RSWEB 2011 - 3rd Workshop on Recommender Systems and the Social Web* (RSWeb 2011)
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Category RSWEB 2011
Deadline: August 01, 2011 | Date: October 23, 2011-October 27, 2011
Venue/Country: Chicago, U.S.A
Updated: 2011-07-30 09:20:00 (GMT+9)
Call For Papers - CFP
3rd Workshopon*Recommender Systems and the Social Web*(RSWeb 2011)Held in conjunction with ACM RecSys’11 on 23rd October in Chicago,IL,USAhttp://www.dcs.warwick.ac.uk/~ssanand/RSWeb11/index.htm
*** ext: 1 August, 2011: Paper submission***19 August, 2011: Author notification12 September, 2011: Camera-ready papersThe exponential growth of the social web poses challenges and newopportunities for recommender systems. The social web has turnedinformation consumers into active contributors creating massiveamounts of information. Finding relevant and interesting content atthe right time and in the right context is challenging for existingrecommender approaches. At the same time, social systems by theirdefinition encourage interaction between users and both onlinecontent and other users, thus generating new sources of knowledge forrecommender systems. Web 2.0 users explicitly provide personalinformation and implicitly express preferences through theirinteractions with others and the system (e.g. commenting, friending,rating, etc.). These various new sources of knowledge can beleveraged to improve recommendation techniques and develop newstrategies which focus on social recommendation. The Social Webprovides huge opportunities for recommender technology and in turnrecommender technologies can play a part in fuelling the success ofthe Social Web phenomenon.The goal of this workshop is to bring together researcher andpractitioners to explore, discuss, and understand challenges and newopportunities for recommender systems and the Social Web.TOPICS OF INTERESTWe solicit original contributions in the following areas:* Case studies and novel fielded social recommender applications* Economy of community-based systems: Using recommenders to encourageusers to contribute and sustain participation.* Social network and folksonomy development: Recommending friends,tags, bookmarks, blogs, music, communities etc.* Recommender systems mash-ups, Web 2.0 user interfaces,rich media recommender systems* Collaborative knowledge authoring, collective intelligence* Recommender applications involving users or groups directly inthe recommendation process* Exploiting folksonomies, social network information, interaction,user context and communities or groups for recommendations* Trust and reputation aware social recommendations* Semantic Web recommender systems, use of ontologies or microformats* Empirical evaluation of social recommender techniques, successand failure measures* Social recommender systems in the enterpriseWe also encourage submissions which relate research results fromother areas to the workshop topics.WORKSHOP ORGANIZERS* Jill Freyne,CSIRO, Tasmanian ICT Centre, Australia* Sarabjot Singh Anand,Department of Computer Science, University of Warwick, UK* Ido Guy,IBM Research, Haifa, Israel* Andreas Hotho,University of Würzburg , GermanyPROGRAM COMMITTEE* Shlomo Berkovsky, CSIRO, Australia* Peter Brusilovsky, University of Pittsburgh, USA* Robin Burke, De Paul University, USA* Xiongcai Cai, University of New South Wales, Australia* Elizabeth Daly, IBM Research, Cambridge, MA USA* Jon Dron, Athabasca University, Canada* Casey Dugan, IBM Research, USA* Rosta Farzan, Carnegie Mellon University, USA* Werner Geyer, IBM Research, USA* Max Harper, University of Minnesota, USA* C. Lee Giles,The Pennsylvania State University, USA* Kristina Lerman, University of Southern California, USA* Luiz Pizzato, The University of Sydney, Australia* Lars Schmidt-Thieme, University of Hildesheim, Germany* Shilad Sen, Macalester College, St. Paul, USA* Aaditeshwar Seth, IIT Delhi, India* Barry Smyth, University College Dublin, Ireland* Gerd Stumme, University of Kassel, Germany* Roelof van Zwol, Yahoo! Research Barcelona* Juergen Vogel, SAP ResearchSUBMISSIONS AND STYLEWe solicit short and long papers as well as research demos on allaspects of recommender systems in the Social Web. Papers should beformatted according to the style guide of RecSys'11.Long papers present original research work and can be of up to 8pages in length. Short papers report on work in progress and can haveup to 4 pages. Presenters of demo systems are asked to submit shortpapers describing their system.Papers should be submitted in PDF format by using easychair:https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=rsweb11
Paper selectionwill be based on a peer review process; there will be no blind reviewprocess - author names and affiliations should be included in thepaper.Important Dates* 1 August, 2011: Paper submission due* 19 August, 2011: Author notification* 12 September, 2011: Camera-ready papers due
Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
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