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DPSS 2014 : International Conference on Data, Processes, and Software Systems | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://icdpss.org/ | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
CALL FOR PAPERS
International Conference on Data, Processes, and Software Systems (DPSS) Hangzhou, China April 21-23, 2014 http://www.icdpss.org Data play a vital role in software application systems including enterprise systems typically consisting of workflow/business management systems that use software processes or (web or e-)services adopting service oriented architecture (SOA). Data provide process (service) semantics (what a service performs, how its actions are related to the environment/context, etc.), and record progress of executions (activity or task status, resource usage and status, correlations, etc.). On the other hand, process execution further generates additional data that are extremely useful for monitoring, auditing, compliance checking, etc. Process descriptions and execution logs could also be managed, queried, mined, and analyzed. In practice, much of these data belong to the "big data". A technical challenge is to develop appropriate techniques and holistic approaches to model business processes/workflows with both data and activities in order to guide and help developing, managing, and improving software systems for enterprise and applications. Since its inception more than 10 years ago, service oriented computing has prevailed as a concept and is now widely adopted in software application development and investigated in academic research. A new research community for services computing has formed. However, the services computing community has yet to fully embrace persistent data (their modeling, manipulation, and management) in many aspects including modeling, composition, analysis, QoS, realization, inter-operation, and runtime support. This conference is aimed at providing a forum for researchers, practitioners, and experts in services computing and business process/workflow management and in data management to explore and discuss technical challenges including modeling, implementation, improvements, analytics, long tail, integration, and interoperation in contexts where both data and processes are present. Through a better understanding of the interactions between (persistent) data and processes/workflows, effective and efficient tools and techniques could be developed to aid development of software application systems. The conference seeks original technical contributions in theory, practice, and evaluation of design techniques for software systems to manage data, processes, and services. Topics of interest include but not limited to: Artifact-centric processes Business analytics Case management Choreography Cloud computing for data, processes, and services Collaborative business processes Data access methods for processes Data and process complexity analysis Data design for processes Data-centric and data-aware processes Foundations of data-centric process models Management and access of processes (models) Ontology for process models Process compliance and auditing Process improvements/evolution Process interoperation and cross service modeling Process mining Process-oriented provenance Processes as services Processes over incomplete data and knowledge Quality metrics Reasoning of data manipulations by processes Resource modeling and management for processes Scientific workflows Service and process management Synthesis of data-centric/aware processes Trust and security in data and processes Verification of data-aware/centric processes Workflow transactions Submissions must contain original contributions that have not been published previously, nor concurrently under review by other conferences or journals. Important Dates Submissions: December 16, 2013 Notification: February 7, 2014 Camera-ready: March 14, 2014 Program Committee Co-Chairs Diego Calvanese (Free University of Bolzano-Bozen, Italy) Jianwen Su (University of California at Santa Barbara, USA) Submission Details Submissions should be formatted according to Springer's LNCS formatting guidelines (see http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html). Submissions must be in English not exceeding 16 pages in length. Submissions should be made electronically and in PDF format on the EasyChair submission site: https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=dpss2014 |
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