[Air-L] FW: CfP: Journal of Information Retrieval -- Special Issue on Non-English Web Retrieval
Holly Kruse
holly-kruse at utulsa.edu
Mon Feb 18 11:36:01 PST 2008
Forwarded on request...
Holly
**************
Dear colleague:
My name is Jesus Vilares (Univ. of A Coruna, Spain), and I am one of the
guest editors of the Special Issue on Non-English Web Retrieval that the
Journal of Information Retrieval is preparing. May be you so kind to
give publicity to this event?
Regards,
JESUS VILARES (on behalf of the guest editors)
http://rea.teimes.gr/~lazarinf/NonEnglishWebIR/
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JESUS VILARES FERRO
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LYS Research Group _/ e-mail: jvilares at udc.es
Facultad de Informatica _/ URL: http://www.grupolys.org/~jvilares
Universidad de A Coruna _/
Campus de Elvina s/n _/ phone : +34 981 167000 ext. 1377
15071 A Coruna - Spain _/ fax : +34 981 167160
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Springer Academic Publishers
Journal of Information Retrieval
Special Issue on
Non-English Web Retrieval
Important dates:
Abstract submission: May 4, 2008
Paper submission: May 11, 2008, 11:50pm Hawaii Standand Time
Notification of acceptance/rejection: June 25, 2008
Guest Editors:
Fotis Lazarinis, Technological Education Institute, Mesolonghi, Greece
Jesus Vilares, Department of Computer Sciences, University of A Coruna,
Spain
John Tait, Information Retrieval Facility, Austria
Efthimis N. Efthimiadis, The Information School, University of Washington
Contacts:
lazarinf [at] teimes [dot] gr
jvilares [at] udc [dot] es
john.tait [at] ir-facility [dot] org
efthimis [at] u [dot] washington [dot] edu
Site: http://rea.teimes.gr/~lazarinf/NonEnglishWebIR/
Since its conception, the World Wide Web (WWW or Web) has rapidly become one
of the most widely used services of the Internet. Its friendly interface and
its hypermedia features attract virtually every computer user around the
globe. As a result, the Web has become a dominant global multicultural and
multilingual pool of various types of data. Further it continues to grow.
Finding information that satisfies specific criteria is a regular daily
activity of almost every Web user. Recent Web statistics showed that almost
65% of the online citizens are non-English language users. As the Web
population continues to grow, especially in Asia, Africa, and South America,
more non-English users will be amassed online. Recent studies showed that
non-English queries and unclassifiable queries have nearly tripled in the
last decade. The main conclusion from previous research is that most search
engine features are primarily focused on the English language.
Based on previous studies and on the experiences and conclusions of the
iNEWS07 (Improving Non-English Web Searching) ACM SIGIR'07 Workshop, the
special issue aims to address the challenges and directions in Non-English
Web retrieval.
For the special issue we seek high quality papers with theoretical and/or
experimental orientation. Topics of interest for the special issue, as
applied to Non-English Web searching, include, but are not limited to:
Evaluation
User search behaviour
Query log analysis
Indexing
Information extraction
Summarization
User studies
Retrieval models
Question answering
Natural language processing
Concept based image retrieval
Creation of multi-lingual web collections
Intranet/enterprise search
Text categorization and clustering
Digital libraries
Cross language and multilingual retrieval
Submission Instructions:
Submissions must be in English and adhere to the format specified by the
journal Information Retrieval.
For formatting guidelines please see: JIR formatting guidelines
The abstract should be about 250-words in plain text. Include title,
author(s) and author(s) affiliations, contact details, and up to five (5)
keywords that describe your work.
The full paper should be anonymous, and authors should conceal their
identity where it is practical to do so. Include a 200-250-word abstract and
up to five keywords. The paper should range between 16-20 pages.
Both the abstract and the full paper should be uploaded in the Springer
paper submission system
For Word and LaTeX templates, please click Springer Word and Latex templates
Reviewers for the special issue:
Alonso, Miguel (Univ. of A Coruña, Spain)
Baeza Yates, Ricardo (Yahoo! Research Barcelona)
Chen, Zheng (Microsoft Research Asia, China)
Dalamagas, Theodore (National Technical Univ. of Athens, Greece)
de Rijke, Maarten (Univ. of Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
Hawking, David (CSIRO ICT Centre, Australia)
Huang, Chu-Ren (Academia Sinica, Taiwan)
Järvelin, Kalervo (University of Tampere, Finland)
Kanaan, Ghassan (Yarmouk University, Jordan)
Kando, Noriko (National Institute of Informatics, Japan)
Karanikolas, Nikitas (TEI of Athens, Greece)
Kuang-hua, Chen (National Taiwan University, Taiwan)
Levene, Mark (Birkbeck University of London, UK)
Losada, David (Univ. of Santiago de Compostela, Spain)
Min, Song (New Jersey Institute of Technology, USA)
Nasredine, Semmar (LIC2M/CEA-LIST, France)
Ntoulas, Alexandros (Microsoft Search Labs, USA)
Ounis, Iadh (Univ. of Glasgow, UK)
Pereira, Gabriel (Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal)
Peters, Carol (ISTI-CNR, Italy)
Plachouras, Vassilis (Yahoo! Research Barcelona)
Rambow, Owen (Columbia University, USA)
Savoy, Jacques (Univ. of Neuchatel, Switzerland)
Stamou, Sofia (Univ. of Patras, Greece)
Sutcliffe, Richard (Univ. of Limerick, Ireland)
Vilares, Manuel (Univ. of Vigo, Spain)
White, Ryen (Microsoft, USA)
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