Workshop Program CALL FOR PAPERS: TCBR@ICCBR05
Textual Case-Based Reasoning Workshop at the 6th International Conference on Case-Based Reasoning
http://www.pages.drexel.edu/~rw37/tcbr05.html
24 August 2005 as part of the ICCBR 2005 Workshop Program
DESCRIPTION
Textual CBR is an increasingly important CBR sub-discipline. Textual CBR techniques can facilitate rapid construction of CBR systems by reducing or eliminating the task of feature-design in domains in which raw cases consist of free or semi-structured text. Moreover, many tasks, such as question answering, are inherently language-based. For such tasks, retaining a textual case representation may be more effective than engineering a feature representation that is intermediate between text queries and text solutions. In addition, textual CBR can provide information extraction or other language analysis tools to assist in engineering feature-based cases. Accelerating growth in the number and size of incident report, lessons-learned, and other unstructured or semi-structured text collections insures that textual CBR will continue to increase in importance.
The goal of this workshop will be to provide a forum for discussion of trends, developments, research issues, and practical experience in textual case-based reasoning. A particular focus of the workshop will be development of data repositories and other shared resources for research and development of textual CBR systems.
Topics will include, but not be limited to, the following:
• Range and scope of applicability: What characteristics of a domain determine whether it is amenable to textual CBR techniques?
• Representation issues: What representations should textual cases be mapped into, and when should cases be manipulated as raw text documents?
• Segmentation and case extraction.
• Conversational CBR.
• Reuse and adaptation of textual cases.
• The relationship between textual CBR and related technologies, such as text mining, question-answering and dialogue systems, and human-language technology.
• Case studies of textual CBR systems.
• Indexing and retrieval of textual cases.
• Automated extraction of lexical and taxonomic information from cases.
• Testing and evaluation methodologies for textual CBR systems.
• Corpora and repositories for textual cases.
WORKSHOP FORMAT
This half-day workshop will start with an invited talk on The Role of Generative Ontologies in Textual CBR, speaker is Kalyan Moy Gupta; followed by paper presentations, a panel, and a concluding discussion period among participants to delineate conclusions and potential future efforts.
This workshop is open to all interested conference participants, but may be limited by available room facilities.
SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS
Papers MUST be submitted in Springer LNCS format, with a maximum of 10 pages. Authors' instructions along with LaTeX and Word macro files are available on the web at http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html.
Extended abstracts that outline relevant research activities, publications, and goals for participation should be submitted using the same LNCS format. Please limit extended abstracts to 2 pages.
Submissions are closed.
IMPORTANT DATES
May 11, 2005: Deadline for workshop paper and abstract submission
June 10, 2005: Notification of acceptance for workshop papers
July 1, 2005: Camera ready copy due
August 24, 2005: Workshop
WORKSHOP COMMITTEE
David Aha,
Kevin D Ashley,
L. Karl Branting (co-chair), BAE Systems, Inc.
Stefanie Bruninghaus,
Luc Lamontagne,
Rosina Weber (co-chair),
FOR ANY QUESTIONS, PLEASE CONTACT WORKSHOP CO-CHAIRS
Rosina Weber (co-chair)
+1 215 895-2494 FAX
+1 215 869 8121 Cell
Rosina.Weber@drexel.edu
http://www.pages.drexel.edu/~rw37/
L. Karl Branting (co-chair)
BAE Systems, Inc.
+1 410 309-9633 ext 2069 Voice
+1 410 309-9370 FAX
+1 919 349-0080 Cell
karl.branting@baesystems.com
http://www.karlbranting.net
Workshop URL: http://www.pages.drexel.edu/~rw37/tcbr05.html