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    WM2009 Workshop on Knowledge Services & Mashups (KSM09)

    Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

    http://ksm09.mature-ip.eu

    Part of the Conference on Professional Knowledge Management (WM 2009)

    Organizers & Contact

    • Tobias Ley, Know-Center, Graz, Austria
    • Stefanie Lindstaedt, Know-Center, Graz, Austria
    • Andreas Schmidt, FZI Research Center for Information Technologies, Karlsruhe, Germany

    Important Dates

    • October 31, 2008 Submission of workshop papers
    • December 15, 2008 Notification of authors about acceptance/rejection
    • January 10, 2009 Submission of camera-ready papers

    Endorsed by

    APOSDLE IP MATURE IP

    Introduction & Motivation

    Large monolithic knowledge management systems as the one-for-all KM solution have largely failed to live up to their expectations. In particular, they have failed

    • to integrate into work practices of the individual, thus lacking adoption by the individual
    • to adapt to different types and sizes of companies, different type of employees as well as changing requirements of those
    • to acknowledge that knowledge management is not an isolated activity within a company, but rather an activity of “networked individuals”

    In line with the trend towards modular service-oriented architectures, we can observe that knowledge management solutions increasingly adopt more modular approaches. However, these developments are usually merely a decomposition into software components without taking into account the user of such systems. But the notion of service goes beyond components; it usually assumes that the granularity of functionality as well as packaging is motivated by usage patterns (e.g., business processes) and not purely technical (software engineering) considerations.

    This means that the shift from integrated knowledge management solutions towards knowledge services is not only a question of modularity, but also requires rethinking offer and demand (by knowledge workers) of such services. And it also requires a thorough understand of knowledge work and new conceptual foundations for its support (e.g., the knowledge maturing model by Maier & Schmidt or the seeding-evolutionary growth-reseeding model by Fischer) to identify basic knowledge services and their interplay, which constitutes another issue of service-orientation: combination or orchestration of different services to provide higher-level functionality. That is the real power of service-oriented approaches.

    In the context of Web 2.0 (which in itself is a user-oriented approach to web applications where the social ecology is explicitly considered), the notion of mashups has emerged as an integration paradigm which is lightweight and easy such that:

    • end-users themselves can combine different services (like aggregating and filtering feeds of content, calendar information etc.)
    • applications and services can easily participate and offer those feeds

    This goes beyond service-orientation (which is about empowering the enterprise to creating their own solutions without relying on vendor prepackaging) and realizes end-user empowerment as well.

    A recent development in the related field of learning support is constituted by personal learning environments, replacing LMS similar to services and mashups replacing KMS. They envision a work environment of individual tools (e.g., for communication, sharing, awareness, collaboration, networking) that allow the individual for organizing her learning in a very personal way. They offer a construction set of small services to be configured by the individual user.

    The workshop aims at bringing these strands of development of service-oriented approaches to supporting knowledge management and learning together to go one step further beyond the enthusiasm about Knowledge Management 2.0, which is essentially about social software for knowledge management. The scope of the workshop ranges from theoretical and conceptual foundations (which might come from various disciplines), methodical contributions up to technical prototype development and gathering experiences from evaluations.

    • Theoretical and conceptual foundations of knowledge services and mash-ups
    • Notion of knowledge services and mashups
    • Theories and concepts of knowledge work
    • Requirements for knowledge services and mash-ups
  • Knowledge Service and Mashup engineering
    • for personal knowledge management and learning (including personal learning environments)
    • for supporting communities and social networking
    • for organizational knowledge management
  • Personalization and contextualization of services and mash-ups
    • Knowledge representations and models for services
    • Semantic models and metadata
  • Knowledge Service Architectures and integration concepts
    • Lightweight mash-up approaches to the combination of different knowledge services
    • Semantic service descriptions
    • Evaluation of knowledge services and mash-ups

    Submission Instructions

    All papers in the conference proceedings have to be formatted according to the following instructions under http://www.gi-ev.de/service/publikationen/lni/ (in German; Latex Template, Word Template). We solicit submissions of the following types:

    • Research papers
    • Case studies and experience reports from industry
    • Position papers and work-in-progress
    • Demonstrations

    Paper submissions should should not exceed 10 pages, descriptions of demos should not exceed 5 pages.

