Call for Papers |
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Aims and Scope
The Grid has emerged as a global platform to support
on-demand virtual organizations for coordinated sharing of
distributed data, applications and processes. Service
orientation of the Grid also makes it a promising platform
for seamless and dynamic development, integration and
deployment of service-oriented applications. The
application components can be discovered, composed and
delivered within a Grid of services, which are loosely
coupled to create dynamic business processes and agile
applications spanning organizations and computing
platforms. The technologies contributing to such Grids of
services include Service-Oriented Computing, Semantic Web,
Grid Computing, Software Engineering, Business Process
Technology, and Agent Technology.
The GSEM'05 conference aims at presenting and discussing
the impact of the latest theoretical and practical results
from the above-mentioned technological and research areas
on the engineering and management of Grid services and
service-oriented applications.
The conference aims at bringing together researchers and
practitioners from diverse fields and interests, including
Web Services, Semantic Web, Grid infrastructures, software
components, workflow, intelligent agents and negotiation
technologies, service management, and those looking for new
business and research cooperation opportunities in the area
of Grid services and service-oriented applications.
Suggested Topics
The topics of the conference include all areas of grid
service engineering and management, but not limited to:
- Modeling, description and discovery of services on the Grid
- Deployment, packaging, and distribution of Grid services
- Grid service architectures, infrastructures and deployment environments
- Software engineering for Grid service creation, development, and generation
- Service provisioning and Quality of Service for Grid services
- Workflow planning and composition for Grid services
- Service level agreement negotiation and contracting
- Adaptive management, coordination, monitoring and control of Grid services and applications
- Formation and management of virtual organizations
- Intelligent services and Grid service agents
- Security, performance and reliability engineering in service Grids
- Testing and benchmarking of grid services
- Grid service business models and applications
- Standardization aspects
Submission Guidelines
We invite original research papers, work-in-progress
reports and industrial experiences describing advances in
the above areas, that have not been published previously,
nor already submitted to other conferences in parallel
with this conference. Full papers must not exceed 15 pages
and follow the author instructions of Springer-Verlag that
can be found at www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html,
see also www.netobjectdays.org
(Menu: For Authors). All papers should be in Adobe
portable document format (PDF) or PostScript format. The
paper should have a cover page, which includes a 200-word
abstract, a list of keywords, and author's e-mail address.
Authors should submit a full paper via electronic
submission. All papers
submitted for GSEM'05 will be peer-reviewed and similarly
to the previous GSEM'04 the accepted papers are
planned to be published in a special proceedings by
Springer Verlag, Lecture Notes in Computer Science
(LNCS). A selection of high quality papers will be invited
to submit extended and enhanced versions of their papers
to the upcoming special issue of a major international
journal.
Important Dates
- Submission of Papers: Passed
- Notification: Passed
- Final Version Due: June 24, 2005
- Conference: September 19-22, 2005
Conference Chairs
Organising Committee
Program Committee*
- Stanislaw Ambroszkiewicz (Polish Academy of Science, Poland)
- Alvaro E. Arenas (CCLRC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, UK)
- Peter Braun (Swinburne University of Technology, Australia)
- Jos de Bruijn (DERI, Austria)
- Rajkumar Buyya (University of Melbourne, Australia)
- Lawrence Cavedon (Stanford University, USA)
- Dieter Fensel (DERI, Austria)
- Bogdan Franczyk (University of Leipzig, Germany)
- Jun Han (Swinburne University of Technology, Australia)
- Yanbo Han (Chinese Academy of Sciences, China)
- Ying Huang (IBM T.J. Watson Research Center, USA)
- Patrick Hung (University of Ontario, Canada)
- Shonali Krishnaswamy (Monash University, AUS)
- Martin von Löwis (Hasso-Plattner-Institut/University of Potsdam, Germany)
- Seng Loke (Monash University, Australia)
- Zakaria Maamar (Zayed University, UAE)
- David Martin (SRI International, USA)
- Ingo Melzer (DaimlerChrysler Research Center, Germany
- Josef Noll (Telenor, Norway)
- Jean-Philippe Martin-Flatin (CERN, Switzerland)
- Roy Oberhauser (Aalen University of Applied Sciences, Germany)
- Lin Padgham (RMIT, Australia)
- Daniel Scheibli (SAP Research Center, Germany)
- Ming-Chien Shan (HP Lab, USA)
- Steffen Staab (University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany)
- Do van Thanh (Telenor R&D, Norway)
- Hua Tianfield (Glasgow Caledonian University, UK)
- Rainer Unland (University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany)
- Gabriel Wainer (Carleton University, Canada)
- Mathias Weske (Hasso-Plattner-Institut/University of Potsdam, Germany)
- Stefan Wesner (University of Stuttgart, Germany)
- Steve Wilmott (Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya, Spain)
- Jun Yan (Swinburne University of Technology, Australia)
- Jian Yang (Macquarie University, Australia)
- Yun Yang (Swinburne University of Technology, Australia)
* Confirmed to date
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