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Workshop on Human Interaction with Intelligent & Networked Systems
In conjunction with Intelligent User Interfaces conference (IUI2009):
http://www.iuiconf.org
February 8th, 2009, Sanibel Island, Florida
http://www.cs.bath.ac.uk/hiins
Important Dates
Submission deadline: November 12th, 2008 ** new date **
Notification of acceptance: November 15th, 2008
Final camera ready submissions: November 28th, 2008
Workshop: February 8th, 2009
Submission
Participants will be required to submit a 4-6 page position paper
which will be reviewed by the workshop programme committee against the
following criteria:
- Relevance to topic
- Novelty/Originality of contribution
- Rigour in approach
- Potential impact
- Ability to communicate to other disciplines
- Ability to appreciate other disciplines
Submissions will be accepted in a CHI format (template downloadable
from Workshop website). Papers should be sent in PDF format to
[log in to unmask]
Workshop Outputs
The workshop will distribute the position papers to all attendees
before the workshop. At the workshop the focus will be on developing
links, identifying common themes, identifying common problems,
developing opportunities for joint working and combining of
approaches, identifying appropriateness of approaches to specific
areas and problems. From the workshop we will produce a research
agenda and a structure for combining the approaches, problems etc to
identify opportunities for further joint research and joint
publications. In summary we will produce:
- Pre workshop position papers
- Post workshop research agenda
- Post workshop research collaborations leading to collaborative
funding proposals.
- Post workshop structure, themes, and contributing authors for a
special journal issue.
Workshop Format
The workshop will have two distinct phases - first sharing attendees
interests, research areas, research problems and research approaches.
From this we will construct a capability map and identify where
research problems, approaches, come together and cluster across the
attendees. The second phase of the workshop will focus upon
identifying a research agenda, where and how different approaches
might be fruitfully brought together to address these research
challenges, identify potential collaborative research projects, and
identify the structure, themes and authors for a special issue of a
journal.
Aims and Scope
Increasingly systems have the ability to undertake decisions and
execute actions without reference to people in either the choice of
decision or the course of action. Additionally such systems have the
ability to work both alongside and with people. However how these
systems manage and execute their work alongside people and with people
and communicate and interact with those people is a subject of current
research concern. Issues arise such as how do people who are in some
sense part of a system that includes "autonomous" components
communicate, coordinate and collaborate together to avoid conflict,
failure or worse. Similarly, issues concern the recognition and
communication of intent, and implication with respect to human-system
interaction. Extending considerations to system - system interaction
when we create system that must communicate, coordinate and
collaborate with each other. These systems have to be designed but
their behaviours and ongoing interactions are often not well
understood and/or evolve as the systems develop. Examples of these
systems are developing in many areas including health, agriculture,
transport, energy and defence. The focus of this research is to bring
together researchers from different disciplines who have interests in
understanding, designing, deploying and assessing the such systems
from the perspective of their interaction with people and how they
communicate, coordinate and collaborate. Drawing out such issues as
awareness, understanding, sharing and joint activity, and considering
such aspects as intentions, states, goals, and resources, through
mechanisms such as negotiation, planning, task-allocation and task
sharing.
This is a timely workshop and IUI is the main area that offers the
chance for these different communities to come together to focus on
the nature and form of human interaction with complex, networked and
autonomous systems. (Note: because the boundaries between these
systems are blurred we are not wishing to exclude any and while there
are distinctions we do not want to use those to divide or exclude
possible attendees).
Objectives
The following are the workshop objectives:
- Bring together a community of researchers and practitioners to
develop the research agenda needed to enhance human interaction with
increasingly powerful and independent intelligent systems e.g. sensors
networks, autonomous systems, agents and robotic systems.
- This community will include but not be limited to those with
interest in decision-making, human computer interaction, collaborative
work, human-robot/agent interaction and sensor networks.
- To define and harness the potential synergies between isolated
communities of interest such that they can collaborate to identify and
tackle the higher-level problems/research questions relating both to
the current generation of complex, powerful, independent, intelligent
systems and the next.
- To identify specific opportunities for exchange between PIM
researchers and HCI researchers.
Potential Participants
The workshop will be of interest to researchers and practitioners from
a number of communities. In particular we welcome and will attract
attendees from different communities including those working in:
- Human computer interaction
- Intelligent systems and decision making
- Sensors and networks
- Human - Robot/Agent interaction
- Collaborative systems
Organisers
Workshop chairs:
Peter Johnson, University of Bath, UK
Mark T. Maybury , Information Technology Division, MITRE, USA
Rachid Hourizi, University of Bath, UK
Christopher Middup, University of Bath, UK
Program committee:
Peter Johnson, University of Bath, UK
Mark Maybury, MITRE, USA
Jill Drury, CSIRO, Australia
Cecile Paris, MITRE, USA
Neil Carrigan, University of Bath, UK
Hilary Johnson, University of Bath, UK
Jo Thoms, BAE Systems, UK
Steve Benford, University of Nottingham UK
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