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Data Analytics and Management in Data Intensive Domains: 20th International Conference, DAMDID/RCDL 2018, Moscow, Russia, October 9–12, 2018, Revised Selected Papers PDF

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Yannis Manolopoulos Sergey Stupnikov (Eds.) Communications in Computer and Information Science 1003 Data Analytics and Management in Data Intensive Domains 20th International Conference, DAMDID/RCDL 2018 Moscow, Russia, October 9–12, 2018 Revised Selected Papers 123 Communications in Computer and Information Science 1003 Commenced Publication in 2007 Founding and Former Series Editors: Phoebe Chen, Alfredo Cuzzocrea, Xiaoyong Du, Orhun Kara, Ting Liu, Krishna M. Sivalingam, Dominik Ślęzak, Takashi Washio, and Xiaokang Yang Editorial Board Members Simone Diniz Junqueira Barbosa Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro (PUC-Rio), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Joaquim Filipe Polytechnic Institute of Setúbal, Setúbal, Portugal Ashish Ghosh Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata, India Igor Kotenko St. Petersburg Institute for Informatics and Automation of the Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg, Russia Junsong Yuan University at Buffalo, The State University of New York, Buffalo, NY, USA Lizhu Zhou Tsinghua University, Beijing, China More information about this series at http://www.springer.com/series/7899 Yannis Manolopoulos Sergey Stupnikov (Eds.) (cid:129) Data Analytics and Management in Data Intensive Domains 20th International Conference, DAMDID/RCDL 2018 – Moscow, Russia, October 9 12, 2018 Revised Selected Papers 123 Editors YannisManolopoulos Sergey Stupnikov Open University of Cyprus FederalResearchCenter“ComputerScience Latsia, Cyprus andControl”of RAS Moscow,Russia ISSN 1865-0929 ISSN 1865-0937 (electronic) Communications in Computer andInformation Science ISBN 978-3-030-23583-3 ISBN978-3-030-23584-0 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-23584-0 ©SpringerNatureSwitzerlandAG2019 Thisworkissubjecttocopyright.AllrightsarereservedbythePublisher,whetherthewholeorpartofthe material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storageandretrieval,electronicadaptation,computersoftware,orbysimilarordissimilarmethodologynow knownorhereafterdeveloped. Theuseofgeneraldescriptivenames,registerednames,trademarks,servicemarks,etc.inthispublication doesnotimply,evenintheabsenceofaspecificstatement,thatsuchnamesareexemptfromtherelevant protectivelawsandregulationsandthereforefreeforgeneraluse. Thepublisher,theauthorsandtheeditorsaresafetoassumethattheadviceandinformationinthisbookare believedtobetrueandaccurateatthedateofpublication.Neitherthepublishernortheauthorsortheeditors give a warranty, expressed or implied, with respect to the material contained herein or for any errors or omissionsthatmayhavebeenmade.Thepublisherremainsneutralwithregardtojurisdictionalclaimsin publishedmapsandinstitutionalaffiliations. ThisSpringerimprintispublishedbytheregisteredcompanySpringerNatureSwitzerlandAG Theregisteredcompanyaddressis:Gewerbestrasse11,6330Cham,Switzerland Leonid Kalinichenko 10.06.1937–17.07.2018 In July 2018 we lost a leading visionary scientist in the field of the database theory. Leonid Kalinichenko is known in the scientific community for his pioneering works, the scientific school he established, and the formation of two international scientific conferences run for two decades each. Leonid Kalinichenko’s entire life was devoted to computer science. In 1959 he graduated from Kiev Polytechnic Institute and started his work at the Institute of Cybernetics the Ukraine Academy of Sciences. In 1968 he received his Ph.D. degree fromtheInstituteofCyberneticsthemainresultsofhisthesisweredevotedtodiscrete eventssystemssimulation(languages,tools,applications),andin1969hemovedtothe Institute for Electronic Control Machines, Moscow. Later, in 1985, he received his Doctor of Sciences degree from the Lomonosov Moscow State University. The thesis wasdevotedtomethodsandtoolsofheterogeneous databasesintegration.Inthesame year he became the head of a department at the Institute of Informatics Problems, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, which is now the Federal Research Center “Computer Science and Control” of the Russian Academy of Sciences (FRC CSC RAS). In1978 Leonidjoined thefacultyof theLomonosov MoscowState University and in 1990 he became Professor of the Department of Computational Mathematics and Cybernetics. He taught courses on object-oriented databases and distributed object technologies. He is an author of ten books, and more than 200 research papers in journals and conference proceedings. His research interests included interoperable heterogeneous information resource integration and mediation, semantic interoper- ability, compositional development of information systems, middleware architectures, and digital libraries. Severalsignificantprogramsystemsweredevelopedunderhissupervision:discrete eventsystemsimulationSLANG(1969),embeddingofsimulationsystemsintovarious