[AISWorld] The 1st International Workshop on Social Service Computing (SSC), December 5-8, 2011

Fahim Akhter fahimakhter64 at gmail.com
Fri May 6 09:37:43 EDT 2011


 The 1st International Workshop on Social Service Computing (SSC), December
5-8, 2011
in conjunction with ICSOC’2011 PAPHOS, CYPRUS
http://www.inf.ufrgs.br/ssc2011/



Nowadays, a good number of applications exhibit social elements reported in
people’s daily life. The objective of these applications is to link users
together to facilitate interactions and make them richer and more
productive. Social computing introduces a new dimension to the Web that goes
beyond connecting HTML pages. Indeed, social applications based on weblogs,
social networks, wikis, etc. have reinforced the role of the Web as an
inevitable communication means. Among all these applications social networks
are those that have attracted the attention of academia and industry
communities. For instance, a social network platform like Facebook is being
seen as a serious rival to some well established players in the Web business
such as Google. This major shift in developing Web applications permits to
accommodate users’ needs and requirements better, but raises major
challenges in an environment that has become increasingly complex, less
structured, and more hostile considering the great mass of knowledge
generally hidden from users.

Despite the growing interest in integrating social computing with focus on
social networks into Web applications, agility and competitiveness remain a
challenge for modern enterprises to compete and respond quickly to market
and business changes. Web applications are required to be interoperable. Web
Services (WSs), which implement the Service Oriented Architecture (SOA)
principles, seem recently to be the technology of choice to develop
interoperable applications that can cross organization boundaries. There is
a kind of synergy between social computing and service computing. Social
computing reflects relationships that people daily experience like
friendship and dislike on social networks. Service computing allows
developing applications as per the basic principle of “I offer services that
somebody else may need” and “I require services that somebody else may
offer”. The format of the workshop in terms of number of sessions, types of
papers (long or short), keynote speakers, and last but not least panel
discussions will be set upon completing paper review and author
notification. The workshop format will be designed to foster discussion and
developing action outcomes on key issues relating to social computing
research relating to service computing.

AIM

This workshop aims at gathering researchers from the fields of social
computing and service computing to think about the obstacles that hurdle the
leveraging of social sciences and techniques for application to services. We
target researchers from both industry and academia to join forces in this
new area. We intend to discuss the recent and significant developments in
the general area of Social Web Services and to promote cross-fertilization
of techniques. In particular, we hope to identify techniques from social
computing that will have the greatest impact on making Web services take
into account their previous experiences to build networks of contacts.
Another aim of the workshop is to identify important directions for the
social community to focus on that may be adopted by the wider service
community.

TOPICS

- Social networks analysis and mining for Web services discovery
- Group interaction and collaboration for Web services composition
- Social networks for Web services privacy and security
- Business opportunities for Social Web services
- Impact of social interactions on services infrastructures and QoS
- Social relationship between Web services
- Social behavior and Web service transaction
- Evolution of Web services in social-like environments
- Social Web services and robustness
- Reputation and social Web services
- Recommendation and social Web services
- Social tagging application for Web services
- User generated services (UGS), Mashups, and mobile Mashups
- Metrics and evaluation
- Case studies

AUDIENCE

This workshop will be of particular interest to service computing
researchers who are working in e-Business (a primary application area of
WS), those interested in developing open systems, in tracking and developing
standards, and of general interest to anyone using the social and service
paradigms for software development. We also believe that the Workshop's
topic area will be of significant interest to the wider IT community and
expect industry participation.

SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS

Authors are invited to submit original, previously unpublished research
papers. Papers should be written in English and must not exceed 15 pages.
For formatting instructions and templates see the Springer LNCS format.

Please, submit papers via the EasyChair conference management tool (
http://www.easychair.org/) in PDF format.

All submissions will be peer-reviewed by members of the international
program committee. Paper acceptance will be based on originality,
significance, technical soundness, and clarity of presentation.

Accepted papers will be included in the workshop proceedings. Workshop
proceedings are planned for publication by Springer Verlag.

At least one author of an accepted paper must register and participate in
the workshop. Registration is subject to the terms, conditions and
procedures of the main conference, please see details at the ICSOC website:
http://www.icsoc.org/.



IMPORTANT DATES:

Paper Submission dead-line: September 15th 2011
Author Notification: October 23th, 2011
Camera-Ready: November 7th 2011
Workshop venue: December, 5th 2011


PROGRAM COMMITEE


Workshop Chair

Noura Faci,  Université Lyon 1 (noura.faci AT liris.cnrs.fr)


Publicity Chair

Fahim Akhter, Zayed University, Dubai, U.A.E (fahim.akhter AT zu.ac.ae)


Organizing Committee

Noura Faci,  Université Lyon 1 (noura.faci AT liris.cnrs.fr)

Hamdi Yahyaoui, Computer Science Department, Kuwait University (hamdi AT
sci.kuniv.edu.kw)

Leandro Krug Wives, Instituto de Informática, UFRGS (wives AT inf.ufrgs.br)

Zakaria Maamar, Zayed University, Dubai, U.A.E (zakaria.maamar AT zu.ac.ae)



Program Committee

Adel Serhani, UAE University, UAE
Brahim Medjahed, University of Michigan, Canada
Cláudio R. Geyer, UFRGS, Brazil
Jamal Bentahar, Concordia University, Canada
Licia Capra, University College London, UK
Márcia Pasin, UFSM, Brazil
M. Adel Serhani, UAE University, UAE
Michael Sheng, University of Adelaide, Australia
Nanjangud C. Narendra, IBM Research India, India
Nikolaos Georgantas, INRIA, France
Pascal Poizat, Université d'Evry Val d'Essonne, LRI, France
Philippe Thiran, University of Namur, Belgium
Romain Rouvoy, Lille 1 University, LIFL, France
Said Elnaffar, UAE University, UAE
Sonia Ben Mokhtar, LIRIS, CNRS, France
Yacine Atif, UAE University, UAE
Youcef Baghdadi, Sultan Qaboos University, Oman
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