[Event at CIG] CFP: WE at SAC 2025 - Paper Submission Deadline 20 September 2024

Cristian Mateos cristian.mateos at isistan.unicen.edu.ar
Mon Sep 9 15:49:15 CEST 2024


Call for Papers
Web Engineering Track
40th ACM/SIGAPP Symposium on Applied Computing (SAC 2025)
March 31 - April 4, 2025, Sicily, Italy

https://www.sigapp.org/sac/sac2025/
https://devel.isistan.unicen.edu.ar/we-sac/

Aims and Rationale
------------------

The World Wide Web is relentlessly evolving. Once a single interconnection
of static, physically distributed content passively accessed by human users
through personal computers, during the explosion of Web-based social
networks, the Web evolved into an environment allowing users worldwide to
interact and collaborate in the creation of user-generated content within
many virtual communities. In this line, Web 2.0 is the umbrella term used
to encompass several developments which followed, namely social networking
sites and social media sites (e.g., Instagram, Facebook), (micro)blogs,
wikis, folksonomies (e.g., Flickr), video sharing sites (e.g., YouTube),
Web applications ("apps"), collaborative platforms, and mashup
applications. Many technologies such as HTML 5, CSS3, AJAX, and client-side
scripting helped to bring these ideas into practice.

Moreover, the current Web can be seen as an evolutionary step from Web 2.0
in that access to content is nowadays ubiquitous, content itself is far
more heterogeneous, and "users" come in mixed and different flavors. First,
ubiquitous access has been mainly pushed by the inception of mobile
computing and mobile devices. Second, served and published Web content is
not only those following traditional interchange formats (i.e., text,
images, audio, video), but also executable code or Web APIs (e.g.,
ProgrammableWeb.com), from which new applications can be built and in turn
published back to the Web. The notion of "Web of objects", which finds its
root in Web-accessible Internet-of-Things (IoT) applications, promotes the
interconnection of hardware elements capable of producing huge amounts of
sensor data. Last, the role of Web application end users and Web
developers/designers is somewhat blurry, due to modern Web technologies
that greatly simplify the creation/deployment of rich Web sites that might
consume Web-accessible services. In addition, the advent of the Semantic
Web -often named Web 3.0- paves the way to the creation of intelligent
applications, and thus the tandem human user-Web browser is no longer the
only way to take advantage of Web content. In this context, novel
approaches and techniques, new tools and frameworks are needed to address
the increasing complexity of the Web and the applications therein.

This track aims at bringing together researchers and practitioners from
industry and academia working on both foundational and practical aspects of
Web Engineering, as well as other ideas that in the Web ecosystem have
found new and unexpected application fields. We seek original, unpublished
contributions that are mainly focused on, but not necessarily limited to,
the following aspects of Web Engineering:

- Web Information Retrieval
- Web Browsers and Web Interfaces
- Web Personalization and Accessibility
- Rich User Experiences and Human Computer Interaction in Web Applications
- Web Recommender Systems
- Web Sentiment Mining
- Web Mining
- Web Language Models
- Web Dialogue Systems
- Social Web Analytics
- Web Graph Analytics
- Web Query Languages
- Semantic Web and Semantic-Enhanced Web Applications
- Web Question Answering Systems
- Web Translation
- Web Provenance
- Web for Digital Humanities
- Web Natural Language Processing
- Web Speech and Video Processing
- Modeling, Designing, and Engineering of Web Applications
- Architectures, Architectural Styles, and Middlewares for Web Applications
- Performance, Scalability, and Quality of Service on the Web
- Online and Offline Testing Techniques for Web Applications and Interfaces
- Web Monitoring and Analysis
- (Process-Aware) Web Information Systems
- Mobile Web, Webapps, and Cross-device Content Delivery
- Web Application Integration: Micro/Rest Services and Data Description
Formats
- Web Technologies in IoT Devices and Cyber-physical Systems
- Virtualization and Containerization for the Web

Proceedings and Post-Proceedings
--------------------------------

Papers/poster accepted for the Web Engineering track will be published by
ACM both in the SAC 2025 proceedings and in the ACM Digital Library, which
ensures excellent visibility.

Paper/poster registration is required, allowing the inclusion of the
paper/poster in the conference proceedings. An author or a proxy attending
SAC MUST present the paper. This is a requirement for the paper/poster to
be included in the ACM digital library. No-show of registered papers and
posters will result in excluding them from the ACM digital library.

Selected Best Papers
--------------------

In the previous (pre-pandemic) editions, authors of selected best papers
have been invited to submit an extended version of their work to an
international journal or a conference post-proceedings volume. For example:

- Best papers of the track at SAC 2019 in a special issue of Information
Processing and Management by Elsevier (Impact factor: 3.444, Scimago rank:
Q1)
- Best papers of the track at SAC 2018 in a Lecture Notes in Business
Information Processing volume by Springer

For the 2025 edition of the track, we will make our best to arrange a
post-proceeding or a special issue in related journals as well.

Student Research Competition (SRC) Program
------------------------------------------

Graduate students are invited to submit research abstracts (maximum of 4
pages in ACM format) following the instructions published at SAC 2025
website. Submission of the same abstract to multiple tracks is not allowed.

All research abstract submissions will be reviewed by researchers and
practitioners with expertise in the track focus area to which they are
submitted. Authors of selected abstracts will have the opportunity to give
poster and oral presentations of their work and compete for three
top-winning places. The SRC committee will evaluate and select First,
Second, and Third place winners. The winners will receive medals, cash
awards, and SIGAPP recognition certificates. Invited students receive SRC
travel support and are eligible to apply to the SIGAPP Student Travel Award
Program (STAP) for additional travel support.

Paper Submission
----------------

Original papers from the above-mentioned or other related areas will be
considered. This includes three categories of submissions:

- Original and unpublished research;
- Reports of innovative computing applications in the arts, sciences,
engineering, business, government, education, and industry;
- Reports of successful technology transfer to new problem domains.

Each submitted paper will undergo a (double) blind review process and will
be refereed by at least three referees. To ease blind review, you shall
remove author names and any information that might divulge authors'
identity from your paper before submitting it.

Accepted papers in all categories will be published in the ACM SAC 2025
proceedings.

The camera-ready version of the accepted paper should be prepared using the
ACM format (guidelines are given on the SAC 2025 website).
Accepted full papers should not exceed 8 pages in a double column format
(with the option to add two pages at extra charge).

Relevant Dates
--------------

- Sept. 20, 2024, 11:59PM (UTC+0.00): Submission of regular papers and SRC
research abstracts
- Oct. 30, 2024: Notification of papers, posters, and SRC research abstracts
- Nov. 29, 2024: Camera-ready copies of accepted papers
- Dec. 6, 2024: Authors registration due

Track Chairs
------------

- Cristian Mateos, ISISTAN-UNICEN-CONICET University - Tandil, Argentina
- Tim A. Majchrzak, University of Agder - Kristiansand, Norway
- Flavius Frasincar, Erasmus University Rotterdam - Rotterdam, The
Netherlands

E-mail contact: frasincar at ese.eur.nl


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