[iaoa-general] CFP JOCCH Special Issue: Semantic Web and Ontology Design for Cultural Heritage
Roberta Ferrario
roberta at loa.istc.cnr.it
Thu Jan 13 14:20:31 CET 2022
CALL FOR PAPERS
JOCCH Special Issue: Semantic Web and Ontology Design for Cultural
Heritage
https://dl.acm.org/journal/JOCCH/semanticwebch
*AIM AND SCOPE*
This special issue follows the workshop SWODCH - Semantic Web and
Ontology Design for Cultural Heritage -
(https://swodch2021.inf.unibz.it/), part of the BoSK - Bolzano Summer of
Knowledge - held virtually on September 20 and 21, 2021.
Starting from the assumption that transdisciplinarity is a key
characteristic of the digital Cultural Heritage research field and that
knowledge representation computational techniques are mature enough to
provide full-fledged virtual environments to Humanities for a new era of
digitally enabled research and teaching, the aim of the 2021 edition of
SWODCH was to create a fruitful dialogue among the communities of
ontology designers, knowledge representation specialists, and Semantic
Web scholars and practitioners focusing on digital Cultural Heritage.
Similarly, the scope of this special issue includes: philosophical and
social analyses of Cultural Heritage data and knowledge, including
already existing community modelling practices, as well as the
historical and social dimensions of data and the explicit representation
of these dimensions in a way that is transparent and accessible to both
humans and machines. We also welcome studies of principled methodologies
and technologies to semantically characterize, integrate, and reason on
data and domain knowledge models. Finally, we invite the submission of
contributions discussing recent experiences in developing and deploying
Semantic Web solutions to expose, link and search Cultural Heritage data
in a harmonised way, and to support the exploitation of already existing
semantic models and datasets.
*TOPICS*
We invite the authors of papers that were presented at SWODCH to submit
extended versions of their workshop papers (This generally means that at
least 25% of the paper is material not previously published). We also
invite any researcher or practitioner in Digital Cultural Heritage to
submit original work related (but not limited) to one or more of the
following topic areas:
Conceptual analysis and ontology design for the Digital Humanities:
- Domain ontologies or conceptual models for history, history of arts,
book studies, theatre, literature, editorial practices, archeology,
musicology, cultural and natural heritage (including architectural
heritage), among others.
- Methodological aspects of ontology development for the Digital
Humanities, including the need for modelling the social (contextual)
dimension of both data and ontologies
- Use of ontology design patterns
- Case studies based on and lessons learned from the use of CIDOC-CRM or
FRBR
- Logical and ontological analysis of CIDOC-CRM or FRBR, e.g., with
respect to foundational ontologies (DOLCE, UFO, BFO, etc.)
- Application of formal ontology theories for knowledge representation
or data management in the Digital Humanities
- Philosophical and sociological analysis of both digital models and
modelling practices in the Digital Humanities
- Social studies on the policies towards the standardization of
ontologies in the Digital Humanities
Semantic Web publishing, architectures and SW-based interaction for
Cultural Heritage
- Semantic Web content creation, annotation, and extraction
- Ontology mapping, merging, and alignment
- Virtual Cultural Heritage collections
- Peer-to-peer Cultural Heritage architectures
- E-infrastructures for Cultural Heritage
- Interoperability, virtually integrated Cultural Heritage collections
- Ontology-based data access or virtual knowledge graphs
- Reasoning strategies (e.g. context, temporal, spatial)
- Search, querying, and visualization of the Cultural Heritage on the
Semantic Web
- Personalized access of Cultural Heritage collections
- Context-aware information presentation
- Navigation and browsing (facets)
- Social aspects in Cultural Heritage access and presentation
- Trust and provenance issues in mixed collection and mixed vocabulary
applications
Semantic Web-based applications for Cultural Heritage with clear lessons
learned:
- Digital Libraries
- Museums (virtual collections, mobile/ web-based museum guides)
- Tourist services
- Ambient Cultural Heritage
- Creative industries
*WORKSHOP CO-CHAIRS*
- Antonis Bikakis, University College London, U.K.
- Roberta Ferrario, ISTC-CNR, Italy
- Stéphane Jean, University of Poitiers - ENSMA, France
- Béatrice Markhoff, University François Rabelais de Tours, France
- Alessandro Mosca, Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, Italy
- Marianna Nicolosi Asmundo, University of Catania, Italy
*IMPORTANT DATES*
- Manuscript submission deadline: June 1st, 2022
- Manuscript review feedback: June 26, 2021
Please note that all submitted papers will be reviewed as soon as they
are received. Accepted papers are published Online First until the
complete Special Issue is published.
*SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS*
Please follow the instructions given here:
https://dl.acm.org/journal/jocch/author-guidelines
You may skip the general description of the Topical Scope and the
accepted type of papers, which do not apply to Special Issues, for which
there is a deadline as indicated in the present Call for Papers. Only
the formatting and submission instructions are relevant in this case.
When choosing the type of paper, select: "Special Issue: Semantic Web
and Ontology Design for Cultural Heritage".
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