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Dates
Submissions
Enquiries
Committee
PDF call
workshop
description |
Motivation
The role of emotion in HCI is becoming ever more relevant and
challenging. HCI for affective systems embraces theories from a wide
range of domains and disciplines such as psychology and sociology,
robotics, computer science or design. It is relevant to a diverse set
of application areas, from teaching and learning to office
applications, entertainment technology, therapeutic applications,
through to advertising and product design. Continual areas of interest
within research include the recognition as well as synthesis of affect
and emotion in the face, body, and speech, and the influence of emotion
on human information processing and decision-making, interaction
metaphors, design aspects, and many more. Throughout this wide-ranging
and multi-disciplinary research there are common obstacles each of us
face in our work, particularly when bringing affect out of the
laboratory and into the real world.
Topics and
Themes
This year’s workshop is focusing on the development of affective
technologies for real-world applications and the issues that this
orientation brings to our research. Position papers are most welcome,
but not limited to, the following topics:
- What are the real world challenges in affective computing and how
can we address them?
- How can we sense and model affect, and what impact does sensing
methodology and models used have on our methods?
- Can one -in the real world- sensibly differentiate between
emotional and non-emotional behavior, and if so how?
- What relationship is there to other concepts such as motivation
and engagement?
- What application areas make ideal research settings for exploring
affective technologies in the real world?
- How can we measure and evaluate the success of affective
interactions?
- What levels of social acceptance exist within society or specific
communities towards affective systems?
- How might social acceptance attitudes impact on the design of
affective technologies?
- What are the opportunities, risks and ethics entailed in
developing affective systems? In particular, how should these risks
and ethical concerns be addressed by the research community?
Who
should attend?
This workshop will meet the requirements of individuals working in the
different fields affected by emotion, giving them a podium to raise
their questions and work with like-minded people of various disciplines
on common subjects. It will use predominantly small group work, rather
than being presentation-based and will be focused on selected topics
based on the contributions. As with previous workshops, which resulted
in a Springer book publication, this interactive and focused workshop
is designed to produce tangible and citable outcomes.
Participate
now!
To become part of this discussion please submit an extended
abstract of your ideas, project or demo description. Case studies
describing current applications or prototypes are strongly encouraged,
as well as presentations of products or prototypes that you have
developed. To encourage a high number of demonstrations, not
just functional prototypes are welcome but also visionary ones in form
of e.g. video prototypes, cardboard mock ups, cartoon strips, forum
theatre presentations, or pastiche scenarios.
In any case we are particularly interested in prototypes and
products that are designed to function in the real world.
After acceptance of your position paper it is mandatory for you to
register to this workshop via the conference web site.
Submission
The abstract should be limited to about 800 words, formatted in ACM style (templates
here) and be in PDF format.
Please send your contribution to submission2009 at emotion-in-hci dot
net
Proceedings
Authors of accepted contributions will be asked to extend their
abstract to a short or full paper to be included in Volume 3 of the
conference proceedings. We might also issue a 2009 volume of the
workshop’s proceedings series, which will be published with an
ISBN by Fraunhofer IRB Verlag.
Important dates
| 30 April 2009 |
position paper deadline |
| 12 May 2009 |
notification of acceptance |
| 1st August 2009 |
camera ready copy due |
| will be announced |
early registration deadline |
| 01 September |
workshop |
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Enquiries
Please address any questions to enquiries2009 at emotion-in-hci.net
Download a PDF version of the call or the workshop
description.
Organizers
Christian Peter, Fraunhofer IGD Rostock, Germany
Elizabeth Crane, University of Michigan, USA
Lesley Axelrod, Interact Lab, UK
Harry Agius, Brunel University, UK
Shazia Afzal, University of Cambridge, UK
Madeline Balaam, University of Sussex, UK
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