://www.cs.uta.fi/conferences/acm-l-2010/): Status: To begin framing the problem, SPAWARSYSCEN Pacific hosted two workshops on ACM-L in 2006. The first event was held at SPAWARSYSCEN Pacific to introduce the Science & Technology (S&T) Initiative and identify a Research and Development agenda for the technology development investigation. The first open workshop was held at the 25th International Conference on Conceptual Modeling, ER 2006, 6-9 November 2006, in Tucson, Arizona. The second open workshop was held at the 28th International Conference on Conceptual Modeling, ER 2009, 9-12 November 2009, in Gramado, Brazil. Workshop deadlines. Abstract Submission: April 20, 2010 Full Paper Submission: April 28, 2010 Author Notification: June 7, 2010 Camera-ready Paper Submission: June 30, 2010 Workshop: November 1-4, 2010 Formatting Guidelines ACM-L 2010 proceedings will be part of the ER 2010 Workshop volume published by Springer-Verlag in the LNCS series. Thus, authors must submit manuscripts using the Springer-Verlag LNCS style for Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Refer to http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html for style files and details. Papers in the final proceedings are strictly limited to 10 pages. Therefore, submitted papers should also not exceed 10 pages, but technical appendices, e.g. containing proofs, can be added to a submission. Papers must be in English, formatted in LNCS style and submitted as PDF-files. Submitted papers must be original and not submitted or accepted for publication in any other workshop, conference, or journal. Submission Guidelines Submission to ACM-L 2010 will be by electronic mail, only, to all three workshop chairs to addresses below, in PDF format, by the due date. All correspondence with authors will be via e-mail, so please ensure that your submission includes an e-mail address for the corresponding author. Workshop chairs and their e-mail addresses: Hannu Kangassalo; University of Tampere, Finland; hk at cs.uta.fi Salvatore T. March; Vanderbilt University, U.S.A; Sal.March at owen.vanderbilt.edu Leah Y Wong; SPAWARSYSCEN Pacific, U.S.A; leah.wong at navy.mil PROGRAM COMMITTEE MEMBERS (to be extended) Stefano Borgo, Laboratory for Applied Ontology, ISTC-CNR, Italy Alfredo Cuzzocrea, University of Calabria, Italy Giancarlo Guizzardi, Universidade Federal do Espirito Santo, Brazil Raymond A Liuzzi, Raymond Technologies, USA Jari Palom?ki, Tampere University of Technology/Pori, Finland Oscar Pastor, Valencia University of Technology, Spain Sudha Ram, University of Arizona, USA Laura Spinsanti, LBD lab ? EPFL, Swizerland Il-Yeol Song, Drexel University, USA Bernhard Thalheim, Christian Albrechts University Kiel, Germany | ||||||||||||||||||
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