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SISM 2013 : International Workshop on Socially Intelligent Surveillance and Monitoring | |||||||||||
Link: http://www.dcs.gla.ac.uk/~vincia/sism2013/index.html | |||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||
International Workshop on Socially Intelligent Surveillance and Monitoring
SISM 2013 http://www.dcs.gla.ac.uk/~vincia/sism2013/index.html In conjunction with the IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Portland (Oregon), June 28, 2013 Computer vision and pattern recognition are the main technologies used for automatic monitoring of public spaces. Effective approaches for tracking people, recognizing poses, postures, gestures, collective crowd phenomena in public environments have been developed in the last years, especially in the video surveillance context, aimed at classifying (suspect, unusual, abnormal) behaviors. In parallel, new technologies are being developed for sensing and monitoring inappropriate behavior in social media (e.g., identity theft, abuses on chlidren, etc.), a setting where the problems requiring surveillance technologies in the physical space tend to appear, in a different form, more and more frequently. Not to mention the critical role that social media play nowadays in a large number of activities that have a potential impact on the public sphere, from flash-mobs stopping the traffic for a few minutes to nation-wide revolutions. This workshop aims at gathering researchers active in computer vision and pattern recognition, human sciences and automatic behavior understanding to tackle the problems above in an interdiscplinary perspective. Joint research across different communities will have a major impact on any technology that can benefit from automatic monitoring approaches, including video-surveillance, architecture, ambient intelligence, marketing, office space design, urbanism, etc. Interested participants are invited to submit papers that should describe high-quality original research joining computer vision and pattern recognition, human sciences and automatic behavior understanding areas. Topics of interest include (but are by no means limited to): Proxemics Human ethology Kinesics Spatial Empathy Territoriality Expressions and emotions Tracking: multi-person, multi-camera, group/crowd Motion segmentation and analysis Crowd/group analysis and simulation Social force models Collective and emergent behaviour Gesture/Action recognition Activity analysis Multi-person/group/crowd interaction analysis Spatial and temporal reasoning Sensory integration and data fusion Social media and security Sentiment analysis Situation awareness and understanding Applications: Ambient Intelligence, Surveillance and Monitoring, Domotics, Intelligent, Perceptual Marketing Important Dates March 13th: submission April 20th: acceptance notification May 1st: Camera Ready June 28th: Workshop Organizing Committee V. Murino (Italian Institute of Technology) M. Cristani (University of Verona) A. Vinciarelli (University of Glasgow / Idiap Research Institute) |
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