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SENSE 2009 : International Workshop on Software ENgineering within Social software Enviroments | |||||||||||||
Link: http://www.prolearn-academy.org/Events/sense09 | |||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||
CALL FOR PAPERS
International Workshop on Software ENgineering within Social software Environments (SENSE09) http://www.prolearn-academy.org/Events/sense09 The SENSE workshop is held in conjunction with the Conference on Software Engineering (SE 2009 - http://www.se2009.de/), Fraunhofer Institute Experimental Software Engineering, Kaiserslautern, Germany, March 2-6, 2009 CONTEXT AND MOTIVATION Due to the new business models of the Web 2.0 and the new generation of Web users the development of social software requires a new SE approach. At the same time social software brings new possibilities for the SE process. Building on the positive experiences from the open source community we propose the term “social software engineering” which should include both Web 2.0 style engineering and engineering of the social software. Communication between different stakeholders, developers and end-users is an essential aspect for successful software engineering (SE). SE presents a social process that has to be supported by the communication enabling tools. SE-participants can express their opinion and exchange their ideas. With the globalization of software production, the social software can serve as a good option for socialization of SE processes. Special about social software is, firstly, its meritocracy; secondly, its extreme user-orientation and, thirdly, its focus on emerging scale-free structures. However, it is not enough to create tools using Web 2.0 business models. The development of social software is a social process itself. Using certain social software for SE, a community experiences endless evolution and requires continuous adaptation of tools to their changing needs. Therefore, the development of social software opens a new challenge for design of SE. The goal of the workshop is to bring together the researchers and practices interested in engineering process of social software, which in turn should/could be applied during software engineering. During the workshop a state-of-the-art discussion on advanced research and open issues on social software engineering will take place. The special focus will be put on design process and design guidelines of social systems created for SE support. Workshop topics include but not limited to the following: * Software engineering of social software * Software engineering within social software * Requirements engineering of social software * Requirements engineering within social software * Context-adaptive interaction * Cooperative information systems * Web 2.0 technologies * Community-aware systems SUBMISSIONS Authors are invited to submit original unpublished research as full papers (max. 12 pages) or work-in-progress as short papers (max. 6 pages). All submitted papers will be peer-reviewed by three members of the program committee for originality, significance, clarity and quality. Accepted papers will be published online as SE2009 workshop proceedings as part of the CEUR Workshop proceedings series. CEUR-WS.org is a recognized ISSN publication series, ISSN 1613-0073. Revised papers of the workshop will be published in the GI LNI series volume for SE 2009 workshops. Authors should use the Springer LNI format. (http://www.gi-ev.de/service/publikationen/gi-edition-lecture-notes-in-infor matics-lni-2005/autorenrichtlinien/) All questions and submissions should be sent to: klamma@dbis.rwth-aachen.de IMPORTANT DATES Paper Submission: December 13, 2008 Notification of acceptance: January 17, 2009 Workshop date: March 3, 2008 ORGANISERS Ralf Klamma, RWTH Aaachen University Volker Wulf, Siegen University Matthias Jarke, RWTH Aachen University Anna Glukhova, RWTH Aachen University PROGRAM COMMITTEE Andreas Oberweis (Karlsruhe University, Karlsruhe, Germany) Asarnusch Rashid (Forschungszentrum Informatik, Karlsruhe, Germany) Balasubramaniam Ramesh (Georgia State University, Atlanta, USA) Bernhard Rumpe (TU Braunschweig, Braunschweig, Germany) Dirk Veiel (FernUniversität Hagen, Hagen, Germany) Dominik Schmitz (RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany) Imed Hammouda (Tampere University of Technology, Tampere, Finland) Jörg Haake (FernUniversität Hagen, Hagen, Germany) Matthias Betz (University Siegen, Siegen, Germany) Matti Rossi (MetaCase, Jyväskylä, Finland) Steffen Lohmann (University of Duisburg-Essen, Duisburg, Germany) Stephan Lukosch (Delft Technical University, The Netherlands) Tommi Mikkonen (Tampere University of Technology, Tampere, Finland) Volkmar Pipek (University Siegen, Siegen, Germany) William Robinson (Georgia State University, Atlanta, USA) Wolfgang Prinz (Fraunhofer FIT, St. Augustin, Germany) |
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