Call for Papers
5th Workshop on Linked Science 2015 — Best Practices and the Road Ahead

Workshop location: Bethlehem, PA, USA (co-located with the 14th International 
Semantic
Web Conference)
Workshop date: October 11 or 12, 2015

Submission Deadline: 7 July 2015, 23:59 Hawaii time
Notification of Acceptance: 30 July 2015, 23:59 Hawaii time
Camera-ready: August 20, 2014, 23:59 Hawaii time
LISC 2015: October 11 or 12, 2015


Workshop URI: http://linkedscience.org/events/lisc2015
Submissions via https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=lisc2015
Hashtag: #LISC2015
Feed: @LinkedScience
Contact: [email protected]

Workshop motivation
Scientific dissemination has been traditionally dominated by publications and 
presentations. Experimental data underpinning the published findings often 
remain unpublished or hard to access. Making data entities identifiable and 
referenceable using URIs and augment them with semantics and scientifically 
relevant annotations could greatly improve data discovery and access. Linked 
Science champions an integrated process of publishing, sharing and interlinking 
scientific resources and data. This is of particular importance for scientific 
research, where open sharing and seamless access to complete experimental 
context is crucial for facilitating knowledge reuse and collaboration within 
and across disciplines.

Semantic Web technologies are gaining maturity and rapid momentum in adoption. 
The Linked Open Data cloud is continuously being populated with different kinds 
of data, such as Web table data (http://webdatacommons.org/webtables/), 
linguistic data (see the LLOD, or the Linguistic Linked Data Cloud 
http://linguistics.okfn.org/resources/llod/) as well as many scientific data 
(such as EBI RDF Platform; http://www.ebi.ac.uk/rdf/). However, researchers in 
many scientific research fields are only starting to explore the possibilities 
of using Semantic Web technologies. The interdisciplinary Linked Science 
workshop brings together researchers from different fields to discuss whether 
and how new emerging technologies, in particular Linked Data, and more 
generally semantic technologies, can realize the vision of Linked Science.

In our past four workshops, new ways of using Semantic Web technologies for 
integrating and making sense out of scientific data have been presented, 
ranging from real experiments and simulations to analytics data analysis, in 
support of mining of knowledge, enabling reproducibility of research or 
generation of new cross-disciplinary hypotheses. However, despite of these 
successes we still find scientific researchers are struggling with adopting the 
Linked Science approaches, with limited guidance on what constitutes as best 
practices and even more limited knowledge on the range of tools and 
technologies available. Therefore, in LISC 2015 we focus on “Best Practices and 
the Road Ahead”, to help diminish the knowledge gap between technologists and 
those less tech-savvy. LISC2015 invites participants to think about practical 
solutions to help apply Linked Science principles and open research challenges. 
We expect these solutions to facilitate the practice of Linked Science can be 
found in the yet existing gamut of tools and workflow systems. A special part 
of the workshop will be devoted to identifying challenges and gaps for less 
technology-savvy users in disciplines such as the humanities or the social 
sciences.
Topics of Interest

Topics for submissions include, but are not limited to:

• Tools and workflows for Linked Science
• Linked Data-based scientific experiments
• Integration of quantitative and qualitative scientific information
• Reports about adopting Linked Science
• (Semi-)Automatic hypothesis generation and testing
• Interactive semantic systems
• Active discovery
• Methodology for explorative empirical research on Linked Data
• Citation generation and evaluation
• Reasoning mechanisms for linking scientific datasets
• Novel visualization of scientific data
• Scientific Information Retrieval
• Integration of experimental data using Semantic Web
• Linked Citizen Science
• Ontologies for scientific information
• Semantic similarity in science applications
• Semantic integration of crowd sourced scientific data
• Provenance, quality, privacy and trust of scientific information
• Data sharing, publishing, and reuse
• Experimental setups for replication and reproducibility studies
• Case studies on linked science, i.e., astronomy, biology, environmental and 
socio- economic impacts of global warming, statistics, environmental 
monitoring, cultural heritage, etc.


Submission format

We invite two kinds of submissions:

• Research papers. These should not exceed 12 pages in length.
• Position papers. Novel ideas, experiments, and application visions from 
multiple disciplines and viewpoints are a key ingredient of the workshop. We 
therefore strongly encourage the submission of position papers. Position papers 
 should not exceed 4 pages in length.

Submissions should use Springer LNCS template. Guidelines for authors can be 
found at http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-7-72376-0 and 
submissions should be made to 
https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=lisc2015. Accepted papers will be 
published as part of the CEUR workshop series. Linked Science 2015 explicitly 
welcomes alternative and enhanced submission formats that include datasets, 
ontologies, and interactive formats. Authors who are preparing such a 
submission should contact the workshop organizers in advance to make sure we 
can accommodate for them in the submission and review process.

At least one author of each accepted paper must register for the workshop. All 
workshop participants have to register for the main conference, ISWC2015, as 
well.

Chairs
• Carsten Keßler (http://carsten.io), Hunter College, City University of New 
York, USA
• Jun Zhao (https://sites.google.com/site/junzhaohome/), Lancaster University, 
UK
• Marieke van Erp (http://www.mariekevanerp.com), VU University Amsterdam, The 
Netherlands
• Tomi Kauppinen (http://kauppinen.net/tomi), Aalto University School of 
Science, Finland
• Jacco van Ossenbruggen, CWI and VU University Amsterdam, The Netherlands
• Willem Robert van Hage (http://wrvhage.nl/), SynerScope B.V. and VU 
University Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Programme Committee

• Mathieu d’Aquin, The Open University, UK
• Boyan Brodaric, Natural Resources Canada
• Oscar Corcho, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain
• Hannes Ebner, Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Sweden
• Daniel Garijo, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain
• Alasdair Gray, Heriot-Watt University, UK
• Paul Groth, Elsevier Labs, the Netherlands
• Rinke Hoekstra, Vrije Universiteit, the Netherlands
• Krzysztof Janowicz, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA
• Simon Jupp, European Bioinformatics Institute, UK
• Craig A. Knoblock, University of Southern California, USA
• Werner Kuhn, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA
• James Malone, European Bioinformatics Institute, UK
• Zoltán Miklós, University of Rennes 1, France
• Eric Stephan, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, USA
• Amrapali Zaveri, University of Leipzig, Germany



--
Computational Lexicology & Terminology Lab (CLTL)
The Network Institute, VU University Amsterdam

De Boelelaan 1105
1081 HV  Amsterdam, The Netherlands
http://www.mariekevanerp.com
http://www.newsreader-project.eu


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