jwa@beta.lanl.gov (Wayne Anderson) (04/07/89)
Just a reminder that the deadline for submitting abstracts to the Hawaii Conference on System Sciences is fast approaching. The following is the call for those of you that might have missed the first posting. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- CALL FOR PAPERS AND REFEREES HAWAII INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SYSTEM SCIENCES - 23 Massive Databases and Ill-defined Objects KAILUA-KONA, HAWAII - JANUARY 2-5 The Software Track of HICSS-23 will contain a session focusing on the problems associated with searching through massive databases for ill- defined objects, or objects that may be well-defined but whose signatures are spread over large areas, that arise in a broad spectrum of disciplines. Example application areas include the sciences (measurements from experiments, satellite data, genome structure, simulations), engineering and design (wind tunnel test results, CAD databases), business (financial transactions, cost accounting for large enterprises), military (traces of battlefield simulations, SDI model results analysis), demographics from census data, and so forth. The goal of this style of data analysis is the discovery of high- level, abstract knowledge from the low-level signature which the databases usually contain. In most cases, any particular question that an analyst may have about the high-level abstract objects which are embedded in the databases can be answered today, given enough time and money. A common method is to use existing programming tools to create procedural application programs which compute or reason with the low-level data. Such programs are seldom useful in answering a question other than the one for which they were designed and are always difficult to modify or validate. Still, this approach is useful when the objects under study are well defined and the ad hoc programs will be used frequently. In many cases, the concepts to be discovered are only intuitively, and often vaguely, understood and man-machine interaction is required to help crystallize and firm-up the definitions. Under these circumstances, ad hoc procedural programs will almost always provide unacceptable results and numerous modifications will be required. An alternative to ad hoc procedural programs is the use of rules, or knowledge-based systems which allow a precise specification of the object of interest, and hide the mechanics of database search. However, this approach works well only when a human expert exists who can articulate his knowledge, the objects under study have crisp definitions, and the databases are not too large. The purpose of this session, therefore, is to explore techniques for conducting searches in the face of very large databases, uncertainty in the targets of the searches, and the possible need for man-machine interaction to crystallize definitions of the objects. These techniques may require such things as procedural programming for stream-processing, declarative programming for integrated deductive analysis and database access, graphical I/O for the investigation of visual formalisms, animation capabilities, and queries by graphical example, and an environment for integrating these and other tools. Papers are invited that may help better define the problem, present approaches to solving selected aspects of the problem, and detail solutions to practical problems. Those papers selected for presentation will appear in the Conference Proceedings, which are published by the Computer Society of the IEEE, and, possibly, later also in a special issue of a professional society periodical. HICSS- 23 is sponsored by the University of Hawaii in cooperation with the ACM, the IEEE Computer Society, and the Pacific Research Institute for Information Systems and Management (PRIISM). INSTRUCTIONS FOR SUBMITTING PAPERS Manuscripts should be 22-26 typewritten, double-spaced pages in length. Do not send submissions that are significantly shorter or longer than this. Papers must not have been previously presented or published, nor currently submitted for journal publication. Each manuscript will be subjected to a rigorous refereeing process involving at least five reviewers. Manuscript papers should have a title page that includes the title of the paper, full name(s) of its author(s), affiliation(s), complete mailing and electronic address(es), telephone number(s), and a 300-word abstract of the paper. DEADLINES * A 300-word abstract is due by April 15, 1989 * Feedback to author concerning abstract by May 1, 1989 * Six copies of the manuscript are due by June 5, 1989 * Notice of accepted papers by August 31, 1989 * Accepted manuscripts, camera-ready, are due by October 2, 1989 SEND SUBMISSIONS AND QUESTIONS TO Wayne Anderson Richard Brice C-10, MS B296 MCC Los Alamos National Laboratory 3500 West Balcones Center Dr. Los Alamos, NM 87545 Austin, TX 78759 Tel: (505) 667-1977 Tel: (512) 338-3429 E-mail: jwa@lanl.gov E-Mail: rsb@mcc.com