    For submissions, please use the electronic submission system under http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=wm2009workshops and select the KSM workshop as track.

    Programme Committee

    Andreas Abecker, FZI Research Center for Information Technologies, Karlsruhe, Germany
    Steffen Lamparter, Karlsruhe Service Research Institute (KSRI), University of Karlsruhe, Germany
    Mathias Lux, University of Klagenfurt, Austria
    Johannes Magenheim, University of Paderborn (TBC)
    Ronald Maier, Leopold-Franzens-University of Innsbruck, Austria
    Gregoris Mentzas, National Technical University of Athens, Greece
    Claudia Müller, University of Stuttgart, Germany
    Sebastian Schaffert, Salzburg Research, Austria
    York Sure, SAP AG, Germany
    Robert Woitsch, BOC, Austria

    Posted in CfP | Comments Off

    ECTEL 2008 – "Time for Convergence" @ Maastricht

    Friday, September 19th, 2008

    This week I had the opportunity to attend the 3rd European Conference on Technology Enhanced Learning at Maastricht in the Netherlands. It was a good networking opportunity for the TEL community, which some dubbed as a “big family” (with all the different aspects of a family). About 130 participants included mostly players from the European projects in the TEL area.

    There were some interesting key notes:

    • Kia Höök inspired the participants to consider the body and the affective dimension of human behavior in their research and development. I think that there is a huge potential, particularly if we want truly holistic and motivating/engaging learning experiences, although it is not easy to see how to transfer her research results, e.g., to workplace learning support. One step in that direction could be the upcoming Call 3 STREP xDELIA where my colleague Clemens van Dinther is involved in and which will deal with emotions.
    • Manu Kapur reported on his experiments on “productive failure”, which showed that students who fail in groups confronted with ill-structured problems outperform those who are successful in groups with well-structured problems even in well-structured problem domains. This implies that short-term failure may not be a reliable indicator for longer term learning success.

    ECTEL08 has given itself the mission “Time of convergence”, aiming at bridging different learning contexts. The discussions at the conference showed that convergence it still at its beginning. This manifested in the recurring debates about the role of informal learning and whether the TEL community should target that more (as APOSDLE and MATURE have started):

    • There was an increasing number of presentations and discussion contributions (e.g, from Graham Attwell as part of the MATURE PLE conceptualizations), including the keynote by Roy Pea who emphasized the role of informal learning compared to formal learning (e.g., only 5% of a student’s learning is within formal contexts).
    • On the other side, Pierre Dillenbourg doubted that this turn towards the “informal” is helpful for the TEL community (he still acknowledges the importance of informal learning) and suspects that this emerging shift of attention is because of frustration about not being able to change the formal system.
    • Rob Koper emphasized in the closing panel that if we want to have informal learning support, we should first work on the acknowledgment and valuing of informal activities in career development.

    The EC (represented by Pat Manson, Marco Marsella, and Martin Májek) explained that investments into TEL have so far not entered practice in a sufficient way. Stefanie Lindstaedt pointed out that industry could be faster to introduce workplace learning tools, but for that we need to provide evidence about the impact, and this can only be achieved if we do not focus on short term effects, but also on longer term effects.

    Also for MATURE, this was a good event. On the first day, MATURE presented the first results of the five months of the project and organized a workshop on Learning in Enterprise 2.0. This was a very good opportunity to bring together the different strands of development (ethnography, concept development, and technical integration of existing tools within design studies) in an open atmosphere and to receive feedback from the community. Additionally, Graham Attwell presented the rolling out of a first simple PLE based on Freefolio in the UK, which is closely linked to MATURE activities.

