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    USECA 2011 - International Workshop on User-Focused Service Engineering, Consumption and Aggregation

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    Category USECA 2011

    Deadline: July 31, 2011 | Date: October 13, 2011-October 14, 2011

    Venue/Country: Sydney, Australia

    Updated: 2011-07-17 17:49:04 (GMT+9)

    Call For Papers - CFP

    CALL FOR PAPERS

    (extended deadline) July 31st, 2011 12 p.m. GMT-11

    First International Workshop on

    User-Focused Service Engineering, Consumption and Aggregation

    (USECA 2011)

    in conjunction with

    12th Int. Conference on Web Information System and Engineering

    Sydney, Australia

    October 13-14, 2011

    http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~hpaik/USECA-2011/

    In recent years, Web services and related technologies have emerged as a

    standard architectural paradigm for application development. The idea of

    being able to reuse existing software components remotely and mix-match

    them to build new applications has been well documented and supported for

    the world of enterprise computing and professional developers.

    However, this powerful idea has not been transferred to end-users who

    have limited or no computing knowledge. The current methodologies,

    models, languages and tools developed for Web service composition are

    suited to IT professionals and people with years of training in computing

    technologies. It is still hard to imagine any of these technologies being

    used by business professionals, as opposed to computing professionals.

    There are three areas of focus of the workshop: service engineering,

    service consumption, and service aggregation, which we discuss in the

    following.

    In the space of service engineering, we are seeking for submissions

    addressing the issues in creating and deploying services from the point of

    view of non-technical end users. As much as developers and technical experts

    have seen solutions supporting their work in the area of SOA,

    the non-technical users are still struggling with the engineering phases

    of the service lifecycle.

    When service consumption is considered, aspects such as user experience,

    multimodal interaction, multitude of possible consumption devices,

    operating systems, and user interaction styles need to be addressed.

    In the era of ubiquitous computing, it is becoming more and more crucial

    to be able to provide broad access to services, no matter when, where, and

    from which device.

    Service aggregation can be understood in multiple ways. Here, we want to

    address not only the issue of getting various services together for the

    purpose of building more advanced applications, but also for the purpose of

    sharing these applications and services with others. How can social networks

    be used as a vehicle for services and service-based applications?

    What are the limitations of using social networks, what are the benefits?

    We hope that the workshop will provide a fertile ground for growing

    solutions to the problems mentioned above, leading to solutions that are

    more consumer-centric, and ultimately successful on the market.

    Topics of Interest (include, but are not limited to)

    * User interfaces and interaction paradigms for services

    * Automatic generation of a UI from a service schema

    * Customizable UIs for a service

    * Business artefacts (documents, forms) and their interaction with online services

    * End-user driven business process automation

    * Mashup and lightweight composition infrastructures

    * Enterprise mashups

    * End-user programming for service composition

    * Visual/graphical programming paradigms for service composition

    * Services for supporting collaborative processes

    * User interfaces and interaction paradigms

    * Service consumption and aggregation with location context

    * Service aggregation and sharing in social networks

    * Service aggregation and mobile devices

    * User-focused service design and engineering methodologies and processes

    * Architectural styles & standards for end-user service composition

    * Industry case studies around the above topics

    Important Dates

    * July 18th, 2011 - abstract submission deadline (optional)

    * (extended) July 31st, 2011 12 p.m. GMT-11 - papers submission deadline

    * August 26th, 2011 - notification of acceptance/rejection

    * September 12th, 2011, 12 p.m. GMT-11 - submission of camera-ready papers

    * October 2011 - the workshop

    Submission Guidelines

    Research papers: max. 15 pages

    Demo papers: max. 2 pages

    Papers must present original, unpublished research results. All

    submitted papers MUST be formatted according to the author guidelines

    provided by Springer LNCS and MUST NOT be longer than 15 pages. Papers

    must be submitted via Easychair: EasyChair (submission system) (please

    note that this is a different EasyChair installation than the one used

    for WISE 2011 conference itself).

    Demo paper submissions must be accompanied by a video of the

    demonstrated tool/system (up to 10 minutes long), submitted with the

    paper through EasyChair.

    Accepted papers will be included in the WISE 2011 workshop proceedings.

    Submission system will be available at:

    http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=useca2011

    Workshop Chairs

    * Dr. Helen Hye-young Paik

    School of Computer Science & Engineering,

    The University of New South Wales, Australia

    email: hpaik (server: cse.unsw.edu.au)

    * Dr. Ingo Weber

    School of Computer Science & Engineering,

    The University of New South Wales, Australia

    email: ingo.weber (server: cse.unsw.edu.au)

    * Dr. Marek Kowalkiewicz

    SAP Research

    Brisbane, Australia

    email: marek.kowalkiewicz (server: sap.com)

    Workshop Program Committee

    (Full and Up-To-Date List To Be Advised on the Web)


    Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
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