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The First International Workshop on Social Software Engineering and Applications (SoSEA 2008)

by amine last modified 2008-04-02 13:36

Workshop

The First International Workshop on Social Software Engineering and Applications (SoSEA 2008 http://www.cs.tut.fi/sosea08/) in conjunction with ASE 2008 http://www.di.univaq.it/ase2008/ L’Aquila, Italy, September 15, 2008

2008-09-15 08:00

2008-09-15 18:00

L’Aquila

Italy

http://www.cs.tut.fi/sosea08/

imed.hammoud@tut.fi

2008-06-15 00:00

CALL FOR PAPERS

The First International Workshop on Social Software Engineering and
Applications (SoSEA 2008 http://www.cs.tut.fi/sosea08/) in conjunction with
ASE 2008 http://www.di.univaq.it/ase2008/ L’Aquila, Italy, September 15,
2008

Paper submission (deadline): June 15, 2008.

Social software has emerged as one of the most exciting and important
phenomenon in today’s software and business arena. With social software,
individuals can interact, share, and meet other individuals, presumably with
similar interests, forming large data, knowledge, and user bases. Social
software engineering, in turn, can be defined as the application of
processes, methods, and tools to enable community-driven creation,
management, deployment, and use of software in online environments.

The social software movement can be regarded as both a challenge and an
opportunity for software development. On the one hand, social software
itself brings its own kinds of challenges such as data sensitivity, content
legality, scalability, and performance. On the other hand, the social
software movement is apparently causing a fundamental change in the way
software engineering is practiced, benefiting from the technologies and
experiences gained from Web 2.0 and the expectations of the forthcoming Web
3.0. In the near future, various forms of social software development will
become a reality. Examples include software mashups, intelligent
context-aware software downloads, and online cooperative CASE tools. Such a
cooperative model of software development would also meet the challenges of
contemporary software engineering such as outsourcing, offshoring, open
source software, etc. Due to its distributed nature, automated approaches to
social software engineering are needed.

The goal of the workshop is to bring together interested academics,
practitioners, and enthusiasts to discuss topics related to the area of
social software engineering. Focusing on technology issues, the workshop
will offer an opportunity for the participants to share experiences and
discuss challenges involved in building and using social software. A special
emphasis will be put the role of social software concepts and technologies
in shaping up future software development. The workshop will also identify
key research issues and challenges that lie ahead.

We solicit two kinds of contributions:
* short position papers describing particular challenges, experiences, or
visions relevant to the scope of the workshop (not to exceed 4 pages);
* full research papers describing original work in any aspect of social
software engineering (not to exceed 8 pages).

Articles should be novel, have not been published elsewhere, and are not
under review by another publication. We are negotiating with major
publishers the possibility to publish extended versions of a selection of
the best papers (chosen by the program committee) as post-proceedings.
Papers must conform, at time of submission, to the ASE 2008 Format and
Submission Guidelines. Submission instructions are available at:
http://www.cs.tut.fi/sosea08.

TOPICS OF INTEREST:
------------------
The workshop will concentrate on two main themes:
* engineering of social software applications;
* the use of social software in software development, exploiting models,
methodologies and technologies.

Workshop topics include (but are not limited to):
* requirements and challenges of building and using social software,
including concerns such as scalability, performance, security, sensitivity
and other legal issues;
* organization and interaction schemes in social software;
* automated approaches, best practices, architectures, frameworks,
methodologies, technologies, tools, and environments for social software
engineering;
* industrial involvement in social software: building, managing and
interfacing with communities, opening up software platforms, integrating
social software;
* building social software engineering communities: the role of companies,
research groups, governments, NGOs, and individuals;
* social software engineering versus other forms of globalization such as
global software development, distributed software engineering, open source,
etc;
* experience reports and lessons on building social software and its use in
software development.

IMPORTANT DATES (DEADLINES):
---------------------------
Paper submission (deadline): June 15, 2008
Acceptance Notification: July 20, 2008
Final Camera-ready: August 20, 2008

WORKSHOP ORGANIZERS:
-------------------
Imed Hammouda, imed.hammouda@tut.fi
Tampere University of Technology

Jan Bosch, Jan@JanBosch.com
Intuit Inc.

Mehdi Jazayeri, mehdi.jazayeri@unisi.ch
University of Lugano

Tommi Mikkonen, tommi.mikkonen@tut.fi
Tampere University of Technology

PROGRAM COMMITTEE:
------------------
Andrea Capiluppi (University of Lincoln, UK)
Björn Lundell (University of Skövde, Sweden)
Cesare Pautasso (University of Lugano, Switzerland)
Frank van der Linden (Philips Medical Systems, the Netherlands)
James D. Herbsleb(Carnegie Mellon University, USA)
Jan Bosch (Intuit Inc., USA)
Imed Hammouda (Tampere University of Technology, Finland)
Mehdi Jazayeri(University of Lugano, Switzerland)
Mohamed Amine Chatti (RWTH Aachen University, Germany)
Pekka Abrahamsson (VTT, Finland)
Tommi Mikkonen (Tampere University of Technology, Finland)