PerSWeb’05 Workshop on Personalization on the Semantic Web

in conjunction with UM’05

                          25 -26 July 2005, Edinburgh, UK

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Welcome to the home page of the PerSWeb'05 workshop held in conjunction with
the 10th International Conference on User Modeling (UM'05),
July 24 - 30, 2005, Edinburgh, UK

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Invited talk

Challenges and Trends for Personalization in the Semantic Web
Nicola Henze, co-ordinator of "Personalized Information Systems" working group

within REWERSE: REasoning on the WEb with Rules and SEmantics EU Network of Excellence.

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PROLEARN network of excellence special session

 

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  A PerSWeb special session on Semantic Web for Adaptive Learning Environments
in conjunction with SW-EL'05 @ AIED'05 Workshop
July 18 - 22, 2005, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
This session will cover the educational perspective – theoretical and experimental studies that support the need for personalizing the Semantic Web, patterns of web usage in different web applications and personalization, engineering of large amounts of web resources to appropriately tailor them to the individual users.

 

The PerSWeb'05 proceedings are now available for download from here.


Workshop days:
 
25th June 2005
13:30 - 17:30
 
26th June 2005
8:30 - 12:30
 

For registration details, please visit the UM'05 web site. 
The Semantic Web paradigm will change drastically the way the web is used with the attempt to achieve semantically rich, well-structured, standardized and verified content for various application areas. The current effort is to enable the machines to process meaning which can guide the information delivery process. As a consequence, a major challenge is to allow various applications to attain interoperability and sharing of content and functionality. Personalization is becoming increasingly important in the semantic web context enabling shared content and services to be tailored to the needs of individual users.  The rapid expansion of semantic-enriched services on the web results in exponential growth of the people who use such services. Users differ in many aspects, e.g. capabilities, expectations, goals, requirements, preferences and usage context. To truly fulfill the Semantic Web vision for improving the way computers and people work together, the user perspective has to be taken into account. The one-size-fits-all-users approach to developing web applications is becoming outdated. Personalization functionality on the Semantic Web has to be implemented and applied to deal with user diversity. The personalization has been a prime concern of the user-modeling community which deals with methods for gaining some understanding of users, i.e. a user model, and using that understanding to tailor the system’s behavior to the needs of individuals.

A central role is played by methods and techniques for modeling users. Existing user modeling approaches need to be adjusted to deal with the new challenges brought by the need to deal with a diverse user population having different preferences, goals, understanding of tasks, conceptual models, etc. Added to this is the vast number of sources provided by tracking the users’ activities to discover patterns of using the web in different application areas. Furthermore, new diagnostic techniques and models are needed to capture the long-term development of users’ capabilities, the dynamics of user’s goals and conceptual understanding, the uncertainty and inconsistency of naïve users’ conceptualizations, and so on. The ambitious target is to offer manageable, extendable and standardized infrastructure for complementing and collaborating applications tailored to the needs of individual users. In this endeavor a great body of Semantic Web research on the use of well-defined standards and ontologies can be adopted to provide extensibility, flexibility, interopability, and reusability. Furthermore, the open-world assumption of the Semantic web refers to the need to take into account user viewpoints ranging from domain experts to complete novices. Traditional personalization and adaptation architectures were suited to deal with closed-world assumption, where user modeling methods, such as overlay, bug library, constraint-based modeling and other marked discrepancies in a user and expert’s semantics as erroneous, and often called them misconceptions. New approaches for open-world user modeling able to elicit extended models of users and to deal with the dynamics of a user’s conceptualization are required to effectively personalize the Semantic Web.





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