[By receiving multiple copies of this email you may understand why there
are still research to be made around email]
NextMail'11
First International Workshop on Next Trends in Email
August 22, 2011 - Lyon, France
In conjunction with the 2011 IEEE / WIC / ACM International Conferences
on WEB INTELLIGENCE and INTELLIGENT AGENT TECHNOLOGY
- Workshop website: http://nextmail11.liris.cnrs.fr/
- Conference website: http://wi-iat-2011.org/
CONTEXT
Is e-mail obsolete? As a matter of fact, we tend to gather more and more
information in our inboxes: personal and professional communications,
but also marketing and commercial ads, alerts and notifications from
websites or social networks, search engines results, agendas, ... The
current use also tends to widen: e-mail is not only used to fulfill
inter-personal communication but also to exchange files, to gather RSS
feeds or to pick up a date for a meeting. Many people rely on their
inboxes to retrieve important information and to organize their daily work.
Do electronic messaging systems offer new solutions to answer these
existing and future usages of e-mail? What will be the trends in e-mail
software? E-mail solutions nowadays don't present huge differences with
early ones : a 3-pane interface displaying email folders, a list of
messages in chronological order and the content of the message currently
selected.. Gmail was quite revolutionary with its new UI (thread list
and thread view) and is considered as the major innovation lately.
Social networks (Facebook) and broadcast medium (Twitter) enable to
reach a broader audience while reducing unsolicited messages. Given this
context, what will be the next innovations in e-mail software: Unified
messaging system? Integration of tasks manager and agenda? Is e-mail
really collaborative? And does e-mail solutions allow collaboration
through e-mail? Can we (should we) share contacts, threads, encourage
content sharing instead of exchanging files with e-mail?
Workshop Goals
This workshop aims at gathering the most relevant scientific and
technical contributions, in order to enlighten the current key research
on emails and to unveil some of the main upcoming trends. Scientific
contributions either from core e-mail research or external fields are
sought for, such as (but not limited to): IA (intelligent agents), NLP
(email linguistic analysis), SNA (social network analysis), psychology
(group interaction, graph communication analysis, ...), linguistic
(stylistic changes from letter-writing to instant messaging jargon),
human-computer interaction (user experience, design guidelines). As well
as technical issues, efficient and emerging best practices based upon
real life scenarii, user experience, security issues, legal archiving,
new protocols may also be of interest. A comprehensive list of topics is
available here.
IMPORTANT DATES
- Paper submissions : March 21, 2011
- Paper notification : June 1, 2011
- Workshop : August 22, 2011 (full day)
TOPICS
Topics include but are not limited to:
- Email content analysis, information extraction, summarization
- Email social networks in enterprise
- Email management strategies within organizations
- Adaptative email agents and semantic agents
- Emails archives exploration, visualization, regulations and behaviors
- Email visual interfaces and human/computer interaction with emails
-Case studies, experiments and user studies on emails usages
- Benchmark and email testing datasets
- Interoperability over email with enterprise resources and legacy systems
- Semantic email and email mining
- Unified messaging and web interactions : instant messaging, RSS feeds,
annotations, tagging
- Personal information management integration in email clients, pending
task management
- Interaction between email , PIM and the mobility factor
- Facing the volume growth, do we need to replace the old protocols?
- Evolution of infrastructures and uses
SUBMISSION
All papers accepted for the NextMail'11 workshop will be included in the
Workshop Proceedings published by IEEE Computer Society Press.
Proceedings will be available at the workshop. Selected papers (after
their expansion and revision) may be selected for book or special
journal issues (editors contact pending).
Formatting Guidelines
Please note that participants must register to the WI/IAT Conference to
attend the workshop.
ORGANIZERS
- Romain Vuillemot, LIRIS, Université de Lyon
- Gaëlle Recourcé, KWAGA, Paris
- Philippe Gilbert, Alinto, Lyon
KEYNOTE
- Ian Smith, Everbread Limited, UK
PROGRAM COMMITTEE (IN PROGRESS)
- David Ascher CEO, Mozilla Messaging
- Vitor R. Carvalho, CMU, USA
- Andrew Lampert, CSIRO, Australia
- Adam Perer, IBM Research, USA
- Michal Laclavik, IISAS, Slovakia
- Ian Smith, Everbread Limited, UK
- D. Sculley, Google, USA
- Simone Stumpf, EECS, Oregon State University, UK
- John Tang, Microsoft Research, USA
--
Romain Vuillemot
PhD in Computer Science
LIRIS/INSA-Lyon, F-69621 Villeurbanne, France.
[log in to unmask]
http://liris.cnrs.fr/romain.vuillemot/
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