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    MESC 2011 - ACM SAC 2011 Track on Mediation Services in Computing Environments

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    Website www.eem11.com | Want to Edit it Edit Freely

    Category MESC 2011

    Deadline: August 31, 2010 | Date: March 21, 2011-March 25, 2011

    Venue/Country: Taichung, Taiwan

    Updated: 2010-08-24 01:14:10 (GMT+9)

    Call For Papers - CFP

    The technical track on Mediation Services in Computing Environments (MeSC) of the ACM Symposium on Applied Computing (SAC 2011) will be held in Taichung, Taiwan, March 21-25, 2011.

    Scope

    The ubiquity of the Internet has thrown into sharp focus the complexity and the heterogeneity of its vast resources. The mapping of these resources, their transparent access, integration and interoperation pose a significant challenge that mediation services are increasingly called upon to address at different levels.

    The scope of mediation has widened to span many contexts in response to the demands generated by the emergence of new environments, new technologies and new applications. In foundational systems this undertaking assumes many forms and ranges from assistance in the search and discovery of resources to arbitration and negotiation by autonomous agents. Mediation presides also over the deployment of cooperative and collaborative schemes, by marshalling resources and scheduling processes. In service provision a manager mediates adaptively the configuration and allocation of resources in a variety of environments including Grids and Cloud. The seamless and transparent transitions between different administrative domains in mobile systems are also initiated and sustained by mediation techniques. Middleware support for implicit and explicit mediation is often a core function of many systems.

    It is in the interaction between humans and systems where mediation is facing its greatest challenge and where it is potentially most effective. Among the applications that fall within this scope, architectural frameworks in e-commerce, e-government and e-learning have been successfully introduced to mediate various levels of service, and create synergy between humans and systems. While hypermedia and personalisation systems represent specific instances of adaptive mediation, software agents have ushered in proxy interventions on behalf of users.

    These different forms of mediation are unified into a discipline underpinned by sound principles and supported by well-defined mechanisms. The fundamental basis for any mediation is that autonomous entities and systems need to overcome their environmental heterogeneity and resolve syntactic and semantic differences in order to meet specific requirements. Effective mediation is achieved by insulating the participating entities from the complexity of the environments of their protagonists, through adherence to common abstractions. The main function of mediation services is to facilitate processes such as data and system integration, coordination of behaviour, resource access and sharing, and participation in complex activities. Mediation services play a fundamental role in ubiquitous and pervasive environments.

    In managing differences between entities and resolving conflicting requirements a range of methods and techniques were introduced to support interoperation and facilitate semantic interoperability. Data transformation, resource management, configuration, adaptation and negotiation define a wide spectrum of mediation, from reactive behaviour to proactive intervention. Mediation services have emerged from their auxiliary role and are asserting themselves as independent systems whose function is enhanced by ontologies, context awareness and adaptivity.

    Topics of Interest

    The aim of this track is to provide a forum for the presentation and discussion of issues related to mediation services across multiple disciplines and to encourage participation of researchers and practitioners from academia and industry. The track seeks original contributions on mediation and mediation services related but not limited to the following topics:

    Mediation in resource management and brokering

    Arbitration and negotiation in mediation

    Data mediation and process mediation

    Personalisation and recommendation systems

    Implicit and explicit profile generation in mediation

    Ontologies and ontology mapping in mediation

    Mediation in hypermedia systems

    Context-awareness in mediation

    Self-configuration and adaptivity in mediation

    Autonomous and emergent behaviour in mediation

    Aggregation of mediation services

    Trusted mediation

    Mediation patterns

    Formal aspects of mediation

    Models and model transformation in mediation

    Aspect-Oriented mediation

    Domain specific languages (DSL) in mediation

    Mediation in collaborative and cooperative systems

    Mediation in ubiquitous and pervasive environments.

    Mediation in social and P2P community systems

    Mediation services in mobile contexts

    Architectural frameworks for mediation

    Mediation in e-commerce, e-government and e-learning

    Case studies and experiences of mediation services

    Important Dates

    Submission deadline: August 31, 2010

    Author notification: October 12, 2010

    Camera-ready copies: November 2, 2010

    Symposium/Track dates: March 21-25, 2011

    Submission/Publication

    Authors are invited to submit research and application papers and follow the template provided ACM SAC 2011.The template can be downloaded from the ACM SAC formatting web page. Papers should be 6 pages long. Up to 2 extra pages per paper are allowed, at a charge of $80 per extra page. A paper must not exceed a maximum of 8 pages. Papers should be submitted electronically via the SAC 2011 website. A paper cannot be submitted to more than one track.

    Papers submitted to the track will be subjected to a blind review process. The name(s) and address(es) of the author(s) must NOT appear in the body of the paper, and self-reference should be in the third person. This is to facilitate blind review. Only the title should be shown on the first page without the authors' information. Papers will be carefully evaluated based on originality, significance, technical soundness and clarity of exposition. The proceedings of the symposium will be published by ACM and will be available through the ACM Digital Library.

    The conference registration will be via the ACM SAC 2011 web site.

    Program Committee

    Marco Aiello, University of Groningen, The Netherlands

    Richard Anthony, University of Greenwich, UK

    Irfan Awan, University of Bradford , UK

    Sandford Bessler, Telecommunications Research Center Vienna, Austria

    Valeria de Castro,Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Spain

    Kuo-Ming Chao, Coventry University, UK

    Soumaya Cherkaoui, Sherbrooke University, Canada

    Jen-Yao Chung, IBM TJ Watson Research Center, USA

    Gregorio Diaz, University of Castilla La Mancha, Spain

    Larbi Esmahi, Athabasca University, Canada

    Howard Foster, City University, London, UK

    Christian Glasner, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Germany

    Nathan Griffiths, University of Warwick, UK

    Robert J. Hendley, University of Birmingham, UK

    Mohan S. Kankanhalli, National University of Singapore, Singapore

    Rania Khalaf, IBM TJ Watson Research Center, USA

    Michael Maximilien, IBM Research, Almaden, USA

    Massimo Mecella, University of Rome, Italy

    Minoru Nakayama, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan

    Gethin Norman, University of Glasgow, UK

    Kozo Okano, Osaka University, Japan

    David Parker, Oxford University, UK

    Omer Rana, Cardiff University, UK

    Martin Randles, Liverpool John Moores University, UK

    Stefan Reiff-Marganiec, University of Leicester, UK

    Dumitru Roman, SINTEF, Norway

    Jose Raul Romero, University of Cordoba, Spain

    Schahram Dustdar, Vienna University of Technology, Austria

    Weiming Shen, National Research Council of Canada

    Timothy K. Shih, Asia University, Taiwan

    Georgios Theodoropoulos, University of Birmingham, UK

    Mathias Weske, University of Postdam, Germany

    Fatos Xhafa, Technical University of Catalonia, Spain

    Muhammad Younas, Oxford Brookes University, UK

    Christian Zirpins, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany

    Track Co-Chairs

    For any inquiries please contact the track organisers:

    Rachid Anane

    Faculty of Engineering and Computing

    Coventry University, UK

    Behzad Bordbar

    School of Computer Science

    University of Birmingham, UK

    Guadalupe Ortiz

    Department of Computer Science

    University of Cadiz, Spain


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