Call for Papers
Fourth Workshop on Knowledge-aware and Conversational Recommender Systems (KaRS 2022)
https://kars-workshop.github.io/2022/
Sep. 18th - Sep. 23rd, 2022, Seattle, WA, USA
Submission deadline: August 5th, 2022, AoE
[SCOPE]
We are pleased to invite you to contribute to the Fourth Workshop on Knowledge-aware and
Conversational Recommender Systems held in conjunction with the ACM International
Conference on Recommender Systems (RecSys 2022), Seattle, WA, USA, from September the 18th
to September the 23rd, 2022.
In the last few years, a renewed interest of the research community in conversational
recommender systems (CRSs) is emerging. This is probably due to the great diffusion of
Digital Assistants (DAs) such as Amazon Alexa, Siri, or Google Assistant that are
revolutionizing the way users interact with machines. DAs allow users to execute a wide
range of actions through an interaction mostly based on natural language messages.
However, although DAs are able to complete tasks such as sending texts, making phone
calls, or playing songs, they are still at an early stage in offering recommendation
capabilities by using the conversational paradigm.
In addition, we have been witnessing the advent of more and more precise and powerful
recommendation algorithms and techniques able to effectively assess users' tastes and
predict information that would probably be of interest to them.
Most of these approaches rely on the collaborative paradigm (often exploiting machine
learning techniques) and do not take into account the huge amount of knowledge, both
structured and non-structured, describing the domain of interest of the recommendation
engine.
Although very effective in predicting relevant items, collaborative approaches miss some
very interesting features that go beyond the accuracy of results and move in the direction
of providing novel and diverse results as well as generating an explanation for the
recommended items. Furthermore, this side information becomes crucial when a
conversational interaction is implemented, in particular for the preference elicitation,
explanation, and critiquing steps.
The 4th Knowledge-aware and Conversational Recommender Systems (KaRS) Workshop focuses on
all aspects related to the exploitation of external and explicit knowledge sources to feed
and build a recommendation engine, and on the adoption of interactions based on the
conversational paradigm. The aim is to go beyond the traditional accuracy goal and to
start a new generation of algorithms and approaches with the help of the methodological
diversity embodied in fields such as Machine Learning (ML), Human-Computer Interaction
(HCI), Information Retrieval (IR), and Information Systems (IS). Consequently, the focus
lies on works improving the user experience and following goals such as user engagement
and satisfaction or customer value.
The aim of this fourth edition of KaRS is to bring together researchers and practitioners
around the topics of designing and evaluating novel approaches for recommender systems in
order to:
* share research and techniques, including new design technologies and evaluation
methodologies;
* identify the next key challenges in the area;
* identify emerging topics in the field.
[TOPICS]
This workshop aims at establishing an interdisciplinary community with a focus on the
exploitation of (semi-)structured knowledge and conversational approaches for recommender
systems and promoting collaboration opportunities between researchers and practitioners.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Knowledge-aware Recommender Systems.
- Models and Feature Engineering:
- Knowledge-aware data models based on structured knowledge sources (e.g., Linked Open
Data, BabelNet, Wikidata, etc.)
- Semantics-aware approaches exploiting the analysis of textual sources (e.g.,
Wikipedia, Social Web, etc.)
- Knowledge-aware user modeling
- Methodological aspects (evaluation protocols, metrics, and data sets)
- Logic-based modeling of a recommendation process
- Knowledge Representation and Automated Reasoning for recommendation engines
- Deep learning methods to model semantic features
- Beyond-Accuracy Recommendation Quality:
- Using knowledge bases and knowledge graphs to increase recommendation quality(e.g.,
in terms of novelty, diversity, serendipity, or explainability)
- Explainable Recommender Systems
- Knowledge-aware explanations to recommendations (compliant with the General Data
Protection Regulation)
- Online Studies:
- Using knowledge sources for cross-lingual recommendations
- Applications of knowledge-aware recommenders (e.g., music or news recommendation,
off-mainstream application areas)
- User studies (e.g., on the user's perception of knowledge-based
recommendations), field studies, in-depth experimental offline evaluations
- Conversational Recommender Systems.
