Distributed and Mobile Collaboration 2008 (DMC)
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The 6th International Workshop on Distributed and Mobile Collaboration (DMC 2008)
General Information
Distributed collaborations within networked enterprises and e-science have been changing radically over the last years. Enterprises and e-science environments demand increased flexibility, interconnectivity, and autonomy of involved systems as well as new coordination and interaction styles for collaboration among people. The latest trends in distributed and mobile collaboration technologies allow people to work across organizational boundaries and to collaborate among/in organizations and communities. The ability to access the organization's distributed knowledge base and to cooperate with co-workers is still a requirement, but new paradigms such as service-oriented computing and Grid computing increase pervasiveness, and mobility enable new scenarios and lead to higher complexity of systems. Independently of the business and e-science domains, individual "collaboration" has become a hot issue. Virtual communities have enjoyed a tremendous popularity recently and are starting to require functionalities for collaboration in the broadest sense similar to those in business and e-science environments. The wide-spread availability of mobile devices makes support for mobility an arising topic in this domain as well.
Many questions to fully enable such scenarios are the subject of ongoing research and are attracting more attention still. For example: How to enable users to retain their ability to cooperate while not being in their home environment? What is the role of context and location in determining how cooperation can be carried out? How can resources be described semantically in a meaningful way to more efficiently exploit the limited resources in mobile environments by supporting better ways of providing data relevant to the user, enabling improved interoperability with the environment and with other mobile users, and deciding when and how to process data? How to provide support for ad-hoc cooperation in situations where the dedicated infrastructure is absent or cannot be used? How will service-oriented computing and Grid computing change collaborative software? How to support software in diverse, small devices such as PDAs and smartphones to access heterogeneous, large-scale resources, such as in the Grid, for large scale collaboration and teamwork, such as in disaster scenarios. How to provide interoperable collaboration services? Which is the shared vocabulary to be used to achieve a common understanding at the semantic level when the collaboration takes place over community or enterprise boundaries?
Workshop Activities and Goals
Software architectures for distributed and mobile cooperative communities must support the fundamental requirements for distributed cooperation: efficient and semantically enhanced information sharing across a widely distributed environment; constant and timely update of distributed knowledge bases with many different sites acting both as potential users and potential providers of information; shared access to a services; security and trust in these environments, different access modes to the same information, and so on. These cross-cutting questions require an interdisciplinary view on the domain and input from a variety of fields, such as workflow systems, groupware and CSCW, event-based systems, software architecture, distributed database systems, mobile computing, pervasive computing, Grid computing etc.
This workshop addresses the interdisciplinary issues of the domain and bring together researchers and practitioners from distributed systems, workflow, CSCW, mobile data management, databases, knowledge management/semantics, grid computing, and software engineering to discuss the common interests, share and exchange expertise and results, appreciate each other's results and contributions, and to provide application developers with facilities (middleware, infrastructures, architectures, tools) that enable the development and deployment of applications supporting distributed collaboration in mobile and pervasive environments.
Topics
- Coordination models, languages, and systems for distributed and mobile collaboration
- Models and architectures for loosely-coupled and large-scale teamwork
- Models and architectures for adaptive collaboration
- Peer-to-peer and pervasive Grid based collaboration
- Integration and interoperability models for distributed and mobile collaboration
- SOA-based, pervasive collaboration services architecture and protocols
- Ontologies for collaboration support and social software
- Semantic process and data description and management for distributed and mobile collaboration
- Interaction patterns for distributed and mobile collaboration
- Security, privacy, and trust in distributed and mobile collaboration
- Quality of service in mobile collaboration
- Context model for distributed and mobile collaboration
- Middleware for context management in distributed and mobile collaboration
- Middleware communications, infrastructure for semantically and rich data in mobile and distributed collaboration
- Context-aware collaboration middleware
- Enabling infrastructures to support collaboration in distributed and mobile environments
- Ontology-based personal information management tools (e.g., for calendars, address books, e-mail, documents, and ideas)
- Mobile and distributed collaboration tools in ad-hoc/virtual communities and networked enterprises
- Collaborative applications for mobile users
- Real-world case studies and experiences for distributed and mobile collaboration
Related call
*Special Issue on Collaboration Services: Methodologies, Architectures, Technologies and Protocols
Important Dates
- Full paper submission: March 17, 2008 (extended, firm deadline)
- Authors Notification: April 21, 2008
- Camera-ready versions: May 26, 2008
- WETICE advanced registration with discount: TBA
- WETICE workshops and on-site registration: June 23-25, 2008
Paper submission
Papers should contain original contributions not published or submitted elsewhere, and references to related state-of-the-art work. Authors of accepted papers are expected to present their views of the field at the oral presentation. Papers up to six pages (including figures, tables and references) can be submitted. Papers should follow the IEEE format, which is single spaced, two columns, 10 pt Times/Roman font. Papers should include a title, the name and affiliation of each author, an abstract of up to 150 words and no more than eight keywords. Authors should also provide contact addresses, if different from the submitting electronic address. All submissions should be electronic (in PDF) and will be peer-reviewed by a minimum of three programm commitee members.
