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Dear Colleagues

Apologies if you receive this email more than once. Together with Fiona 
McNeill, Francisco José Quesada (both from Heriot-Watt University, UK, 
and Hemant Purohit (George Mason University, USA), I'm organising 
anI*ntelligent Systems Track at the ISCRAM (Information Systems for 
Crisis Response and Management) conference* in Spain. The submission 
deadline for long papers is the 8th December, but the short paper 
deadline is on the 8th February, so plenty of time to get writing.

Please consider submitting to the track and passing on the information 
to any colleagues that may be interested.

Kind regards
Julie Dugdale
University Grenoble Alps
Head of the HAwAI (Human Aware Artificial Intelligence) research team, 
Grenoble Informatics Lab.


  TRACK: Intelligent Systems


  16^th International Conference on


  INFORMATION SYSTEMS FOR CRISIS RESPONSE AND MANAGEMENT


  /“Individual-Centric Emergency Management Systems”/

*Conference *May 20-22, 2019

^

*Valencia, Spain*

Universitat Politècnica de València

https://iscram2019.webs.upv.es/**

**


  Program Committee co-chairs:


  José J. González ([log in to unmask])


  Zeno Franco ([log in to unmask])

**

**

**

*INTRODUCTION TO THE TRACK*

The aim of this track is to bring together state-of-the-art works on 
crisis information systems that exhibit some degree of intelligent 
behaviour. Intelligent systems have for many years now been at the 
forefront of empowering crisis managers, citizens and communities 
through advanced information systems.

Providing adequate information management and decision support during a 
crisis situation makes exacting demands on the information systems 
employed. Acquiring, filtering, organizing, representing, reasoning with 
and distributing relevant information to the right stakeholders at the 
right time and in the right format is a challenging and complex task. 
Intelligent systems provide a way of managing this complexity, for 
example by transforming unstructured data into a structured form of 
actionable knowledge for decision support. Such systems may be deployed 
to help emergency responders to maintain community resilience, to 
enhance their preparedness, to manage the crisis or to implement the 
recovery.

Intelligent systems will display some ability to reason, perceive, learn 
or act intelligently in their environments; and they may have proactive, 
reactive, autonomous and/or social aspects. Techniques from Artificial 
Intelligence, the Semantic Web and associated domains may be employed to 
develop such robust and adaptable information management and decision 
support systems.This track welcomes contributions to the theory, 
methodology and practice of developing and evaluating intelligent 
systems in the context of crisis response and management.

*TRACK TOPICS INCLUDE, but are not limited to*

/-//Intelligent context-aware modelling and processing/

/- Intelligent agents and distributed problem solving/

/- Rescue robotics and Humanitarian UAVs/

/- Case studies featuring the application of AI techniques/

/- Human-AI interaction and human-aware AI for crisis management/

/- Intelligent training systems/

/- Applications of the Semantic Web and linked data to crisis management/

/- Development and applications of ontologies and knowledge graphs for 
crisis management/

/- Intelligent user interfaces/

/- Smart cities and smart environments/

/- Agent based modeling and social simulation as a decision making tool/

/- Adaptive and self organizing systems/

/- Machine learning and deep learning applications/

/- Vision recognition/

/- Intelligent mapping/

/- Knowledge representation, discovery and reasoning/

/- Planning and scheduling/

/- Social intelligence/

/- Automatic negotiation of trust and analysis of provenance information/

/- Optimization and heuristics/

/- Intelligent behaviour in wireless sensor networks/

/- Applications based on blockchain and distributed ledgers technologies/

*TRACK FORMAT*

We intend to have two different aspects to the track organization during 
the conference.The first will be standard paper presentation to outline 
the state of the art in the field.

The second will focus on building networks and cross-disciplinary 
collaborations with a view to facilitating future work in the track.This 
will consist of themed discussion groups organised via Well Sorted 
(https://www.well-sorted.org).Attendees enter one or more topics of 
personal interest within the theme and then, once all topics are 
entered, sort them into what they believe are areas of overlapping 
interest.The system then creates themed groups.We will ask accepted 
authors to input their topics before the conference, and in the days 
leading up to and during the conference will promote this event to all 
conference attendees to give everyone with any interest in the theme a 
chance to participate and to increase awareness of and interest in the 
track. We hope this will be particularly useful to engage practitioners, 
students and others who may feel they don’t have much to offer the theme 
from a technical point of view but have relevant views about the crisis 
domain challenges and can bring a broad scope to the discussions. The 
general discussions within the themed groups will focus on: 1) how can 
intelligent systems improve crisis management?, and 2) what are the 
potential drawbacks and ethical issues of using intelligent and 
automated systems?More specific themes will emerge during the grouping 
process.

*SUBMISSIONS AND IMPORTANT DATES*

We accept both core research (CoRe) papers and work in progress (WiPe) 
papers.CoRe papers should be 4000-8000 words and WiPe papers should be 
3000-6000 words.Unsuccessful papers may, if judged to have sufficient 
relevance, be accepted as posters, and unsuccessful CoRe papers may, if 
appropriate, be invited to resubmit as WiPe papers.

*Full Research and Insight Papers*

Submission deadline: December 8th, 2018

Decision notification: January 7th, 2019

*WiPe (Short) Papers*

Submission deadline: February 8th, 2019

Decision notification: March 8th, 2019

**

*TRACK CHAIRS*

Julie Dugdale, University Grenoble Alps, France.

Fiona McNeill, Heriot-Watt University, UK.

Francisco José Quesada Real, University of Edinburgh, UK.

Hemant Purohit, George Mason University, USA.



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