Call for Papers
OIC 2008: ONTOLOGIES FOR THE INTELLIGENCE COMMUNITY
Towards Effective Exploitation and Integration of Intelligence Resources
George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia
December 3-4, 2008
(A classified event is scheduled for December 5 for those with TS/SCI clearances only. For further information contact:
oic-2008-ts-sci@xxxxxxx)
The tasks of collecting, analyzing, and disseminating intelligence grow more complex with every year, the emergence of new technologies and new types of th
required to enable greater flexibility, precision, timeliness and automation of analysis in response to rapidly evolving threats. Ontology-based technology as applied in areas such as bioinformatics has demonstrated the possibility of gains along all of these dimensions. The time is ripe to extend these gains to other spheres.
This conference will bring together experts on ontology-based technology with particular experience in the problems facing the intelligence community. It will feature invited talks from prominent ontologists and intelligence community leaders, as well as submitted papers focusing especially on the creation of public-domain ontology resources to support the work of intelligence analysts.
Submissions are invited of short papers in pdf format (up to 1500 words) designed to serve as the basis for 20-minute oral presentations at the conference. Accepted papers will be published (at speaker discretion) in the proceedings, in b
a printed version to be distributed at the meeting. The authors of selected papers will be invited to submit longer versions for publication in Volume 2 of the series on Semantic Technology, Information Sharing and Intelligence Analysis.
Papers may address a wide variety of issues addressing the ontology needs of the intelligence community. We are especially interested in papers on the following topics:
- Ontologies and reasoning under conditions of uncertainty
- Ontological issues related to source credibility and evidential pedigree
- Ontological issues related to the use of images and other kinds of sensing devices
- Creating an interoperable suite of public-domain ontologies relevant to intelligence analysis covering areas such as:
* Social networks
* Ethnicity, religion and politics
* Spatial and temporal phenomena
* Conditions that foster or inhibit outbreak of vi
sp;* Infrastructure with
* Biology and health
* Emergency Response
- Usability issues relating to ontology technology
Important dates:
Submissions due: July 27, 2008
Notification of acceptance: August 29, 2008
Camera-ready papers due: October 31, 2008
Further information will be provided in due course at
http://c4i.gmu.edu/OIC08For inquiries please write to the conference co-chairs:
Kathryn Blackmond Laskey
C4I Center and SEOR Department
4400 University Drive, MS 4B5
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030-4444
klaskey@xxxxxxx
Duminda Wijesekera
Department of Computer Science
4400 University Drive, MS 4A5
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030-4444
Bill Andersen (Ontology Works)
Selmer Bringsjord (Rensselaer Polytechnic University)
Dennis Buede (Innovative Decisions, Inc.)
Werner Ceusters (University at Buffalo)
Randall Dipert (University at Buffalo)
Kathleen Stewart Hornsby (University of Iowa)
Terry Janssen (Lockheed Martin Corporation)
Kathryn Blackmond Laskey (George Mason University, co-chair)
Kevin Lynch (CIA)
Dan Maxwell (Innovative Decisions, Inc.)
Leo Obrst (MITRE Corporation)
Steven Robertshaw (UK Defence Science and Technology Laboratory)
Barry Smith (University at Buffalo)
Duminda Wijesekera (George Mason University, co-chair)