    Technorati tags: ectel08, matureip

    Posted in conference, elearning, mature-ip, publications, workplace learning | Comments Off

    Learning in Enterprise 2.0 Workshop and first MATURE results

    Tuesday, September 9th, 2008

    Next week, I will attend the ECTEL 2008 conference at Maastricht. Together with several others I am organizing the LEB 2008 workshop (Learning in Enterprise 2.0 and Beyond), which aims at exploring the implications of web 2.0 and e-learning 2.0 to learning in enterprises. This will also be a good opportunity to see the results of the first five months of the MATURE IP and to get into discussion with us:

    • Informal learner styles: Individuation, interaction, in-form-ation (Ronald Maier, Stefan Thalmann)
      This contributions presents an informal learning typology based on the first ethnographic study.
    • Concept of a Tool Wrapper Infrastructure for Supporting Services in a PLE (Tobias Nelkner, Wolfgang Reinhardt, Graham Attwell)
      The authors present further steps towards the notion of a personal learning environment in enterprises.
    • Ontologies, Dialogue and Knowledge Maturing: Towards a Mashup and Design Study (Andrew Ravenscroft, Simone Braun, John Cook, Andreas Schmidt, Jenny Bimrose, Alan Brown, Claire Bradley)
      This contribution introduces a design study of combining the SOBOLEO tool for supporting ontology maturing and the Interloc tool for argument games.

    Technorati tags: matureip, ectel08

    Posted in conference, elearning, mature-ip, maturing, workplace learning | Comments Off

    Presentation on Knowledge Maturing at Ohrid Summer School

    Monday, June 16th, 2008

    In the middle of weeks of heavy travelling, I am currently at Ohrid for the PROLEARN/EATEL Summer School. Pablo and I had the opportunity to open the summer school with the first lecture on Knowledge Maturing: a different perspective on learning where we explained the main conceptual foundations of the MATURE IP.

    SlideShare | View | Upload your own

    Tags: scohrid
    Posted in elearning, hr, km, mature-ip, maturing, symposium, workplace learning | Comments Off

    Learning in Enterprise 2.0 and Beyond – ECTEL 2008 Workshop

    Friday, May 2nd, 2008

    Rethinking learning in enterprises in response to bottom-up participatory approaches is one of the main themes of the MATURE IP. So together with my colleague Simone Braun (FZI), Graham Attwell (Pontydysgu), Eric Ras (Fraunhofer IESE), Stefanie Lindstaedt (Know-Center), and Ronald Maier (University of Innsbruck) we are organizing a workshop at this year’s ECTEL conference in Maastricht on that subject: Learning in Enterprise 2.0 and Beyond.

    Recently, we have seen a paradigm shift in technology support for learning towards more participatory approaches in which learners are seen as active contributors. Within enterprises, this new perspective brings together traditionally separated disciplines like e-learning, knowledge management, and human resources development, but also requires a fundamental change of the culture of the respective enterprise towards an enterprise 2.0, which is characterized by enhanced collaboration and a cultural of employee participation. The enterprise 2.0 needs to understand itself as a learning organization, needs to leverage bottom-up processes (from the employee towards the organization) and aim at closed-loop approaches where feedback, continuous improvement, and encouraging small and large-scale innovations at all levels is key.

    In this workshop, we aim at exploring new ways of technology-enhanced learning within an enterprise on the way to enterprise 2.0, and the role of learning technology in the transformation process. This includes the exploration of individual perspectives in the form of personal learning environments (in contrast to traditional LMS or VLE), the community perspective, and the organizational perspective (new forms of guidance, e.g., as part of competence management strategies). There is a tension between these different perspectives, which has a huge impact on the success of learning technologies in the enterprise. Therefore, we are also looking for conceptual approaches addressing these issues.

    One important aspect in this respect is the consideration of motivational factors affecting the engagement in learning activities and the contribution towards organizational goals: how can we leverage the intrinsic motivation of employees and create learning contexts that keep this motivation alive? What is the effect of social relationships?

    An essential part of the workshop will be the interaction of the participants, aiming at a better definition/characterization of enterprise 2.0 and the implications for future research approaches. This will be facilitated by a larger discussion slot which will be moderated and guided by lead questions.

