Talk:ISWC 2020

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Auch hier die Frage: "Virtual event" eintragen oder "Virtual conference" oder "Online conference"? Im Feld Ort oder im Feld Land? Kommentar: Originally planned: Athens, Greece? Britta Seeberg

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Wikidata Workshop @ ISWC 2020

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[CfP] Wikidata Workshop @ ISWC 2020 (Lucie Kaffee)

  • The First Wikidata Workshop*

Co-located with the 19th International Conference on Semantic Web (ISWC 2020). Date: To be announced (late October, early November) The workshop will be held online, afternoon European time.

Website: https://wikidataworkshop.github.io/

Important dates

Papers due: August 10, 2020 Notification of accepted papers: September 11, 2020 Camera-ready papers due: September 21, 2020 Workshop date: To be announced (end October/early November)

Overview

Wikidata is an openly available knowledge base, hosted by the Wikimedia Foundation. It can be accessed and edited by both humans and machines and acts as a common structured-data repository for several Wikimedia projects, including Wikipedia, Wiktionary, and Wikisource. It is used in a variety of applications by researchers and practitioners alike. In recent years, we have seen an increase in the number of publications around Wikidata. While there are several dedicated venues for the broader Wikidata community to meet, none of them focuses on publishing original, peer-reviewed research. This workshop fills this gap - we hope to provide a forum to build this fledgling scientific community and promote novel work and resources that support it. The workshop seeks original contributions that address the opportunities and challenges of creating, contributing to, and using a global, collaborative, open-domain, multilingual knowledge graph such as Wikidata. We encourage a range of submissions, including novel research, opinion pieces, and descriptions of systems and resources, which are naturally linked to Wikidata and its ecosystem, or enabled by it. What we’re less interested in are works which use Wikidata alongside or in lieu of other resources to carry out some computational task - unless the work feeds back into the Wikidata ecosystem, for instance by improving or commenting on some Wikidata aspect, or suggesting new design features, tools and practices. We welcome interdisciplinary work, as well as interesting applications which shed light on the benefits of Wikidata and discuss areas of improvement. The workshop is planned as an interactive half-day event, in which most of the time will be dedicated to discussions and exchange rather than frontal presentations. For this reason, all accepted papers will be presented in short talks and accompanied by a poster. We are considering online options in response to ongoing challenges such as travel restrictions and the recent Covid-19 pandemic.

Topics

Topics of submissions include, but are not limited to:

- Data quality and vandalism detection in Wikidata - Referencing in Wikidata - Anomaly, bias, or novelty detection in Wikidata - Algorithms for aligning Wikidata with other knowledge graphs - The Semantic Web and Wikidata - Community interaction in Wikidata - Multilingual aspects in Wikidata - Machine learning approaches to improve data quality in Wikidata - Tools, bots and datasets for improving or evaluating Wikidata - Participation, diversity and inclusivity aspects in the Wikidata ecosystem - Human-bot interaction - Managing knowledge evolution in Wikidata

Submission guidelines

We welcome the following types of contributions.

- Full research paper: Novel research contributions (7-12 pages) - Short research paper: Novel research contributions of smaller scope than full papers (3-6 pages) - Position paper: Well-argued ideas and opinion pieces, not yet in the scope of a research contribution (6-8 pages) - Resource paper: New dataset or other resource directly relevant to Wikidata, including the publication of that resource (8-12 pages) - Demo paper: New system critically enabled by Wikidata (6-8 pages)

Submissions must be as PDF or HTML, formatted in the style of the Springer Publications format for Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS). For details on the LNCS style, see Springer’s Author Instructions. The papers will be peer-reviewed by at least two researchers. Accepted papers will be published as open access papers on CEUR (we only publish to CEUR if the authors agree to have their papers published).

Papers have to be submitted through easychair: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=wikidataworkshop2020

Proceedings

The complete set of papers will be published with the CEUR Workshop Proceedings (CEUR-WS.org).

Organizing committee

- Lucie-Aimée Kaffee, University of Southampton - Oana Tifrea-Marciuska, Bloomberg - Elena Simperl, King’s College London - Denny Vrandečić, Google AI

Programme committee

- Lydia Pintscher, Wikidata, Wikimedia Deutschland - Maria-Esther Vidal, TIB Hannover - Miriam Redi, Wikimedia Foundation - Edgar Meij, Bloomberg - Simon Razniewski, Max Planck Institute for Informatics - Alessandro Piscopo, BBC - Pavlos Vougiouklis, Huawei Technologies, Edinburgh - Marco Ponza, University of Pisa - Markus Krötzsch, Technische Universität Dresden - Andrew D. Gordon, Microsoft Research & University of Edinburgh - Cristina Sarasua, University of Zurich - Aidan Hogan, Universidad de Chile - Claudia Müller-Birn, FU Berlin - Finn Årup Nielsen, Technical University of Denmark