programming systems SKIF (1977), heterogeneous database integration (1984), com- positionaldevelopmentofinteroperableinformationsystems(2001),subjectmediation middleware for scientific problem solving over distributed information resources vi LeonidKalinichenko (2010). Investigations on methods and tools for heterogeneous information resources integrationapplyingsubjectmediationmethodologysupportedbyformalspecification andverificationwereembracedbytheframeworkprojectcalledSYNTHESIS.In1986 Leonid Kalinichenko was awarded the USSR State Prize in the Field of Science and Technologyforhisworksonsystemsimulation.In2010hebecameHonoredScientist of the Russian Federation. For several decades Leonid Kalinichenko took an active part in facilitation of research in the field of databases. From 1974 he was the Deputy Chairman of the Working Group on Software for Data Banks under the USSR State Committee on Science and Technology. He initiated the creation of the Moscow ACM SIGMOD Chapterin1992andbecamethepermanentchairofthechapter.Themonthlyscientific seminar of the chapter has operated since the chapter creation until the present time. The 200 seminar meetings significantly influenced the Russian community on data- bases and information systems. He successfully formed several international conferences including the European ConferenceonAdvancesinDatabasesandInformationSystems(ADBIS)in1993and Russian Conference on Digital Libraries (RCDL) in 1999. Leonid Kalinichenko acted as the permanent chair of the Steering Committees of the conferences as well as chair (co-chair) of the Program Committees of many conferences. In the last few years his activities and works were devoted to problem solving in dataintensivedomains.During2013–2016heinitiatedseveralresearchprojectsaimed at conceptual modeling and data integration within distributed computational infrastructures. In 2015 he initiated the transformation of the RCDL conference into the Interna- tional Conference on Data Analytics and Management in Data Intensive Domains (DAMDID)—a multidisciplinary forum of researchers and practitioners from various domains of science and research promoting the cooperation and exchange of ideas in the area of data analysis and management in data-intensive domains. The conference became a place for discussions on data access, analysis and management problems in astronomy, neurology, genomics, material science, biology. In 2015 he also organized a master program entitled “Big data: infrastructures and methods for problem solving” at the Department of Computational Mathematics and Cybernetics, Lomonosov Moscow State University to attract students in the field of multidisciplinary data analysis and management. Leonid was a great scientist with a surprisingly deep knowledge of the state of the art in his field of science, understanding the urgent directions of the development of science. But he was also a real scientific driver of the research team he led at the Institute of Informatics Problems, a driver of conferences he established and scientific groups he contacted. Leonid Kalinichenko vii Leonid’s passing away is a huge loss for the scientific community, his family, his colleagues and his friends. Igor Sokolov Yannis Manolopoulos Vladimir Sukhomin Victor Zakharov Nikolay Kolchanov Arkady Avramenko Pavel Braslavsky Vasily Bunakov Alexander Elizarov Alexander Fazliev Alexei Klimentov Mikhail Kogalovsky Vladimir Korenkov Mikhail Kuzminski Sergey Kuznetsov Vladimir Litvine Archil Maysuradze Oleg Malkov Alexander Marchuk Igor Nekrestjanov Boris Novikov Nikolay Podkolodny Aleksey Pozanenko Vladimir Serebryakov Yury Smetanin Vladimir Smirnov Sergey Stupnikov Konstantin Vorontsov Viacheslav Wolfengagen Preface This CCIS volume published by Springer contains the proceedings of the XX Inter- national Conference Data Analytics and Management in Data-Intensive Domains (DAMDID/RCDL 2018) that took place during October 9–12 in the Lomonosov Moscow State University at the Department of Computational Mathematics and Cybernetics. The conference was dedicated to the memory of its founder, Leonid Kalinichenko, who passed away on July 17, 2018. The DAMDID is planned as a multidisciplinary forum of researchers and practi- tioners from various domains of science and research, promoting cooperation and exchange of ideas in the area of data analysis and management in domains driven by data-intensiveresearch.Approachestodataanalysisandmanagementbeingdeveloped in specific data-intensive domains (DID) of X-informatics (such as X = astro, bio, chemo, geo, med, neuro, physics, chemistry, material science etc.), social sciences, as well as in various branches of informatics, industry, new technologies, finance and business are expected to contribute to the conference content. Traditionally DAMDID/RCDL proceedings are published locally before the conference as a collection of full texts of all contributions accepted by the Program Committee: regular and short papers, abstracts of posters and demos. Soon after the conference, the texts of regular papers presented at the conference are submitted