    Topics

    Topics include empirical, conceptual, and technical approaches in the following areas:

    • Designing personal learning environments
      • Learner as consumer and producer and learner empowerment
      • Relevant tools, services, and architectures
      • Bottom-up approaches for work-integrated learning
      • Connecting knowledge assets, e.g. with mashups, semantic structures
    • Exploring the tension between individual and organizational perspectives on learning
      • Scaffolding and guidance of individual learning processes towards organizational goals (business or competence development goals)
      • Exploring the transitions between individual, community, and organizational learning
      • Learning in distributed communities of practice and collaboration between different enterprises
      • Approaches bridging knowledge management, e-learning, and human resources perspectives
      • Employability, role of different types of e-portfolios
      • Collaborative and participatory competence management
      • Novel educational approaches and learning theories on technology-enhanced individual and organizational learning
    • Motivational and social aspects
      • Motivational and social barriers to informal learning
      • Designing learning environments to leverage intrinsic motivation
      • Awareness of social relationships

    Target Group

    The workshop aims at bringing together researchers and practitioners concerned with learning in enterprises including includes researchers from different backgrounds like information technology, (vocational) pedagogy, psychology, and multiple fields of expertise like e-learning, knowledge management, human resources, among others.

    Submission Types

    • Research papers (up to 10 pages)
    • Position papers (up to 5 pages)
    • Experience reports (short up to 5 pages, long up to 10 pages)

    Organization Commitee

    Andreas Schmidt, FZI Research Center for Information Technologies, Germany  [main contact, email: aschmidt@fzi.de]
    Graham Attwell, Pontydysgu, UK
    Simone Braun, FZI Research Center for Information Technologies, Germany
    Stefanie Lindstaedt, Know-Center Graz, Austria
    Ronald Maier, University of Innsbruck, Austria
    Eric Ras, Fraunhofer IESE, Germany

    Programme Commitee

    Alan Brown, University of Warwick, UK
    John Cook, London Metropolitan University, UK
    Knut Hinkelmann, University of Applied Sciences Northwestern Switzerland
    Helen Keegan, University of Salford, UK
    Barbara Kieslinger, ZSI, Austria (TBC)
    Christine Kunzmann, Kompetenzorientierte Personalentwicklung, Germany
    Tobias Ley, Know-Center Graz, Austria
    Johannes Magenheim, University of Paderborn, Germany
    Torsten Leidig, SAP, Germany (TBC)
    Jeanne Mengis, University of Lugano, Switzerland
    Andrew Ravenscroft, London Metropolitan University, UK
    Uwe Riss, SAP, Germany (TBC)
    Luk Vervenne, Synergetics, Belgium
    Amir Winer, Center for Futurism in Education, Ben-Gurion-University of the Negev, Israel
    Martin Wolpers, Fraunhofer FIT, Germany
    Volker Zimmermann, IMC, Germany

    Tags: elearning, enterprise20, km, knowledge_management, learning, web20
    Posted in CfP, competencies, elearning, hr, mature-ip, maturing, workplace learning | Comments Off

    OntoContent 2008

    Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

    After a successful OntoContent 2007 workshop, we are now preparing a next instance of the OntoContent workshop series. This year will will concentrate on user-centered semantics (under the theme of Web 3.0) and on collecting experiences on ontology engineering and maintenance from the fields of Human Resources, and e-health/life sciences/ambient assisted living.

    Ontology Content and Evaluation in Enterprise
    with two Special Tracks on Human Resources and E-Health/AAL

    in conjunction with OnTheMove Federated Conferences 2008, Monterrey, Mexico

    http://ontocontent2008.mature-ip.eu

    Under the buzz word Semantic Web a lot of research has been going on in recent years, exploring formalisms for expressing ontologies, reasoning algorithms for inferencing hidden knowledge in an open world, but also on “semantifying” different types of problems. But outside the Semantic Web research community, there has been little uptake so far. This is also due to the fact that the concept of ontology is more about content than formalism, and we are in dire need for content-related research and experiences. As Braun et al. 2007 stated, a “good” ontology is a balance of the degree of social agreement, the level of formality, and the appropriateness for the problem at hand that is supposed to be solved with ontologies. In line with this view, the workshop is looking for experiences and empirical results on which formalism is better suited, how to achieve or measure social agreement, and how to judge whether an ontology is appropriate. It is the mission of this workshop to report on these experiences and to reflect them back to the Semantic Web community.

