Linked Science

Introduction

Monday, October 24th - 09:00-18:00 - Room: Koch

Scientific efforts are traditionally published only as articles, with an estimate of millions of publications worldwide per year; the growth rate of PubMed alone is now 1 papers per minute. The validation of scientific results requires reproducible methods, which can only be achieved if the same data, processes, and algorithms as those used in the original experiments were available. However, the problem is that although publications, methods and datasets are very related, they are not always openly accessible and interlinked. Even where data is discoverable, accessible and assessable, significant challenges remain in the reuse of the data, in particular facilitating the necessary correlation, integration and synthesis of data across levels of theory, techniques and disciplines. In the 1st International Workshop on Linked Science (LISC 2011) we will discuss and present results of new ways of publishing, sharing, linking, and analyzing such scientific resources motivated by driving scientific requirements, as well as reasoning over the data to discover interesting new links and scientific insights.

Find the schedule and further information on the workshop's website.


Accepted Workshop Papers

Paul Groth and Yolanda Gil. Linked Data for Network Science

Vinh Nguyen, Olivier Bodenreider, Todd Mining and Amit Sheth. The knowledge-driven exploration of integrated biomedical knowledge sources facilitates the generation of new hypotheses

Sebastian Nordhoff and Harald Hammarström. Glottolog/Langdoc: Defining dialects, languages, and language families as collections of resources

Stephan Mäs, Matthias Müller, Christin Henzen and Lars Bernard. Linking the Outcomes of Scientific Research: Requirements from the Perspective of Geosciences

Johnson Mwebaze, Danny Boxhoorn and Edwin Valentijn. Supporting Scientific Collaboration Through Class-Based Object Versioning

Todd Vision, Hilmar Lapp, Paula Mabee, Monte Westerfield and Judith Blake. Similarity between semantic description sets: addressing needs beyond data integration

Craig A. Knoblock, Pedro Szekely, Jose Luis Ambite, Shubham Gupta, Aman Goel, Maria Muslea, Kristina Lerman and Parag Mallick. Interactively Mapping Data Sources into the Semantic Web

Jim McCusker, Timothy Lebo, Li Ding, Cynthia Chang, Paulo Pinheiro Da Silva and Deborah L. McGuinness. Where did you hear that? Information and the Sources They Come From


Organization

Workshop Chairs

  • Tomi Kauppinen, Institute for Geoinformatics, University of Muenster, Germany
  • Line C. Pouchard, Extreme Scale Systems Center, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA
  • Carsten Keßler, Institute for Geoinformatics, University of Münster, Germany

Organizing Committee

  • Mathieu d’Aquin, Knowledge Media institute (KMi), Milton Keynes, UK
  • Frank van Harmelen, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands
  • Kerstin Kleese-Van Dam, Scientific Data Management Group at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington, USA
  • Eric G. Stephan, U.S. Department of Energy Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington, USA
  • Jun Zhao, Life Science Interface in the University of Oxford, UK

Programme Committee

  • Sören Auer, University of Leipzig, Germany
  • V. Balaji, Princeton University and NOAA/GFDL, USA 
  • Luis Bermudez, Open Geospatial Consortium, USA
  • Benno Blumenthal, Columbia University, USA
  • Chris Bizer, Free University of Berlin, Germany
  • Tim Clark, Harvard University, USA
  • Philippe Cudre-Mauroux, University of Fribourg, Switzerland
  • Anusuriya Devaraju, University of Münster, Germany
  • Stefan Dietze, L3S Research Center, Germany
  • Kai Eckert, Mannheim University Library, Germany
  • Peter Fox, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
  • Auroop Ganguly, Oak Ridge National Laboratory and University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA
  • Damian Gessler, U. of Arizona, USA
  • Paul Groth, VU University Amsterdam, The Netherlands
  • John Harney, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA
  • Laura Hollink, TU Delft, The Netherlands 
  • Maria Indrawan, Monash University, Australia
  • Antoine Isaac, Europeana, The Netherlands
  • Krzysztof Janowicz, Pennsylvania State University, USA
  • Matt Jones, UC Santa-Barbara, USA
  • Werner Kuhn, University of Münster, Germany
  • Chris Lynnes, NASA, USA
  • Deborah L. McGuinness, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
  • Jim Myers, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
  • Jens Ortmann, University of Münster, Germany
  • Paulo Pinheiro da Silva, University of Texas El Paso, USA 
  • Martin Raubal, ETH Zürich, Switzerland
  • Simon Scheider, University of Münster, Germany
  • Mark Schildhauer, UC Santa-Barbara, USA
  • Christoph Stasch, University of Münster, Germany
  • Anita de Waard, Elsevier Labs