MKM 2001 - Call for Papers
Mathematical Knowledge Management is an exciting new field in the
intersection of mathematics and computer science.
We need efficient, new techniques - based on sophisticated formal mathematics
and software technology - for taking fruit of the enormous knowledge available
in current mathematical sources and for organizing mathematical knowledge in a
new way.
The Workshop and the Special Issue should bring together math
researchers, software developers, publishing companies, math organizations,
and teachers for exchanging their views and approaches and for pushing the
field.
Whereas the workshop is designed to provide a forum for discussion and
presentation of early ideas, the special issue is a forum for polished,
refereed papers in the area of mathematical knowledge management.
Participation and presentation of talks and papers is possible in both the
workshop and the special issue, jointly or independently.
Scope
Mathematical knowledge management is a new and exciting topic in the
intersection of mathematics and computer science:
- Currently much effort/money is spent for producing new mathematical
knowledge.
- Very little effort/money is spent for improving the reliability and
efficiency of tools for retrieving what is already known in mathematics.
- Current techniques for mathematical knowledge retrieval are very
cumbersome, unreliable and shockingly unsuccessful.
By the workshop and the subsequent special issue on mathematical knowledge
management we want to provide a forum for math researchers, system designers,
publishing companies, math professional organizations, math research managers,
etc. for presenting and discussing recent work in the
computer-supported management of mathematical knowledge.
(Note that, in order to achieve maximum focus for both the workshop and the
special issue, "mathematical knowledge management" should be parsed as
"(mathematical knowledge) management" and not as "mathematical (knowledge
management)". In other words, the scope of the workshop and the special issue
is "the management of mathematical knowledge" and not "the mathematical theory
of general knowledge management"!)
Hence, in more detail, the scope of both the workshop and the special issue is
defined to be
- early ideas, philosophy, opinions, strategical goals
- formal languages, logical background
- standards, representations, and translation between representations
- algorithms, heuristics, innovative formal methods including theorem proving
- existing and future tools, systems
- organizational considerations
for the two main problems of mathematical knowledge management:
A particular emphasis of the workshop and the special issue will be on the
interconnection between mathematical knowledge management and automated
theorem proving systems, math assistants, and current mathematical software
systems.
An important goal of the workshop and the special issue is to bring together
the representatives of the research groups currently working on standards and
systems for mathematical knowledge management as, for example, OpenMath,
MathML, OMDoc, Mizar, THEOREMA, MathWorld, QED, TPTP, MBase, OMEGA, ILF, HELM,
EULER, LIMES, etc.
Also, it should be clear that the future of mathematical knowledge management
is not only a technical question of improved tools but also a question of how
the culture of doing mathematics will and should be changed. Hence,
contributions to these strategical questions are also highly welcome.
Computer-supported Retrieval of Mathematical Knowledge
Problem: Given the mathematical literature (in some area of mathematics, or in
some well-defined collection of sources as for example a journal or a book
series) and given a mathematical concept, a mathematical problem or a
mathematical method find all relevant information on the concept, problem, or
method in the literature considered.
This problem has many subproblems depending on how the mathematical literature
is "given":
- in the traditional way of text on paper
- as natural language texts in electronic form (e.g. Latex)
- as formal texts (well-formed formulae in some logic) in electronic form
- as executable code, e.g. mathematical software systems and/or
specifications of certain algorithms etc.
- ...
The problem has many subproblems also depending on what we ultimately want as
the output of a search:
- references to the literature
- relevant mathematical text
- relevant formal definitions, theorems, proofs
- methods
- executable code of algorithms
- knowledge formally derivable from the stored knowledge
- ...
It is clear that, as soon as we want to tackle more sophisticated versions of
the problem of retrieving mathematical knowledge, the full potential of
special and general computer-supported theorem proving systems and related
systems will be indispensable.
Computer-supported Build-up of Mathematical Knowledge
The second main problem of mathematical knowledge management is the problem of
new approaches and computer-support for structuring and building up
future mathematical knowledge bases in order to bring mathematical
knowledge retrieval to a new level of efficiency, reliability, and
completeness that should significantly surpass the efficiency, reliability,
and completeness of current retrieval tools for the current
mathematical knowledge bases as represented in current libraries.
This problem, again, has many subproblems:
- practical languages for the formalization of mathematics
- language standards for formal mathematics
- structuring of mathematical knowledge on the basis of the logical
structure of knowledge rather than on the basis of key words
- interaction of formal mathematical knowledge bases with computer-supported
proving systems
- interaction of formal mathematical knowledge bases with current
mathematical software systems (algorithm libraries, etc.)
- tools for restructuring the available knowledge in some mathematical area
w.r.t. to a desired aspect
- ...
Interaction with the Organization of Mathematical Research and Teaching
and the Application of Mathematics
The construction of new tools for mathematical knowledge management for the
current mathematical community will not be sufficient. Rather, we also
have to address the question of how future mathematicians will have to
change their working technique and how future math students will have
to be trained for working (doing math research, teaching mathematics, and
applying mathematics) reasonably within the frame of computer-supported global
mathematical knowledge webs. It may be foreseen that the impact of
computer-supported mathematical knowledge webs on the behavior and formal
qualification of mathematicians will be drastic. Conversely, a new generation
of formally well trained mathematicians will be necessary to make significant
progress in the efficiency, reliability, and completeness of mathematical
knowledge management.