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LoCA 2007 Call for Papers

3rd International Symposium on Location- and Context-Awareness
September 20th-21st, 2007
Oberpfaffenhofen near Munich, Germany
http://loca2007.context-aware.org

The 2007 Symposium on Location and Context Awareness seeks new and significant research on systems, services, and applications to detect, interpret and use of location and other contextual information. Context includes users’ activities, goals, abilities, preferences, interruptibility, affordances, and surroundings. With context, we can expect computers to deliver information, services, and entertainment in a way that maximizes convenience and minimizes intrusion. Developing awareness involves research in sensing, inference, data representation, and design.

Topic Areas:
We seek technical papers describing original, previously unpublished research results. Areas of interest include, but are not limited to:

  • Sensing location and context
  • Inference techniques for context from low-level sensor data
  • Privacy and sharing of location and context information
  • User studies of location- and context-aware systems

Dates:

  • Submission Deadline: May 29, 2007
  • Author Notification: July 3, 2007
  • Camera-Ready Version: July 10, 2007
  • Symposium: Sept. 20-21, 2007

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Keho – the place for Presence research

Keho is a new online magazine for the Presence research community. It is the e-zine of Peach, a European project aimed at supporting Presence research. The first issue of Keho will be available to download from the Peach website www.peachbit.org in Spring 2007. A sample issue is online now.

Contribute

Keho is looking for input from people working in the field of Presence. Do you have news about an interesting project or an event to share, an opinion about the direction Presence research is, or should be, taking, or perhaps an idea for a feature on Presence research in action? We would welcome your suggestions for articles for Keho. If you would like to contribute to the first issue please get in touch with the editor, before January 31st, i.helgason at napier.ac.uk or have a look at the Keho wiki: http://keho.pbwiki.com

Subscribe

If you would like to be notified when the first issue of Keho is available please subscribe to the mailing list at keho at peachbit dot org

Keep us in touch

We would like to be kept in touch with your activities. If you have a news mailing list please add the Keho editor: i.helgason at napier.ac.uk

About Peach

Peach is an EU-funded, Sixth Framework Programme Coordination Action on Presence, which aims to promote and support the networking and coordination of research and innovation activities. Its objective is to stimulate structure and support the Presence research community, with special attention to the challenges associated to the interdisciplinary character of the field. Secondly, because Presence research is set to produce disruptive technologies which can cause profound social impact and raise serious ethical issues, Peach will study the relationship between Presence technologies and society, looking at areas such as trends, ethics and legal aspects. Peach is also working to foster contact between researchers and the market, and enhance the public understanding of Presence research and technology.

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10th International Bauhaus Colloquium – Architecture and the Digital Image

10th International Bauhaus Colloquium — Weimar 2007

The Reality of the Imaginary — Architecture and the Digital Image — Bauhaus-Universität Weimar April 19 – 22, 2007

Call for papers for young scholars and PhD candidates.

The Bauhaus Colloquium is an international conference which has been held at regular intervals since 1976. It is devoted to the theoretical, philosophical and historical investigation of contemporary architecture.

On the basis of the current debates on the digital media technologies, augmented reality and ubiquitous design the 10th International Bauhaus Colloquium will discuss The Reality of the Imaginary – Architecture and the Digital Image. It can be hardly overlooked but the new reality of the digital habitat has been unsettling architecture for quite some time. Steadily and increasingly the new image technologies are shaping the world on their terms.

Since the early 1990’s architecture theory has been shifting its theoretical focus from the linguistic sign to the digital image. For a while it even looked as if spatial imagination might be eventually absorbed by digital media. Some people even believed in a late fulfilment of the post-modern postulate of the end of architecture. But today the digital image techniques can no longer be reduced to a matterless, ephemeral and solely imaginary world. On the contrary, with the growing liquidification of the boundaries between digital images and the world of material objects, digital images do not any longer present an autonomous sphere.

The new image techniques not only interpret the world anew but actively interfere with its material and spatial practices, i.e. with its architectural constitution. In the context of today’s digital turn it seems as if especially today the imaginary digital world and the architectural material world are growing more permeable to each other.

Therefore the colloquium proposes to discuss architecture as a cultural practice that is engaged in a permanent process of border crossing between image and space, between sign and material and between the reality of the architectural space and the imaginary world of the digital sphere.

With this call for papers we are asking young scholars and PhD candidates for their application. Four
workshops will be offered. The topics of the workshops are the same as in the four plenary sessions:

  • Image and Space
  • Architecture and the Production of Visibility
  • Urbane Image – Global Media
  • Forms of Mobilizing the Gaze

Please send an abstract of maximum 300 words and indicate the workshop you think appropriate to your
work. Please attach a brief CV.