for online publishing in a volume of the European repository of the CEUR Workshop Proceedings, as well as for indexing the volume content in DBLP and Scopus. Since 2016 a DAMDID/RCDL volume of post-conference proceedings with up to one third of the submitted papers that have been previously published in CEUR Workshop Proceedings have been published by Springer in their Communications in Computer and Information Science (CCIS) series. Each paper selected for the CCIS post-conference volume should be modified as follows: the title of each paper should be a new one; the paper should be significantly extended (with at least 30 per cent of new content); the paper should refer to its original version in CEUR Workshop Proceedings. The program of DAMDID/RCDL 2018 alongside the traditional data management topics reflects a rapid move into the direction of data science and data-intensive analytics. The Workshop on FAIR Data and European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) consti- tuting the first day of the conference on October 9 included four sessions. The first session devoted to FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable) data princi- plesintherealmofopenscienceincludedinvitedtalksbyMichelSchouppe(European Commission, Directorate-General for Research and Innovation) and Simon Hodson (Executive Director of CODATA). Michel Schouppe considered the relevance of EOSC and FAIR and phases of implementing the EOSC, while Simon Hodson over- viewedFAIRData,FAIRServicesandtheFAIRdataactionplan.Thesecondsection devoted to FAIR platforms and interoperability included invited talks by Ari Asmi x Preface (IntegratedCarbonObservationSystemERIC),SergeyStupnikov(FRCCSCRAS)and NikolaySkvortsov(FRCCSCRAS).AriAsmidiscussedbuildingFAIRenvironmental services platforms in Europe, Sergey Stupnikov presented FAIR data based on extensible unifying data model development, and Nikolay Skvortsov considered data interoperability and reuse among heterogeneous scientific communities. The third sessiondevotedtoFAIRimplementationissuesandactivitiesincludedinvitedtalksby Peter Wittenburg (Max Planck Computing and Data Facility), Erik Schultes (Leiden University Medical Centre, GO FAIR International Support and Coordination Office) and Damien Lecarpentier (CSC-IT Center for Science). Peter Wittenburg discussed digital objects as a concept to help implement FAIR and EOSC, Erik Schultes con- sideredacceleratingconvergencetoanInternetofFAIRdataandservices,andDamien Lecarpentier overviewed FAIR activities within the various EOSC-funded initiatives. Thefourthsessionwasapanelondataaccesschallengesfordata-intensiveresearchin Russia andEOSCwhereexpertsfromdifferent regionsanddisciplineshadthechance todiscussthecurrentstateandfutureoftheFAIRactionplanandtheEOSCinitiative, present their views and contributions, and discuss active participation. The conference Program Committee reviewed 54 submissions for the conference andeightsubmissionsforthePhDworkshop.ForthePhDworkshopsevenpaperswere acceptedandonewasrejected.Fortheconference24submissionswereacceptedasfull papers, 18 as short papers, five as posters, whereas 12 submissions were rejected. According to the conference program, these 47 oral presentations were structured into 14 sessions including Internet of Things and Cognitive Systems, Data Integration and Data Analysis, Knowledge Representation, Ontologies and Applications, Data Anal- ysis and Applications, Conceptual and Data Models, Advanced Data Analysis Meth- ods,DataAnalysisinAstronomy,TextSearchandProcessing,DistributedComputing andApplicationsofMachineLearning,ResearchDataInfrastructures,andInformation Extraction from Text. Although most of the presentations were dedicated to the results of projects con- ducted in the research organizations based in the Russian Federation including Chelyabinsk, Ekaterinburg, Kazan, Moscow, Novosibirsk, Obninsk, St. Petersburg, Tomsk, Tver, Ulyanovsk, the conference has acquired features of internationalization. Thismoveiswitnessedby13talks(sixofthemwereinvited)preparedbywell-known foreign researchers from such countries as Armenia (Yerevan), Belgium (Brussels), Germany (Munich, Hamburg, Kiel), Great Britain (Harwell), Hungary (Budapest), Finland (Espoo, Helsinki), France (Paris), Kazakhstan (Almaty), The Netherlands (Leiden). Fortheproceedings,12paperswereselectedbytheProgramCommittee(ninepeer reviewed and three invited papers) and after careful editing they formed the content of the post-conference volume structured into seven sections including FAIR Data Infrastructures, Interoperability and Reuse (three papers), Knowledge Representation (one paper), Data Models (one paper), Data Analysis in Astronomy (one paper), Text Search and Processing (two papers), Distributed Computing (one paper), Information Extraction from Text (three papers). ThechairsofProgramCommitteeexpresstheirgratitudetotheProgramCommittee membersforcarryingoutthereviewingofthesubmissionsandselectionofthepapers forpresentation,totheauthorsofthesubmissions,aswellastotheRussianFoundation

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