RSE-FT2010

Contact: Alex Stolz, alex.stolz@ebusiness-unibw.org
Lecturers:Martin Hepp


Schedule

Tuesdays, 14:00 - 15:30, Room 36/1134

Apr 27, 2010

Christian Fuerber: Using SPIN & SPARQL for DQM

May 5, 2010

10:00 - 12:30: GoodRelations Brainstorming & Roadmap Meeting

May 11, 2010

WIINF Seminar Theses: Review of Tables of Contents

  • Martin Hille: Einsatz von GoodRelations für Auto-, Fahrrad- und Bootsvermietung (Usage of GoodRelations for Car, Bike, and Boat Rental) (Betreuer: Alex Stolz)
  • Ugur Uysal: Einsatz von GoodRelations für Automobilhändler und Werkstätten (Usage of GoodRelations for Car Sales and Repair) (Betreuer: Andreas Radinger)
  • Norman Dreßler: Einsatz von GoodRelations in der Gastronomie (Usage of GoodRelations for Restaurants and Cáfes) (Betreuer: Andreas Radinger)
  • Klaus-Stephan Gerken: Einsatz von GoodRelations für Eintrittskarten und Veranstaltungen (Usage of GoodRelations for Tickets and Events) (Betreuer: Uwe Stoll)

May 25, 2010

Jun 8, 2010

Jun 22, 2010

Jul 6, 2010

Jul 20, 2010

WIINF Seminar Theses: Final Presentations

Additional Materials

Types of Research Contributions

The following is taken from the EKAW 2010 Call for Papers and is, imo, and excellent summary of the various types of research papers that are usually accepted at conferences and workshops:


A) Standard research papers

These are "standard" papers presenting a novel method, technique or analysis with appropriate empirical or other types of evaluation as proof-of concept. The main evaluation criteria here will be originality, technical soundness and validation.

B) In-use papers

Here we are expecting papers describing applications of knowledge management and engineering in real environments. Applications need to address a sufficiently interesting and challenging problem on real and large datasets, involving many users etc. The focus is less on the originality of the approach and more on presenting real, large-scale and complex systems that solve a significant problem. Technical details to understand how the problem is solved are required. Evaluations should involve real users of a system rather than representing a pure academic exercise. The papers will be evaluated according to the significance and practical relevance of the described research as well as with respect to the technical soundness of the described solution and accompanying evaluation.

C) Problem Analysis papers

We invite researchers to also publish problem analysis papers which do not present any novel method, technique or approach to solving a problem, but help to understand the problem itself. Understanding the characteristics of a problem itself is an important task in research and can benefit many people working on the same or at least similar problems. We expect in-depth discussions and analysis of a certain phenomenon or problem, with clear definitions as well as qualitative and quantitative analyzes of the main characteristics of the problem. We also expect a reasonable review of the state-of-the-art stating in how far current solutions fall short. Papers will mainly be evaluated with respect to how general and technically sound their problem analysis is and how useful it will be for other researchers working on the same problem. We expect that such papers will guide future research by highlighting critical assumptions, motivating the difficulty of a subproblem or explaining why current techniques are not sufficient, all corroborated by quantitative and qualitative arguments. Evaluation criteria will also include appropriate categorization of the problem area and description of present solutions and approaches; and appropriate description of the limitations of the present solutions and approaches.

D) Validation papers

A fundamental characteristic of research is that it should be reproducible. In some disciplines, reproduction of results by others is a basic research activity. We would like to encourage researchers to reproduce and validate methods, results and experiments etc. proposed by others before in a new context or application, on new datasets, under new assumptions etc. The goal is clearly to reach interesting and significant new conclusions about the method/approach in question that warrant a stand-alone publication. The reproduction of results should thus lead to new knowledge about the method in question or reveal inherent problems in the assumptions of the original research or limitations of previous solutions. Papers will be evaluated with respect to the soundness of the rationale for reproducing a certain approach as well as with respect to the new knowledge that is generated by reproducing the approach in question. A clear comparison between the results obtained through the reproduction and the original results are mandatory.