The deadline is January 12, 2007. Mail to be sent to: bauhaus-kolloquium {at} uni-weimar dot de

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EuropIA.11

EuropIA.11: 11th International Conference on Design Sciences & Technology
Digital Thinking in Architecture, Civil Engineering, Archaeology, Urban Planning and Design : Finding the Ways — September: 19-21, 2007 – Montreal – Quebec – Canada

New digital cultures bring inevitable changes to our world and to the techniques, research methods and practices of design. The computer technology transforms slowly but surely the professions of environmental planning, architecture, archaeology and design. In recent years, we witness the emergence of digital methods using computer not only for facilitating technical tasks, but also to analyse project’s performance or amplify the creative thinking of designers. Educating the future professionals has become a real challenge due to the clash between fast developing technology and slower evolving new design thinking and values redefinition.

Confronting multi-disciplinary theoretical, teaching and practice experiences at the Europia11, will help finding the ways to the future of design.

Topics:

  • Digital Design Thinking
  • Environmental Design: Changing Values
  • Digital Methods in Archaeology and Heritage Reconstruction
  • Design Process and Know-how Communication

And EuropIA relevant subjects:

  • Archaeology and Reconstruction
  • Building and Construction Robotics
  • Collaborative Design
  • Design Education
  • Design Support Environments
  • Design Knowledge Representations
  • Design Methods Process and Creativity
  • Digital Fabrication and Prototyping
  • Ecological and Sustainable Design
  • Heritage Conservation and Reconstruction
  • Human and Machine Intelligence
  • Intelligent Design and Planning Tools
  • Intelligent, Interactive and Responsive Environments
  • Knowledge Based Design and Generative Systems
  • Urban Design
  • Virtual and Augmented Reality

Important Dates:

  • December 1, 2006: Call for papers – Open
  • March 15, 2007: Submission Full paper deadline
  • April 30, 2007: Notifications to Authors
  • June 15, 2007: Final papers camera ready

Papers Submission
Papers should be maximum 12 pages in length (a full page of text is about 500 words), i.e. your contribution might be around 5000 words long (including references) plus figures. Papers must be submitted in a word format to the following address: eia11-submit {at} europia.org.

Reviewing

  • All papers will be reviewed using a blind refereeing process by at least two members of the International Advisory Board.
  • The proceedings of the conference will be published by Europia – Publishers, Paris, France
  • Special issue of the Journal: IJDST (http://europia.org/DST)

Link: http://europia.org/EIA11

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PerGames 2007

The PerGames series of international symposia addresses the design and technical issues of bringing computer entertainment back to the real world with pervasive games.

Previous PerGames events were held in Vienna (2004), Munich (2005), Dublin (2006) and attracted researchers and practitioners from all over the world. PerGames 2007 will take place in and around Max Gandolf Saal at the University of Salzburg, Austria, on June 11. & 12. 2007. It will be co-located with the ACM Conference on Advancements in Entertainment Technologies (ACE). It is supported by IPerG, the Integrated Project on Pervasive Gaming from the European Commission’s IST Programme.

PerGames 2007 will feature high quality paper presentations and demos reviewed by an international program committee of experts from the fields of Pervasive Computing and Gaming. This time, we call for four categories of participation:

  • Research Papers (submission deadline is 1. March 2007)
  • Research Posters (submission deadline is 15. April 2007)
  • Live Demonstrations (… 15. April 2007)
  • Citywide Games (… 15. April 2007)

Please regard the details on submission categories. Printed and online proceedings will be provided.

Link: http://www.pergames.de/

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Enactive/07 conference

The Enactive/07 conference will be held in Grenoble (France) on November 19-22, 2007. Enactive/07 is an international scientific and cultural event, promoted by the European Network of Excellence ENACTIVE.

Seizing the opportunity of its welcome to Grenoble, an historical place in France for innovation in Arts, the 4th International Conference on Enactive Interfaces will be extended by an intellectual and artistic event: Enaction_in_Arts.

4th International Conference on Enactive Interfaces In the continuation of previous editions, Enactive / 07 aims at promoting the concept of Enaction in the field of Information and Communication Technologies. Creative researchers, innovative engineers and producers are invited to confront their last theoretical, experimental, technological and applicated advances during various talk, demo and poster sessions.

Enaction_in_Arts
Arts and Culture is one of the main fields that are intimately linked with contemporary concepts and technologies. Enaction_in_Arts sessions aim at promoting innovative artistic creations, theories and technologies for the Future of Arts. It will be a unique meeting at the crossing point of Art – Science – Technology and will offer to researchers, engineers and artists the opportunity to discover cutting-edge research, technologies and artworks centered around Enaction and Enactive Systems.

Your are cordially invited to submit:

  • Artworks and demonstrations for Enaction_in_Arts sessions (deadline January 31, 2007)
  • Scientific papers (deadline July 10, 2007)
  • Ateliers (deadline September 10, 2007)
  • Exhibit spaces (deadline September 10, 2007)

For more information, please visit Enactive/07 website: http://www.enactive2007.org

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New co-worker to IPCity in Aalborg University

AAU has employed a new co-worker to work on the IPCity project. Giang Phuong Nguyen from Vietnam will have her Ph.d. defense in Holland in the early 2007, but will join AAU in January to get introduced to the work currently done. Afterwards Giang will carry on the work that has been made until now.