    In the area of system design, there is currently a major shift taking place towards user-centered design, and the workshop aims to foster use-centered ontology-based system design. Therefore, we also welcome research and experiences on participatory and evolutionary approaches (i.e., with a continuously high degree of involvement of the actual users) to building and maintaining ontologies that pave the way towards a Web 3.0, bringing together users and semantics.

    We also strongly encourage to submit critical papers deriving lessons from failures with “ontologies in the wild”, not only stereotypical success reports!

    Workshop Structure and Topics

    The workshop will consists of three main parts: a general part on experiences with real-world ontology engineering and approaches to assessment of ontologies, a special track on ontologies in Human Resources and a special track on ontologies in e-health and ambient-assisted living.

    • Towards Web 3.0: a user-centered semantic web
      • lessons from Web 2.0 for ontology engineering
      • experiences with participatory and evolutionary approaches to ontology engineering (e.g., based on social software)
      • lightweight ontology formalisms (e.g., SKOS) and microformats
      • experiences/empirical results on lightweight vs. heavy-weight ontologies
      • experiences/empirical results on graphical modeling of ontologies
      • experimental evidence (e.g., from cognitive science) on conceptual modeling
      • challenges/requirements for maintenance and evolution of ontologies
      • good, best, and bad practices
    • Methods for assessing ontologies
      • Ontology evaluation
      • Quality measures for ontologies
      • assessment of ontologies with regard to social agreement, formality, and appropriateness
      • experiences with assessment and evaluations methods
    • Ontologies in Human Resources (Recruiting, Development, Employability)
      • modeling and representation of: Jobs, CVs, Competencies, Skills, Employees, People, Organizations, Social Events, etc.
      • HR upper level concepts
      • E-Portfolio (standards) and ontologies
      • Semantics of HR-XML
      • Semantic metadata for HR applications
      • Semantics in job matching
      • Semantics in learning technologies
      • Good/Best practices for semantics in HR
      • Maintenance of ontologies in HR
    • Ontologies in E-Health and Ambient Assisted Living (AAL)
      • Upper level concepts of healthcare and life sciences ontologies.
      • Ontologies of diseases, nursing, therapeutics, drug, etc.
      • Ontologies and ontology-driven approaches in Ambient-Assisted Living
      • Maintenance of ontologies in e-health and AAL

    If you feel that something fits into the theme of the workshop, but is not listed here, just contact the organizers.

    Submissions

    Types of papers include:

    • research papers (max. 10 pages)
    • case studies experience reports (preferrably from industry) (max 10 pages)
    • position papers, clearly analyzing current state of practice for future challenges of research (max. 6 pages)

    Papers submitted to OntoContent 2008 must not have been accepted for publication elsewhere or be under review for another workshop or conference. All submitted papers will be evaluated by at least three members of the program committee, based on originality, significance, technical soundness, and clarity of expression.

    Papers will be published in an LNCS volume by Springer as part of OTM 2008 proceedings. Excellent papers will be considered for a journal publication or as book chapters

    Important Dates

    Abstract Submission Deadline: June 15, 2008
    Paper Submission Deadline: June 30, 2008
    Acceptance Notification : August 15, 2008
    Camera Ready Due: August 25, 2008
    Registration Due: August 25, 2008
    OTM Conferences: November 9 – 14, 2008

    Organizers

    Andreas Schmidt, FZI Research Center for Information Technologies, Karlsruhe, Germany [main contact]
    andreas.schmidt@fzi.de

    Mustafa Jarrar, University of Cyprus
    mustafa@jarrar.info

    Werner Ceusters, University of Buffalo, USA

    Program Committee (partially to be confirmed and to be completed)

