[OAI-general] CFP: Distributed Computing Architectures for Digital Libraries
Michael L. Nelson
mln@ils.unc.edu
Fri, 8 Feb 2002 11:06:29 -0500 (EST)
Call for Papers
Workshop on Distributed Computing Architectures for Digital Libraries
http://www.cs.odu.edu/~jbollen/icpp2002/
to be held in conjunction with the
31st International Conference on Parallel Processing (ICPP 2002)
Vancouver, Canada August 18-21, 2002
http://www.eecg.toronto.edu/icpp2002/
Workshop Co-Chairs:
Johan Bollen <jbollen@cs.odu.edu>
Department of Computer Science
Old Dominion University
Norfolk VA, 23529, USA
http://www.cs.odu.edu/~jbollen/
Michael L. Nelson <m.l.nelson@larc.nasa.gov>
NASA Langley Research Center
Hampton VA 23681
http://mln.larc.nasa.gov/~mln/
Description:
Digital libraries (DLs) are increasingly common on the Web,
providing ordered, vetted digital collections to targeted user groups.
To date, much of DL research has focused on the acquisition and
representation of digital objects, optimizing and personalizing user
services, and interoperability efforts. Few DLs employ mirrors, much less
some of the more sophisticated, non-client-server architectures found
in WWW deployment, e.g. peer-to-peer systems and distributed storage
architectures. Although these new architectures have been succesfully
applied to a large number of Internet services, they have had little
impact on DL research. Are they technically suitable for DL use, or do
social and economic issues prevent their adoption?
This workshop will explore these issues as well as highlight some of the
more novel DL architectures. A range of theoretical, technical,
and speculative papers are sought to discuss and propose alternate DL
architectures and approaches. Papers are requested in the following
and related topics:
- Peer-to-Peer (P2P) systems
- Adaptive digital libraries
- Wireless access to digital libraries
- Grid computing
- Distributed searching
- Metadata harvesting
- Distributed storage systems
- Serverless storage and information retrieval
- DL requirements vs. ordinary web requirements
- Provenance, trust, integrity and archival issues
in distributed digital libraries
Important Dates:
April 20, 2002 Paper Submission
May 15, 2002 Notification of acceptance
June 1, 2002 Camera-ready copies due
Submission details:
Authors are invited to submit research contributions representing
original, previously unpublished work. Submitted papers will be carefully
evaluated by the technical committee for originality, significance,
technical soundness, and clarity of exposition. Submissions will only
be accepted in PDF, emailed to the co-chairs. Accepted papers will be
published by IEEE Computer Society Press as proceedings of the ICPP'2002
workshops. All submitted papers must be formatted according to the author
guideline provided by IEEE Computer Society Press (two column-format),
and accepted papers must not exceed six pages. Please contact the
co-chairs with any questions.
Technical Committee
- Kurt Bollacker, Long Now Foundation (kurt@longnow.org)
- Johan Bollen, Old Dominion University (jbollen@cs.odu.edu)
- Ed Chi, XEROX PARC (echi@parc.xerox.com)
- Fabio Crestani, Strathclyde (fabioc@cs.strath.ac.uk)
- Cliff Joslyn, Los Alamos National Laboratory (joslyn@lanl.gov)
- Thomas Krichel, Long Island University (thomas.krichel@liu.edu)
- Michael Nelson, NASA Langley Research Center (m.l.nelson@larc.nasa.gov)
- Luis M. Rocha, Los Alamos National Laboratory (rocha@lanl.gov)
- Herbert Van de Sompel, Los Alamos National Laboratory
- Simeon Warner, Cornell (simeon@cs.cornell.edu)
- Mohammad Zubair, Old Dominion University (zubair@cs.odu.edu)