For more information on Giang’s background, see her homepage, http://staff.science.uva.nl/~giangnp/isis/homepage/

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CHI 2007 workshop: Imaging the City

Exploring the Practices & Technologies of Representing the Urban Environment in Human-Computer Interaction

Recent technological developments mark the city as a central and perhaps special space for human-computer interaction research and practice. Visions of ubiquitous computing, the resonance of the ‘urban probe’, and the proliferation of interactive mapping services speak to the significance of the urban landscape to studies of Human-Computer Interaction. But such visions and technologies require, produce and reproduce images of urban space that influence what these systems, and our interactions with them, are and might be. Developing and employing technologies for the urban environment requires visualization techniques that both reflect and challenge how we image, and consequently imagine, the city.

This one-day workshop will explore the practices and technologies of imaging the urban environment, bringing together an interdisciplinary array of designers, HCI experts, urban planners and technologists to investigate such issues as:

  • How do we represent the city in HCI, and how do these representations inform HCI research and practice?
  • What kinds of technological devices, services, and platforms support imaging the city now and might be created in the near future?
  • How are and might these new representations of the city and urban imaging technologies be used for social and political ends?
  • What new methods are required for developing technologies that image the city in new ways?
  • What can we learn from the urban experience to design stronger representations and interfaces within HCI research and practice?

We welcome position papers from HCI practitioners, architects, visualization specialists, urban planners, futurists and artists. Sample topics might include:

  • Novel design and use of interactive mapping technologies
  • ‘Mashups’ and other user-driven combinations of imaging, information and location-based technologies and services
  • Urban surveillance technologies: their uses, abuses and implications
  • Urban environmental sensing: the social, technical and visualization challenges
  • and opportunities
  • The design and design implications of GPS-enabled/location-aware devices
  • Flickr photosharing, photoblogs and the geo-coding of images

Link: http://www.andrew.cmu.edu/user/cdisalvo/chi2007workshop/

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CHI 2007 workshop on Mobile Spatial Interaction

The use of geo-referenced information on the web has recently received increasing interest in the research community and the public. People use interactive maps to share their favourite places with others, and they use geo-browsing services for planning their vacation. Spatial information is even more useful in mobile situations, because it is directly related to the user’s surroundings.

The idea of Mobile spatial interaction (MSI) is becoming increasingly relevant, feasible and desired. Location and orientation sensing hardware is being integrated into a growing number of handsets and can be expected to be even more widespread in the near future. At the same time, geographic information systems and 3D models are becoming more sophisticated.

The workshop Mobile Spatial Interaction will aim to help researchers realize the vision of seamless and intuitive Mobile Spatial Interaction. The goal is to reach beyond the conventional model of location by creating a sense of space and orientation.

The intention is to bring together researchers and practitioners from areas as diverse as: mobile application design; geographic information systems, geodesy and geoinformatics; pervasive game design; communications theory and social software design; experimental hardware prototyping; commercial device manufacturing; psychology of spatial perception; semantic systems and natural language processing; marketing; multimedia arts; tourism and cultural heritage; information visualization and sonification; spatial audio; and augmented reality.

Link: http://msi.ftw.at/

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CHI 2007 workshop – Tangible User Interfaces in Context and Theory

Tangible User Interface (TUI) research addresses critical issues in HCI, including reflective practice in product design, embodied interaction, and ubiquitous computing. However, these can be obscured by gadget design concepts, and the technical challenge of devices and infrastructure. This workshop is an opportunity to step aside from the frustrations of making the technology work, focusing on concerns that underlie TUI research. It is of special interest to students aiming to advance the field, and commercial researchers seeking innovative applications.

Themes include analytic and generative theories of TUIs, and deployment and evaluation in real contexts. Participants should have experience of designing and building TUIs, but we encourage position papers that “step away from the workbench” to reflect on the goals and context of research, such as:

  • Human factors of manipulation
  • Semantic mappings between physical and virtual
  • Applied epistemology / ontology
  • Social facilitation through shared objects
  • Physical and material design spaces

The workshop will start with reviews of research themes emerging from position papers, emphasising current state of the field. Participants will then analyse specific design test cases from industry, or current fieldwork, applying these theoretical perspectives in structured small group discussion. Organisers are experienced leaders in the field, including Alan Blackwell (chair), George Fitzmaurice, Lars-Erik Holmquist, Hiroshi Ishii, and Brygg Ullmer. Commercial participants include Boeing and Nokia.

Please submit position papers, of no more than 4 pages, to alan.blackwell [at] cl.cam.ac.uk. At least one author of accepted papers must register for the workshop, and for one conference day.

Link: http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/conference/tangibleinterfaces/

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