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Workshop on Improving and Assessing Pen-Based Input Techniques
A workshop at HCI 2005
Edinburgh, Scotland
Monday 5 September 2005
http://www.dcs.gla.ac.uk/pen_workshop/
Over the past ten years or so, pen-based interaction with handheld devices has become widespread. Digital ink and digital pens, as well as the more common use of pens with PDAs and tablet PCs, all provide new methods for interaction. This workshop is designed to bring the human back into the investigation of pen-based interfaces and to consider ways in which such interfaces can be designed to provide rewarding user experiences.
WORKSHOP OBJECTIVES
The workshop will focus on the following four themes:
-- Recognition Techniques for Rich Pen-based Input: Input to pen-based systems can be varied, including handwritten text, drawing, doodles, annotations or structural elements (e.g., arrows). We will consider how to handle and enrich such input.
-- Methods that improve the Reading Process. Recognition will never be 100% accurate but with the appropriate assistance, the user may be able to read the output.
-- User-based Error Repair: The discovery of and recovery from errors at the interface, and the possibilities for multimodal error repair and error reduction methods.
-- Methods for Evaluating Pen-based Interfaces: Traditionally, the focus has been on the calculation of recognition error rates and the determination of ratings for user satisfaction. Novel evaluation methods are of interest, especially those that capture a broader range of quality attributes.
PAPER SUBMISSION AND WORKSHOP ATTENDANCE
Participation in the workshop requires the submission and acceptance of a paper. These papers will form the basis of workshop presentations and discussions. We invite submissions of research papers that address one or more of the workshop themes. Papers must be a maximum of 8 pages and should include a 200-word abstract. Papers should not be anonymised. Papers will be reviewed by the workshop organisers and will be selected for appropriateness, originality and academic rigour. Thoughtful and reflective papers of a more conceptual nature will be considered alongside more traditional studies and "practice & experience" reports. It is intended that authors of selected papers from the workshop will be invited to submit revised versions of their papers as the basis of a special issue of Interacting with Computers.
IMPORTANT DATES
We are operating two deadlines for contributions. The first deadline was 27th June; the second is 15th August. Decisions will communicated to authors by 22nd August.
Contributions should be sent to both organisers in both pdf and Word formats. The Volume 2 formatting style of HCI 2005 is preferred but not essential.
ORGANISERS
Janet Read ([log in to unmask])
Phil Gray ([log in to unmask])
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