    Bill Andersen, Ontology Works, USA
    Keith Baker, University of Reading, UK
    Ernst Biesalski, EnBW AG, Germany
    Paolo Bouquet, University of Trento, Italy,
    Simone Braun, FZI Research Center for Information Technologies, Germany
    Christopher Brewster, University of Sheffield, UK
    Michael Brown, Skillsnet.Com
    Yannis Charalabidis, National Technical University of Athens, Greece
    Ernesto Damiani, Computer Science Department, Milan University, Italy
    Aldo Gangemi, Laboratory for Applied Ontology, ISTC-CNR, Rome, Italy
    Fausto Giunchiglia, University of Trento, Italy
    Giancarlo Guizzardi, University of Twente, The Netherlands
    Mohand-Said Hacid, University Claude Bernard Lyon 1 LIRIS – Villeurbanne, France
    Martin Hepp, DERI Innsbruck, Austria
    Stijn Heymans, University of Innsbruck, Austria
    Christine Kunzmann, Kompetenzorientierte Personalentwicklung, Germany
    Jens Lemcke, SAP AG, Germany
    Tobias Ley, Know-Center Graz, Austria
    Stefanie Lindstaedt, Know-Center Graz, Austria
    Alessandro Oltramari, Laboratory for Applied Ontology, ISTC-CNR, Trento, Italy
    Viktoria Pammer, Know-Center Graz, Austria
    Jeff Pan, University of Aberdeen, UK
    Paul Piwek, Open University, UK
    Christophe Roche, Université de Savoie, France
    Peter Scheir, Know-Center Graz, Austria
    Pavel Shvaiko, University of Trento, Italy
    Miguel-Angel Sicilia, University of Alcalá, Spain
    Barry Smith, State University of New York at Buffalo, USA
    Silvie Spreeuwenberg, LibRT, The Netherlands
    Armando Stellato, University of Roma, Italy
    Andrew Stranieri, JUSTSYS, Ballarat, Australia
    Karl Stroetmann, Empirica, Germany
    Sergio Tessaris, Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, Italy
    Robert Tolksdorf, Free University of Berlin, Germany
    Francky Trichet, University of Nantes, France
    Luk Vervenne, Synergetics, Belgium

    Sponsoring institutions/projects

    This workshop is organized in a joint effort by the Ontology Outreach Advisory (OOA), the MATURE IP, and the SOPRANO IP.

    • The OOA is an international not-for-profit association that consists of industry, government, and research leaders and innovators with respect to ontology development, use, or education. The general mission of the OOA is to develop strategies for ontology recommendation and standardization, and promote the ontology technology to industry.
    • The MATURE IP is a large-scale integrating European project (FP7) in the field of technology-enhanced learning aiming at support of knowledge maturing processes within and across companies, including in particular ontology maturing.
    • The SOPRANO IP is an integrated European project (FP6) in the field of ambient-assisted living and follows an ontology-driven service-oriented approach to construct a flexible and affordable platform for in-house ambient-assisted living solutions.

    Tags: aal, competence, hr, ontology, web30
    Posted in aal, CfP, competencies, hr, maturing, ontology, soprano | 1 Comment »

    Good Tags – Bad Tags: Social Tagging in Knowledge Organization

    Monday, February 25th, 2008

    Tagging as a lightweight, more participatory approach to resource metadata has become a hype in a wide range of disciplines, among them computer science, information management, and psychology. Last week’s workshop “Good Tags – Bad Tags: Social Tagging in Knowledge Organization”, well organized at Tübingen at the Knowledge Media Research Center, showed the different, but converging perspectives on tagging. Main success factors identified were:

    • simplicity (and the resulting ease of use), although a “tagging competency” was still considered necessary
    • enabling of participatory system design (i.e., tagging as appropriate metadata formalism for user generated content)
    • reduction of cognitive load for the annotator
    • flexibility and agility (not prescribing metadata structure, but allowing for emergence thereof)

    The workshop also showed different understanding of “tags” and “tagging”. Johannes Busse (a colleague from ontoprise working in our project Im Wissensnetz made a good point with differentiating between linguistic tagging (where a tag represents a syntactic string) and semantic tagging (where a tag is another resource, be it a semantic concept, a person, another resource etc.). Also, some definitions of a tag annotation were presented, which stressed that a tag annotation is basically a triple (resource, tag, user) with several other attributes (e.g., timestamp, but also additional semantic qualifiers).

    While tagging is a challenge for controlled vocabularies like library thesauri, it should be clear that controlled vocabularies and ontologies have their clear benefits in terms of disambiguation, multilinguality, levels of abstraction, and simple typos. So our contribution on ontology maturing, from simple tags to full-fledged ontologies actually showed the way: leverage on the simplicity of tagging for broadening the group of users contributing to the metadata generating, while retaining the possibility of higher-quality metadata. Interesting lightweight developments in that respect was the approach on Semantic Weblog by Benjamin Birkenhage.

