AIMS and SCOPE
With the movement of software engineering to service engineering, intelligence has already become one critical, non-replaceable corner-stone in service provisioning, from user requirements identification, run-time service provisioning and selection/usage, to intelligence business process decision making. One great challenge of service intelligence is the quantification of humans service experience in terms of the run-time behavior of both machines and people. The phase service intelligence actually has two meanings. The first one is the intelligence for services C how to come up with intelligent service-related decisions. This includes intelligence computation algorithms, decision models and support systems for service-related management and operations, web service and process mining, trust/reputation/recommendation/requirements for services, service analytics, human service interaction, machine learning for service provisioning and management, and human-service quality of experience model. The second one is the intelligence-as-a-service C how to actually deploy third party intelligence-as-a-services and compose them with software-as-a-services so that better services can be provided to users and in-depth understanding of user experience can be fed back to service providers for future improvement. One big challenge is that most of the intelligence-as-a-service systems need to work with massive monitored data streams in real-time. This workshop aims to provide a forum for highly interactive and in-depth discussion on all issues related to both service intelligence and intelligence services, in particular for services in the cloud.
TOPICS OF INTEREST
The topics of interest for SI2010 include, but are not limited to:
Authors are invited to submit original, unpublished research papers that are not being considered for publication in any other forum or conference. Manuscripts of maximum 4 pages should be submitted electronically, in PDF format using IEEE specification at Cyberchair at:
http://wi-consortium.org/cyberchair/wiiat10/scripts/ws_submit.php.
Submission will be peer-reviewed; selection criteria will be based on relevance, significance, impact, originality, and technical soundness. If you have any question, please contact chichihung@mail.tsinghua.edu.cn
Publication
The workshop proceedings will be published by IEEE Computer Society Press, to be indexed by IE. Selected papers will also be invited for a special issue in some highly reputation journal.
Workshop Chairs
Prof. Chi-hung Chi (Contact person)
Tsinghua University, China
Email: chichihung@mail.tsinghua.edu.cn
Prof. Cherie Ding
Ryserson University, Canada
Email: cding@scs.ryerson.ca
Prof. Andreas Wombacher
University of Twente
Email: a.wombacher@utwente.nl
Dr. Bruce Spencer
National Research Council, Canada
Email: Bruce.Spencer@nrc.ca
Sheikh Iqbal Ahamed, Marquette University, U.S.
Barrett R. Bryant, University of Alabama at Birmingham, U.S.
Barbara Carminati, University of Insubria, Italy
Jianming Deng, SouthEast University, China
Weichang Du, University of New Brunswick, Canada
Elena Ferrari, University of Insubria, Italy
Luis Ferreira, University of Twente, Netherlands
Yanbo Han, Chinese Academy of Science, China
Mika Helenius, Helsinki University of Technology
Willem-Jen van den Heuvel, Tilburg, Netherlands
Soo Dong Kim, Soongsil University, Korea
Juanzi Li, Tsinghua University, China
Ying Li, IBM China, China
Althea Liang, Singapore Management University, Singapore
Sandy Liu, National Research Council, Canada
Miguel Vargas Martin, University of Ontario, Canada
M.J. van Sinderen, University of Twente, Netherlands
Kenji Takahashi, NTT, Japan
Qianxiang, Wang, Beijing University, China
Zhengping Wu, University of Bridgeport, U.S.
Weider Yu, San Jose State University, U.S.
Jia Zhang, North Illinois University, U.S.