[Sigdl-l] Call for Participation - DESIRE 2011 Workshop at CIKM - Data infrastructurEs for Supporting Information Retrieval Evaluation
Nicola Ferro
ferro at dei.unipd.it
Tue Jul 26 02:23:48 EDT 2011
** Apologies for cross postings **
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Call for Participation
Data infrastructurEs for Supporting Information Retrieval Evaluation (DESIRE 2011) Workshop
Co-located with CIKM 2011, the 20th ACM Conference on Information and Knowledge Management
Friday 28th October 2011, Glasgow, UK
http://www.promise-noe.eu/events/desire-2011/
Early registration deadline: 31st August 2011
http://www.cikm2011.org/registration
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AIM AND SCOPE
The objectives of the workshop are: to gather interested experts from the three areas of interest
to CIKM - databases, information retrieval, and knowledge management - and discuss how to address
the problem of envisaging and designing evaluation infrastructures able to store, manage, and
make accessible the scientific data and knowledge of interest for advancing the evaluation of
information retrieval and access tools.
The main outcome will be to produce a roadmap and initial best practices to guide the development
of the necessary evaluation infrastructures.
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
- An Infrastructure fo Supporting the Evaluation of Interactive Information Retrieval
Norbert Fuhr, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany.
- Ontology-based data management
Maurizio Lenzerini, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy.
ACCEPTED PAPERS
- Evaluation with the VIRTUOSO platform
Gérard Dupont, CASSIDIAN, Elancourt, France
Gaël de Chalendar, CEA, Fontenay-aux-Roses, France
Khaled Kheliff, CASSIDIAN, Val de Reuil, France
Dmitri Voitsekhovitchy, CEA, Fontenay-aux-Roses, France
Géraud Canety, CEA, Fontenay-aux-Roses, France
- A Lightweight Framework for Reproducible Parameter Sweeping in Information Retrieval
Richard Eckart de Castilho, Ubiquitous Knowledge Processing (UKP) Lab, Technische Universität Darmstadt. Darmstadt, Germany <br/>
Iryna Gurevych, Ubiquitous Knowledge Processing (UKP) Lab, Technische Universität Darmstadt. Darmstadt, Germany <br/><br/>
- Use Cases as a Component of Information Access Evaluation
Jussi Karlgren, Swedish Institute of Computer Science, Sweden
Anni Järvelin, Swedish Institute of Computer Science, Sweden
Preben Hansen, Swedish Institute of Computer Science, Sweden
Gunnar Eriksson, Swedish Institute of Computer Science, Sweden
- PatOlympics - An Infrastructure for Interactive Evaluation of Patent Retrieval Tools
Mihai Lupu, Vienna University of Technology, Austria
- Infrastructure and Workflow for the Formal Evaluation of Semantic Search Technologies
Stuart N. Wrigley, Dept. Computer Science, University of Sheffield, UK
Raúl García-Castro, Facultad de Informática Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain
Cássia Trojahn, INRIA & LIG, Montbonnot Saint Martin, France
- Principles for Robust Evaluation Infrastructure
Justin Zobel, Department of Computer Science & Software Engineering, The University of Melbourne, Australia
William Webber, Department of Computer Science & Software Engineering, The University of Melbourne, Australia
Mark Sanderson, School of Computer Science & Information Technology, RMIT University, Australia
Alistair Moffat, Department of Computer Science & Software Engineering, The University of Melbourne, Australia
IMPORTANT DATES
- Early Registration deadline: 31 August 2011
- Workshop: 28 October 2011
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
- Stefano Ceri, Politecnico di Milano, Italy
- Maarten de Rijke, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
- Donna Harman, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), USA
- Noriko Kando, National Institute of Informatics (NII), Japan
- Henning Müller, University of Applied Sciences Western Switzerland
- Shila Ofek-Koifman, IBM Haifa, Israel
- Christos Papatheodorou, Ionian University, Greece
- Fausto Rabitti, ISTI-CNR, Italy
- Mark Sanderson, RMIT University, Australia
- Timos Sellis, National Technical University of Athens, Greece
- Gerhard Weikum, Max-Planck-Institut für Informatik, Germany
ORGANIZERS
- Maristella Agosti, University of Padua, Italy
- Nicola Ferro, University of Padua, Italy
- Costantino Thanos, ISTI-CNR, National Council of Research, Italy
CONTACT
- Nicola Ferro, ferro at dei.unipd.It
FURTHER INFORMATION ABOUT THE WORKSHOP
The Information Retrieval area has a strong and long tradition dating back to the 1960s in producing
and processing scientific data resulting from the experimental evaluation of search algorithms and
search systems. This attitude towards evaluation has led to fast and continuous progress in the
evolution of information retrieval systems and search engines.
However, in order to make these data test collections understandable and usable they must be endowed
with some auxiliary information, i.e., provenance, quality, context, etc. Therefore, there is a need
for metadata models able to describe the main characteristics of evaluation data. In addition, in
order to make distributed data collections accessible, sharable, and interoperable, there is a need
for advanced data infrastructures.
Nevertheless, the information retrieval area has barely explored and exploited the possibilities for
managing, storing, and effectively accessing the scientific data produced during the evaluation
studies by making use of the methods typical of the database and knowledge management areas.
It is thus time for these three communities – information retrieval, databases, and
knowledge management – to join efforts, meet, and cooperate to address the problem of envisaging and
designing useful infrastructures able to coherently manage pertinent data collections and sources
of information, and so take concrete steps towards developing them.
Indeed, the information retrieval experts need to recognise this need, while the database and
knowledge management experts need to understand the problem and work together to solve it by using
the methods and techniques specific to information management.
Therefore, the workshop will gather together experts from these three areas, to encourage them to
recognise the urgency of addressing the problem in an integrated and coherent way, and to coordinate
efforts towards drawing a roadmap and suggesting best practices for an effective solution of the
problem.
The goal of the workshop is to understand how to make use of the expertise of the three scientific
areas in a cooperative way to avoid the duplication of efforts which may occur when addressing the
problem separately in each specific area and to trigger synergies and joint actions on this issue.
The workshop is intended to be a single full day workshop, consisting of: invited talks and paper
presentations during the morning; active discussion groups during the afternoon, engaging the
participants in the topics which have emerged in the previous sessions in order to define a roadmap
and best practices.
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