    Posted in maturing, ontology, symposium | Comments Off

    First German Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) Congress 2008

    Friday, February 1st, 2008

    SOPRANO AAL 2008 PosterThe last three days I was at the first German AAL Congress at Berlin and presented (together with my colleague Christophe Kunze) our results in the area of context-aware technologies for ambient assisted living. This encompassed intelligent sensor systems for detecting activities and other vital parameters, our ontology-centered design methodology as well as our AAL ontology from our work in SOPRANO. I had some interesting discussions with a lot of interesting people ;)

    The congress had 330 participants on the first two days alone (and they had to close registration early in January) Demographic change was the stereotypical motivation slide… And the dominating discussion theme of the German-speaking part was the lack of business models, which was seen as a main cause for the lack of market take-up. Closer inspection revealed that the majority of problems probably is due to regulatory conditions, especially in the area of health and care insurance. This is supposed to change with the new financial system of the health insurance in Germany, starting 2009 where a lot of interesting things are expected to happen. Let’s see if this helps to reduce barriers.

    The European day was dominated by the new Joint AAL Programme under Article 169, which is supposed to introduce a new funding programme that is aimed at more short-term projects (2-3 years time-to-market). The first call will be published end of March/beginning of April. Available funding does not appear to be extremely high – so the call will probably be highly competetive. Expected consortia are about the size of FP7 STREPs. The proposals will be evaluated centrally (at an European level), however, the funding contracts will be made with the national authorities. Although it was claimed that the funding regulations are making it easier to participate, especially for SMEs, because of the national funding agencies, I believe this introduces additional complexity (while FP7 rules are – also for SMEs – quite simple if they have some consulting on it). The national authorities have budget limits so that situations may arise where a consortium is recommended for funding while the national funding agency does not have any money left… Probably, also with decentralized reporting, you will generate additional overhead.

    The emerging AAL community appears to be an interesting mix of various disciplines with surprisingly concrete visions and a challenging field for applied research where technology can achieve much – but only if it is embedded in a holistic solution.

    Posted in aal, conference, ontology, soprano | Comments Off

    OnTheMove Conferences 2007 & OntoContent 2007 Workshop

    Friday, November 30th, 2007

    The last days I was at the OTM Conferences 2007 (for the third time) and mainly organized the OnToContent 2007 workshop together with Mustafa Jarrar (supported by the OOA and this year by SOPRANO). Although we had less submissions than the year before, we decided to keep up the quality level (with an acceptance rate of 38%) and rather have less presentations in the workshop. The strategy turned out well, and there was a lot of interaction in the workshop .  Unfortunately, this year there was no high quality submission in the HR area, which is a topic particularly of interest to me.

    On the ODBASE conference, my colleague Andreas Walter presented his ImageNotion application for collaborative semantic annotation of images (developed in the IMAGINATION project). By the way, Andreas currently conducts an evaluation of the tool and needs as many participants as possible. So if you want to have the chance of winning an iPod Nano with video, participate under www.imagenotion.com/go.

    In the breaks, we had some interesting discussions in the “emerging community” of collaborative and evolutionary approaches to ontology engineering (especially with Pieter De Leenheer from the VU Brussels and Katharina Siorpaes from STI Innsbruck). Katharina presented on a simple, but promising game-based approach to ontology engineering, borrowing ideas from similar games for image annotation with tags.

    FInally, OTM local organization was much better than last year :) – no serious issues apart from bad luck with keynote speakers. But Frank Leymann was there to give a very good ad hoc replacement talk. 

    Posted in conference, ontology | Comments Off

    Professional Training Facts 2007

    Saturday, November 17th, 2007

    The last two days I was at the Professional Training Facts 2007 to present the joint work between me and Christine Kunzmann on Competency-Oriented Human Resource Development as well as a talk by colleague Simone Braun on social aspects in informal learning.
    Andreas Schmidt at Professional Training Facts 2007

    Posted in competencies, elearning, hr, km, symposium, workplace learning | Comments Off

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