- Design of a Conversational Agent:
- Design and implementation methodologies
- Dialogue management (end-to-end, dialog-state-tracker models)
- UX design
- Dialog protocols design
- User Modeling and interfaces:
- Critiquing and user feedback exploitation
- Short- and Long-term user profiling and modeling
- Preference elicitation
- Natural language-, multi-modal-, and voice-based interfaces
- Next-question problem
- Methodological and Theoretical aspects:
- Evaluation and metrics
- Datasets
- Theoretical aspects of conversational recommender systems
[SUBMISSIONS]
Submissions of full research papers must be in English, in PDF format in the CEUR-WS
two-column conference format available at:
http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-XXX/CEURART.zip
or at:
https://www.overleaf.com/latex/templates/template-for-submissions-to-ceur-w…
if an Overleaf template is preferred.
Submission will be peer-reviewed and accepted papers will appear in the CEUR workshop
series. Papers may range from theoretical works to system descriptions.
We particularly encourage Ph.D. students or Early-Stage Researchers to submit their
research. We also welcome contributions from the industry and papers describing ongoing
funded projects which may result useful to the Knowledge-aware and Conversational
Recommender Systems community.
The conference language is English.
We invite three kinds of submissions, which address novel issues in Knowledge-aware and
Conversational Recommender Systems:
* Long Papers should report on substantial contributions of lasting value. The Long papers
must have a length of a minimum of 6 and a maximum of 8 pages (plus an unlimited number of
pages for references). Each accepted long paper will be included in the CEUR online
Workshop proceedings and presented in a plenary session as part of the Workshop program.
* Short/Demo Papers typically discuss exciting new work that is not yet mature enough for
a long paper. In particular, novel but significant proposals will be considered for
acceptance in this category despite not having gone through sufficient experimental
validation or lacking a strong theoretical foundation. Applications of recommender systems
to novel areas are especially welcome. The Short/Demo papers must have a length of a
minimum of 3 and a maximum of 5 pages (plus an unlimited number of pages for references).
Each accepted short paper will be included in the CEUR online Workshop proceedings
* Position/Discussion Papers describe novel and innovative ideas. Position papers may also
comprise an analysis of currently unsolved problems, or review these problems from a new
perspective, in order to contribute to a better understanding of these problems in the
research community. We expect that such papers will guide future research by highlighting
critical assumptions, motivating the difficulty of a certain problem, or explaining why
current techniques are not sufficient, possibly corroborated by quantitative and
qualitative arguments. The Position/Discussion papers must have a length of a minimum of 2
and a maximum of 3 pages (plus an unlimited number of pages for references). Original
Position/Discussion accepted papers will be included in the CEUR online Workshop
proceedings. Selected Position/Discussion papers will be invited as oral presentations.
The review process is single-blind. Submitted papers will be evaluated according to their
originality, technical content, style, clarity, and relevance to the workshop.
Moreover, following the RecSys 2022 guidelines, reviewers will be asked to comment on
whether the length is appropriate for the contribution. Shorter papers should generally
report on advances that can be described, set into context, and evaluated concisely.
Longer papers should reflect substantial contributions of lasting value.
Short and long paper submissions must be original work and may not be under submission to
another venue at the time of review.
Accepted papers will appear in the workshop proceedings.
Submission will be through Easychair at:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=kars2022
[IMPORTANT DATES]
* Paper submissions due: August 5th, 2022
* Paper acceptance notification: August 27th, 2022
* Camera-ready deadline: September 10th, 2022
* Workshop day: Sep 18th-23rd, 2022
Deadlines refer to 23:59 (11:59 pm) in the AoE (Anywhere on Earth) time zone.
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