-------- FINAL CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS AND PARTICIPATION ---------

 

You Are Here 2:

2nd Workshop on Spatial Awareness and Geographic Knowledge Acquisition with Small Mobile Devices

 

In conjunction with the International Conference on Spatial Cognition 2010,

Mt. Hood / Portland, Oregon, August 15, 2010

http://www.informatik.uni-bremen.de/~schmid/yah2/

 

 

!!!!!!!! NEWS !!!!!!!!!!

----------------------------

1. The best papers of YAH2 will be invited to contribute to a Special Issue hosted by JLBS (www.informaworld.com/jlbs ).

2. We are very proud to announce two student travel scholarships each worth 250€. Please visit our website for details http://www.informatik.uni-bremen.de/~schmid/yah2/

 

 

You Are Here 2 in a Nutshell

----------------------------

Web: http://www.informatik.uni-bremen.de/~schmid/yah2/

Follow us on Twitter for updates: http://twitter.com/YouAreHere2

Deadline: Up to 12 pages until May 15th, 2010

Workshop Date: August 15th, 2010

Topics: Mobile Maps, Interaction with Maps, Spatial Awareness, Geographic Knowledge Acquisition

 

 

Topic

----------------------------

Geographic information is nowadays ubiquitously available: Internet, car navigation systems, and various mobile devices have access to geographic data. The visualization of and the interaction with this data effects the cognitive processing of the information. It has been shown that turn-by-turn instructions turn off the brains of users, prevent them from learning the environment, and can be the cause of bizarre accidents. Straightforward map visualizations and awkward interaction, on the other hand, may not help and often lead to corrupted knowledge acquisition and misinterpretation of the surrounding environment.

 

It is plausible to assume that when everyday access to and usage of spatial information (e.g. wayfinding, searching, locating) finally migrates to mobile devices, people will eventually never access survey representations of their environment on large scale displays such as maps or large screens.

 

However, it is representations, which communicate configurational and contextual information of an environment, that most easily allow for the establishment of correct and coherent mental representations beyond sequences of turns or entities of vista spaces. Due to the inherent richness, large-scale geographic information is not suitable for being displayed on the small screens of mobile devices.

 

If we want to avoid life-long dependency on navigation devices and foster adequate knowledge acquisition, we will have to develop new and task specific visualizations and corresponding interaction primitives. They will allow the efficient communication and manipulation of complex spatial knowledge on multiple levels of granularity.

 

The development of visualizations of and interaction with geographic information, especially with respect to communicating complex configurations and to foster spatial knowledge acquisition is still rather unexplored. Coupled with task specific interaction, that efficiently shortcuts the inherent queries, we can expect the development of adequate representations and interaction primitives: adequate for small displays, adequate to understand spatial information, and adequate in retrieving answers for spatial queries.

 

 

Topics focus on but are not limited to:

• Novel information visualization algorithms for geographic information

• Novel task specific interaction primitives or query summaries

• Ingredients to create spatial awareness

• Small display cartography

• Large maps versus small multiples

• How is map information integrated across different levels of granularity/scales

• Map gestures and other summary graphics

• Ontology guided map schematization

• YAH maps in the light of new information technology

• Social aspects of spatial awareness

• The influence of visual clutter; why presenting more information does not mean a better understanding of places

• Advising schematization algorithms for small scale displays

• Individual differences and familiarity

• Measures and empirical results for spatial awareness and interaction usability

 

 

Workshop Keynote Speakers

----------------------------

Colin Ellard, http://www.colinellard.com/

Dan Montello, http://www.geog.ucsb.edu/~montello/

 

 

Important Dates

----------------------------

• Submission until May 15th, 2010

• Notification of acceptance from Jun 15th, 2010

• Camera-ready papers due to July 15th, 2010

• Workshop on August 15th, 2010

 

 

Submission Details

----------------------------

Please submit up to 12 pages (in Springer LNCS format as PDF) via the EasyChair conference system:

http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=yah2

Submissions can be position statements, work in progress, or completed work. All submissions will be reviewed by the committee. Accepted papers will be given 20 minutes for presentation and 10 minutes for discussion at the workshop.

 

 

Organizers

----------------------------

Stephen C. Hirtle, University of Pittsburgh

Alexander Klippel, Penn State University

Falko Schmid, University of Bremen

 

 

Committee

----------------------------

Pragya Agarwal

Suchith Anand

Julie Dillemuth

Juergen Doellner

Georg Gartner

Christoph Hoelscher

Christian Kray

Antonio Krueger

Lynn Liben

Dan Montello

Avi Parush

Martin Raubal

Kai-Florian Richter

Christoph Stahl

Stephan Winter

Xiaolong Zhang

 

We look forward to receiving your contributions and active participation.

 

Best wishes,

 

Suchith Anand

 

Dr Suchith Anand

Centre for Geospatial Science
The Nottingham Geospatial Building

University of Nottingham  NG7 2 TU
Tel: (0)115 82 32750

http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/~lgzwww/contacts/staffPages/SuchithAnand/Suchith%20Anand.htm
http://www.opensourcegis.org.uk/
http://ica-opensource.scg.ulaval.ca/

 


This message has been checked for viruses but the contents of an attachment may still contain software viruses which could damage your computer system: you are advised to perform your own checks. Email communications with the University of Nottingham may be monitored as permitted by UK legislation.