Formatting Instructions and templates are available at
* ftp://pubftp.computer.org/Press/Outgoing/proceedings/IEEE_CS_Latex.zip * ftp://pubftp.computer.org/press/outgoing/proceedings/instruct.doc
Full papers accepted for the workshop will be included in the proceedings, published by the IEEE Computer Society Press. Please note that each accepted paper should have at least one author register and present the paper at WETICE-2008 to get the paper published in the proceedings.
To submit your paper, please log into the EasyChair's DMC 2008 webpage.
Workshop Program
WETICE 2008 Program
Monday, June 23, 2008 Opening of WETICE
Tuesday, June 24, 2008 DMC workshop schedule (see below)
Wednesday, June 25, 2008 Joint session (WETICE 2009 presentation, Workshop reports and best paper awards) Closing session
DMC 2008 Program
9:00 - 9:15 Title: A Context-aware Data Sharing Service over MANet to Enable Spontaneous Collaboration Authors: Juan A. Botia, Hoa Ha Duong, Isabelle Demeure and Antonio F. Gomez-Skarmeta
9:20 - 9:35 Title: An Architecture for an Adaptive and Collaborative Learning Management System in Aviation Security Authors: Yi Guo, Adrian Schwaninger and Harald Gall
9:40 - 10:05 Title: Mobile Ad hoc Networks for Collaborative and Mission-critical Mobile Scenarios: a Practical Study Authors: Gianluca Bertelli, Massimiliano de Leoni, Massimo Mecella and Justin Dean
10:10 - 10:25 Title: Service Discovery for Semantic Peer-to-Peer Cooperation Authors: Devis Bianchini, Valeria De Antonellis, Michele Melchiori and Denise Salvi
10:25 - 10:30 Final discussion and closing
Committees
Program Chairs
- Schahram Dustdar, Vienna University of Technology (Austria)
- Harald Gall, University of Zurich (Switzerland)
- Gerald Reif, University of Zurich (Switzerland)
- Hong-Linh Truong, Vienna University of Technology (Austria)
Steering Committee
- Schahram Dustdar, Vienna University of Technology (Austria)
- Harald Gall, University of Zurich (Switzerland)
Program Committee (being updated)
- Marco Aiello, University of Groningen (NL)
- Michele Angelaccio, Università di Roma 2 Tor Vergata (I)
- Farhad Arbab, Centrum voor Wiskunde en Informatica (CWI) (NL)
- Boualem Benatallah, University of New South Wales (AUS)
- Ivona Brandic, Vienna University of Technology (AUT)
- John Breslin, National University of Ireland (IE)
- Christoph Bussler, Staff Software Engineer, BEA Systems (USA)
- Fabio Casati, University of Trento (I)
- Volker Gruhn, University of Leipzig (D)
- Siegfried Handschuh, National University of Ireland (IE)
- Heiko Ludwig, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center (USA)
- Tiziana Margaria, Postdam University (D)
- Massimo Mecella, Universita' di Roma La Sapienza (I)
- Nikolay Mehandjiev, University of Manchester (UK)
- Guadalupe Ortiz, Extremadura University (E)
- Jean-Marc Pierson, Université Paul Sabatier (F)
- Omer Rana, Cardiff University (UK)
- Stefan Tai, University of Karlsruhe (D)
- Mathias Weske, University of Potsdam (D)
- Andreas Wombacher, University of Twente (NL)
- Gianluigi Zavattaro, University of Bologna (I)
Contact
Chairs of DMC 2008 at dmc2008@vitalab.tuwien.ac.at
