================================================================== Call For Workshop Proposals ICDM '05: The 5th IEEE International Conference on Data Mining Sponsored by the IEEE Computer Society New Orleans, Louisiana, USA Workshops: 27 November 2005 (followed by Main Conference: 28-30 November 2005) http://www.cacs.louisiana.edu/~icdm05/ (Proposals Due: 15 June 2005) =================================================================== The ICDM '05 organizing committee invites proposals for workshops to be held in conjunction with the conference. The purpose of these workshops is to provide participants with an informal setting for discussing innovative work in progress on important new technical directions. Workshops will be held on November 27, immediately preceding the conference on November 28-30. The 2005 IEEE International Conference on Data Mining (IEEE ICDM '05) provides a premier forum for the dissemination of innovative, practical development experiences as well as original research results in data mining, spanning applications, algorithms, software and systems. The conference draws researchers and application developers from a wide range of data mining related areas such as statistics, machine learning, pattern recognition, databases and data warehousing, data visualization, knowledge-based systems and high performance computing. By promoting high quality and novel research findings, and innovative solutions to challenging data mining problems, the conference seeks to continuously advance the state of the art in data mining. As an important part of the conference, the workshops program will focus on new research challenges and initiatives, and the tutorials program will cover emerging data mining technologies and the latest developments in data mining. Researchers and practitioners from all areas of the data mining community are invited to submit proposals for review. The organizers of approved workshops are expected to define the workshop's focus, gather and review submissions, and decide upon final program content. Although the format of the workshop also is to be determined by the organizers, substantial time should be allotted for discussion. Two successful workshop formats that worked in the past (somehow complementary) are: . a focused, technical area with a large enough community to sustain it (e.g. "Techniques and representations for text clustering"), or . a cross-field topic attractive to researchers from several sub-communities (e.g. "Privacy and Security of Genetic and Bioinformatics Data". The schedule for submission and preparation of workshop papers also will be left to the discretion of the workshop organizers. Because ICDM will handle publication of the informal workshop proceedings, we ask that 1. Workshop papers be prepared in the same format as ICDM conference papers (Latex style file available here) 2. Workshop papers adhere to a 10 page limit (2 pages longer than the conference limit), and 3. Workshop organizers prepare the camera-ready proceedings by October 26. IMPORTANT DATES 15 June 2005 Deadline for proposals 07 July 2005 Notification of proposal acceptance 26 September 2005 Camera ready papers from authors for proceedings due 26 October 2005 Camera ready workshop proceedings from oragnizers for proceedings due 27 November 2005 Workshops at ICDM '05 SUBMISSION PROCEDURE Workshop proposals should be submitted electronically (in Postscript, PDF or MS Word) to: Pawan Lingras Math and Computing Science, Saint Mary's University Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada B3H 3C3 e-mail: Pawan.Lingras@stmarys.ca/pawan@cs.smu.ca Phone: 902-420-5798, Fax: 902-420-5035 Web: http://cs.smu.ca/~pawan HOW TO PROPOSE A WORKSHOP Proposals for workshops should be at most five pages in length (fewer if possible) and should contain: . A brief description of the specific technical issues that the workshop will address. . The reasons why the workshop is of interest at this time. . The names, postal address, phone and fax numbers and email addresses of the Workshop Organizing Committee. This committee should consist of at least three experts in the field, not all at the same institution. . The name of one member of the Workshop Organizing Committee who is designated the contact person. . A list of previously-organized related workshops by any of the Workshop Organizing Committee. Previous experience organizing workshops is not a requirement. . A list of potential attendees. . A draft workshop Call for Papers. . A list of audio-visual or technical requirements and any special room requirements. Workshop proponents may wish to look at web pages from ICDM'03 Workshops and ICDM'04 Workshops Home Pages