Reasoning from Experiences on the Web

Call For Papers

 

Advances in web technology have led to vast amounts of user generated experiential web content in the form of blogs, emails, reviews and opinions. Proliferation of web content invariably also means significant increases in web usage. Typically many users will have similar searching and browsing needs and should ideally benefit from this commonality.

The WebCBR workshop will explore ways in which Case-Based Reasoning (CBR) can advance web technology in two ways. Firstly by enabling better analysis, retrieval and reuse of experiential knowledge residing on the web. Secondly by harnessing web usage experiences to improve browsing and searching.

We are keen to showcase research on novel indexing and reasoning schemes that go beyond link analysis and exploit folksonomies as well as ontologies, search and browsing that exploits novel evidence combination techniques from text, multimedia, user content and user interactions. This calls for hybrid approaches that draw from, and extend, research in related areas (e.g. Information Retrieval, Machine Learning, Computational Linguisitics, Information Extraction, Text Mining and adaptive user interfaces).

Topics

Topics will include, but not be limited to, the following:

Format and Submission

Workshop papers should be submitted in Springer LNCS format, which is the format required for the final camera-ready copy, with a maximum of 10 pages for full papers and 5 pages for short (position) papers. Authors' instructions along with LaTeX and Word macro files are available on the web www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html.

Full papers in PDF format should be submitted using the ICCBR-09 EasyChair Conference Site and the WebCBR workshop 2 track submission facility.

Important Dates

Organising Committee

Program Committee

Hosted By

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