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BCS-HCI  April 2006

BCS-HCI April 2006

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Subject:

Cfp: Workshop on the role of emotion in HCI, London, 12 September 2006

From:

British HCI News <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

British HCI News <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Thu, 27 Apr 2006 23:28:55 +0100

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (147 lines)

~~~~~~~ BRITISH HCI GROUP NEWS SERVICE ~~~~~~~~~~~
~~         http://www.bcs-hci.org.uk/           ~~
~~ All news to: [log in to unmask]  ~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~ NOTE: Please reply to article's originator,  ~~
~~ not the News Service                         ~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

                      Call for Participation

              ======================================
                     The 2006 Workshop on
                   The Role of Emotion in HCI

                        to be held at the
                HCI 2006 conference, London, UK

                    Tuesday, 12 September 2006

                  http://www.emotion-in-hci.net
              ======================================

Deadline for Abstracts: June 4, 2006


Objectives:

The topic of emotion in Human-Computer Interaction is of increasing 
interest to the HCI community. Since Rosalind Picard's fundamental 
publications on affective computing, research in this field has 
gained significant momentum.

Emotion research is largely grounded in psychology yet spans across 
numerous other disciplines. The challenge of such an 
interdisciplinary research area is developing a common vocabulary 
and research framework that a mature discipline requires. What is 
increasingly needed for advanced and serious work in this field is 
to place it on a rigorous footing, including developing theoretical 
fundamentals of HCI-related emotion research, understanding 
emotions' function in HCI, ethical and legal issues, and the 
practical implications and consequences for the HCI community.

The first workshop on emotion in HCI held in Edinburgh last year 
brought an interdisciplinary group of practitioners and researchers 
together for a lively exchange of ideas, discussion of common 
problems, and identification of domains to explore.

This year's workshop will build on the success of last year. Focus 
will be on discussion and joint work on selected topics. 
Participants will engage in developing further the themes from the 
first workshop in as wide an application spectrum as possible, such 
as internet applications, ambient intelligence, office work, control 
rooms, mobile computing, virtual reality, presence, and home 
applications.

You are cordially invited to become part of this interdisciplinary 
forum. This will be a very practical workshop with the participants 
working together to find new insights, views, ideas and solutions. 
We therefore invite contributions which will enrich the discussions 
by their innovative content, fundamental nature, or new perspective. 
We also encourage demos of products or prototypes related to the topic.


Topics addressed by the workshop are:
- How do applications currently make use of emotions and
   how could it be improved?
- What makes applications that support affective interactions
   successful?
- How do we know if affective interactions are successful, and
   how can we measure this success?
- What value might affective applications, affective systems, and
   affective interaction have?
- What requirements on sensing technologies are there in HCI?
- What technology is currently available for sensing affective
   states?
- How reliable is sensing technology?
- Are there reliable and replicable processes to include emotion in
   HCI design projects?
- What opportunities and risks are there in designing affective
   applications?
- What are the relationships between emotion, affect, personality,
   and engagement, and what do they mean for interactive systems
   design?

To become part of this discussion please submit an extended abstract 
of your ideas 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.
The abstract should be limited to about 800 words. Accepted 
contributions will be published on the workshop's homepage with the 
possibility to extend them to short papers of 4 pages. It is also 
planned to produce a special issue of a journal on the results of 
the workshop.

Please note that registration to the HCI conference is required in 
order to take part in the workshop (at least for the day of the 
workshop). Early bird registration deadline is 23rd June.


Dates:
04 June      - position paper deadline
14 June      - notification of acceptance
23 June      - early registration deadline
12 September - workshop

For a more detailed description of the workshop visit the workshop's 
web site: http://www.emotion-in-hci.net/workshopHCI2006/

Submit your position paper/demo description (800 words) to
        [log in to unmask]

For inquiries use [log in to unmask]

The conference web site with registration information is
http://www.bcs-hci.org.uk/hci2006/


Workshop committee:

Christian Peter, Fraunhofer IGD Rostock, Germany
Lesley Axelrod, Brunel University, UK
Elizabeth Crane, University of Michigan, USA
Russell Beale, University of Birmingham, UK
Ruth Aylett, Heriot-Watt University Edinburgh, UK
Barbara Fredrickson, University of North Carolina, USA
Kristina Höök, Swedish Institute of Computer Science, Sweden
Bodo Urban, Rostock University, Rostock, Germany
John Waterworth, Umeå University, Sweden
Nicola Millard, British Telecom plc, UK
Karina Oertel, Fraunhofer IGD Rostock, Germany
Jörg Voskamp, Fraunhofer IGD Rostock, Germany
Robert Ward, University of Huddersfield, UK
Steffen Mader, Fraunhofer IGD Rostock, Germany


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