[Corpora-List] [Applied Ontology] CFC: Special issue on Formal Ontologies for Communicating Agents

From: fomi (fomi@loa-cnr.it)
Date: Wed Sep 20 2006 - 17:40:10 MET DST

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    CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS
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    Following FOCA, workshop held at ESSLLI from July 31 to August 4, 2006
    (http://www.loa-cnr.it/esslli06/):

    Formal Ontologies for Communicating Agents, special issue for the
    journal Applied Ontology (http://www.applied-ontology.org/)

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    GUEST EDITORS OF THE SPECIAL ISSUE:

    Roberta Ferrario (ferrario at loa-cnr.it)

    Laurent Prevot (prevotlaurent at gate.sinica.edu.tw)

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    PURPOSE OF THE SPECIAL ISSUE :

    Following the workshop "Formal Ontologies for Communicating Agents"
    that took place within the last ESSLLI summer school in Malaga, we would
    like to invite contributions for a special issue of the international
    journal ''Applied Ontology''.
    We especially invite the authors of the paper presented at FOCA 2006 to
    submit an extended
    version of their contribution. However, anyone is invited to submit a
    relevant contribution for the topic of the special issue described
    below.

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    DESCRIPTION:

    In recent years lots of efforts have been devoted to formal studies of
    human and artificial agent communication. Research advancements have
    been achieved along three main lines: (i) agent's internal states and
    dynamics, (ii) social interaction and conventional communicative
    patterns, (iii) semantics-pragmatics interface - especially in the
    dialogue context (i.e. the interplay between the semantic content of
    messages and the communicative acts themselves). There is a recent
    trend of studies trying to integrate these approaches in many ways. On
    the other hand, formal ontology has been consecrated as a good solution
      for comparing and integrating information and thus its application to
    this specific domain is very promising . More precisely, an ontological
      analysis of the fundamental ingredients of interaction and
    communication will make explicit the hidden ontological assumptions
    underlying all these proposals.
    Ontology has also proven to be a very powerful means to address issues
    related to the exchange of meaningful communication across autonomous
    entities, which can organize and use information heterogeneously.
    The purpose of this special issue is therefore to gather contributions
    that (i) take seriously into account the ontological aspects of
    communication and interaction and (ii) use formal ontologies for
    achieving a better semantic coordination between interacting and
    communicating agents.

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    MAIN TOPICS:

    We encourage contributions concerning the two main areas listed below
    with a particular attention to explore the interplay between
    ontological analysis and its applications in practical cases.

    * Ontological aspects of interaction and communication
        - Ontological analysis of interaction and communication
        - Studies on the structure and coherence of interaction
              - Logical models for communicative acts
        - Primitives of interaction and communication
        - Formal semantics of dialogue (dealing with ontological issues)
        *Semantic coordination through formal ontologies
        - Dialogue semantics and formal ontology
        - Dynamic ontology sharing
        - Ontological primitives for meaning negotiation, ontological
    alignment and semantic interoperability
            - Ontology evolution through communication
            - Concrete problems and experiences in terminological
    disambiguation and integration

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    ABOUT THE JOURNAL:

    Although a formal contribution is not an absolute requirement for
    contributing to Applied Ontology, the contributors should keep in mind
    the aim and scope of Applied Ontology, an interdisciplinary journal of
    Ontological Analysis and Conceptual Modeling.

    Applied Ontology is a new journal whose focus is on information content
    in its broadest sense. As the subtitle makes clear, two broad kinds of
    content-based research activities are envisioned: ontological analysis
    and conceptual modeling. The former includes any attempt to investigate
    the nature and structure of a domain of interest using rigorous
    philosophical or logical tools; the latter concerns the cognitive and
    linguistic structures we use to model the world, as well as the various
    analysis tools and methodologies we adopt for producing useful
    computational models, such as information systems schemes or knowledge
    structures.

    Applied Ontology is the first journal with explicit and exclusive focus
    on ontological analysis and conceptual modeling under an
    interdisciplinary view. It aims to establish a unique niche in the
    realm of scientific journals by carefully avoiding unnecessary
    duplication with discipline-oriented journals. For this reason, authors
    will be encouraged to use language that will be intelligible also to
    those outside their specific sector of expertise, and the review
    process will be tailored to this end. For example, authors of
    theoretical contributions will be encouraged to show the relevance of
    their theory for applications, while authors of more technological
    papers will be encouraged to show the relevance of a well-founded
    theoretical perspective. Moreover, the journal will publish papers
    focusing on representation languages or algorithms only where these
    address relevant content issues, whether at the level of practical
    application or of theoretical understanding. Similarly, it will publish
    descriptions of tools or implemented systems only where a contribution
    to the practice of ontological analysis and conceptual modeling is
    clearly established.

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    SUBMISSION DETAILS:

    Submissions, that will undergo a peer-reviewing process, must be sent
    electronically through the journal's website
    (http://www.applied-ontology.org/) by the deadline listed below.
    Detailed instructions for authors are available from the same website.

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    IMPORTANT DATES:

    Submissions December 20, 2006
    Notification February 21, 2007
    Camera-ready April 25, 2007
    Special Issue Winter 2007

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