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Proceedings of the
1st International Workshop on Adaptation,
Personalization and REcommendation in
the Social-semantic Web (APRESW 2010)
held at the
7th Extended Semantic Web Conference (ESWC 2010)
31st May 2010, Heraklion, Greece
Iván Cantador1, Peter Mika2, David Vallet1,
José C. Cortizo3, Francisco M. Carrero3
1
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain
{ivan.cantador, david.vallet}@uam.es
2
Yahoo! Research, Spain
pmika@yahoo-inc.com
3
Universidad Europea de Madrid, Spain
{josecarlos.cortizo, francisco.carrero}@uem.es
Preface
The 1st International Workshop on Adaptation, Personalization and REcommendation
in the Social-semantic Web (APRESW 2010) was held in Heraklion, Greece, on the
31st of May 2010, under the frame of the 7th Extended Semantic Web Conference
(ESWC 2010).
APRESW workshop represented a meeting point for individuals working on
adaptive, personalized and recommender systems for the Social-semantic Web. The
main objectives of this meeting were to gather state of the art approaches, discuss
lessons learnt, and identify interesting applications for available semantic-based
repositories, techniques and technologies.
A total of seven papers were presented at the workshop. There were two research
papers, two position papers, and three posters. Nine submissions were received, and
each of them was reviewed by three members of the Programme Committee.
We thank all authors for submitting and presenting their works, and members of
the Programme Committee for providing their time and expertise for reviewing and
selecting the workshop papers. We also express our gratitude to Harith Alani for
being our invited speaker. All their efforts made APRESW workshop possible.
Iván Cantador
Peter Mika
David Vallet
José C. Cortizo
Francisco M. Carrero
Motivation
During the last years, researchers and practitioners of the Semantic Web have
progressively consolidated a number of very important achievements. Formal
languages have been standardized to define ontology-based knowledge
representations, logic formalisms and query models. Ontology engineering
methodologies and tools have been proposed to ease the designing and populating of
ontological knowledge bases. Reasoning engines have been implemented to exploit
inference capabilities of ontologies, and semantic-based frameworks have been built
to enrich the functionalities of Web services. These achievements are the pillars to
deal with the complex challenge of bringing semantics to the Web.
The above gives a new ground to extend the focus of the Semantic Web by
engaging it in other communities, where semantics can play an important role. The
available semantic knowledge bases can be used to enrich and link additional
repositories, ontology engineering techniques can be utilized to properly design and
build ontologies in further real-world domains, and inference and query mechanisms
can enhance classic information management and retrieval approaches.
Among these communities, this workshop aims to attract the attention of students
and professionals both from academia and industry who take benefit of semantic-
based techniques and technologies in within-application Adaptation, Personalization
and Recommendation approaches. In parallel to the progress made in the Semantic
Web research topics, there have been appearing works in the above areas that use
ontologies to model the user’s preferences, tastes and interests, and exploit these
personal features together with meta-information about multimedia contents in order
to provide the user with adaptation and personalization capabilities for different
purposes such as information retrieval and item recommendation.
Moreover, with the advent of the Web 2.0 (also called the Social Web), the
potential study and development of those approaches have increased exponentially.
Social networks allow people to provide explicit relationships with others, and find
out implicit user similarities based on their profiles. Social tagging services offer the
opportunity to easily create and exploit personal knowledge representations. Wiki-
style sites represent an environment where the community contributes and shares
information, and blogs are media in which users express subjective opinions. In all of
these scenarios, adaptation, personalization and recommendation are core
functionalities. However, the understanding and exploitation of the semantics
underlying user and item profiles are still open issues.
Topics of Interest
APRESW workshop focused on establishing user/usage models for adaptation,
personalization and recommendation approaches for the Social-semantic Web.
The topics of interest included, but were not limited to the exploitation of the Web
of Data, the identification of semantics underlying social annotations of multimedia
contents, and the application of semantic-based techniques and technologies in
research fields related to:
• Personalized access to multimedia content
• Content-based recommendation and collaborative filtering
• Adaptive exploration of multimedia content
• Adaptive user interfaces for multimedia content browsing and searching
• Community extraction and exploitation
• Social networks analysis for collaborative recommendation
• User profile construction based on social tagging information
• Context-aware multimedia content access and delivery
• Mobile and ubiquitous multimedia content access and delivery
Organising Committee
Iván Cantador Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain
Peter Mika Yahoo! Research, Spain
David Vallet Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain
José C. Cortizo Universidad Europea de Madrid, Spain
Francisco M. Carrero Universidad Europea de Madrid, Spain
Programme Committee
Sofia Angeletou Knowledge Media Institute, The Open University, UK
Ching-man Au Yeung NTT Communication Science Labs, Japan
Alejandro Bellogín Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain
Pablo Castells Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain
Manuel Cebrián Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
Rosta Farzan Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Miriam Fernández Knowledge Media Institute, The Open University, UK
Enrique Frías Telefónica I+D, Spain
Ana García-Serrano Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, Spain
Andrés García-Silva Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain
Tom Heath Talis, UK
Frank Hopfgartner University of Glasgow, UK
Ioannis Konstas University of Edinburgh, UK
Estefanía Martín Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Spain
Phivos Mylonas National Technical University of Athens, Greece
Daniel Olmedilla Telefónica I+D, Spain
Carlos Pedrinaci Knowledge Media Institute, The Open University UK
Jérôme Picault Alcatel-Lucent Bell Labs, France
Francesco Ricci Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, Italy
Sergey A. Sosnovsky University of Pittsburgh, USA
Martin Szomszor City University London, UK
Marc Torrens Strands, Spain
Paulo Villegas Telefónica I+D, Spain