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HRI 2009 : 4th ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot InteractionConference Series : Human-Robot Interaction | |||||||||||||
Link: http://www.hri2009.org/ | |||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||
Authors are invited to submit all manuscripts in PDF (Adobe Acrobat) format. Eight camera-ready pages
including figures are allowed for each full paper. Accepted papers will be published in the conference proceedings, archived in the ACM Digital Library, and assigned for either oral or full poster presentation. Authors are also encouraged to submit their late-breaking results for short papers (two pages) which will not appear in the proceedings but which will be presented in a special poster session. Detailed instructions are available on the conference web site: http://www.hri2009.org. Video Submission We invite videos related to all aspects of HRI. Besides the importance of the lessons learned and the novelty of the situation, the entertainment value will be judged. The video itself must be self-explanatory for the audience. The videos will be published in the conference proceedings and archived in the ACM Digital Library. Tutorials and Workshops Proposals are sought from those wishing to organize a Tutorial or a Workshop on a HRI-related theme. Tutorials and Workshops will be held on March 10, one day before the main technical sessions. Exhibitions There will be an exhibition site at the conference and promoters are encouraged to display state-of-the-art products and services in all areas of robotics and human-robot interaction. Important Dates 15 September 2008 Submission of full papers, videos, and tutorial/workshop proposals 12 December 2008 Notification of acceptance 15 December 2008 Submission of late-breaking short papers 12 January, 2009 Final camera-ready papers due Topics: Socially intelligent robots Robot companions Lifelike robots Assistive (health & personal care) robotics Remote robots Mixed initiative interaction Multi-modal interaction Long term interaction with robots Awareness and monitoring of humans Task allocation and coordination Autonomy and trust Robot-team learning User studies of HRI Experiments on HRI collaboration Ethnography and field studies HRI software architectures HRI foundations Metrics for teamwork HRI group dynamics Individual vs. group HRI Robot intermediaries Risks such as privacy or safety Ethical issues of HR Organizational/society impact |
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