posted by user: amonrapp || 27041 views || tracked by 3 users: [display]

frontiersQS 2016 : New Frontiers of Quantified Self 2 Workshop @ UbiComp '16

FacebookTwitterLinkedInGoogle

Link: https://newfrontiersqs2.wordpress.com/
 
When Sep 12, 2016 - Sep 12, 2016
Where Heidelberg
Submission Deadline Jun 14, 2016
Notification Due Jun 28, 2016
Final Version Due Jul 5, 2016
Categories    ubiquitous computing   wearable computing   computer science   data mining
 

Call For Papers

New frontiers of Quantified Self 2: going beyond numbers - International Workshop at the 2016 ACM International Joint Conference on Pervasive and Ubiquitous Computing (UbiComp) September 12-16, 2016 Heidelberg (Germany).

Workshop Website: https://newfrontiersqs2.wordpress.com/

IMPORTANT DATES
Deadline for submissions: 14th June
Response to authors: 28th June
Camera ready submission deadline: 5th July

Please submit to: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=frontiersqs2

MOTIVATION
The Quantified Self (QS) movement, also known as Personal Informatics (PI), has the goal to collect personal data on different aspects of people’s daily lives with technological tools. Recently, we have seen increasing complexity in the Quantified Self domain. First, we have more data being collected, thanks to the availability of an increasing number of apps and wearables for self-tracking. There are also more types of information to be combined, as activity recognition algorithms are now able to recognize a variety of behaviors and activities that can be mashed up and provide multifaceted views on the user. This provides new opportunities for the use of large collections of digital traces, which can go beyond behavior change for exploring new personalized services in education, entertainment, transportation and so on. Despite this growing complexity, the Quantified Self still lacks a discussion on what all these personal data gathered could represent for users, what meaning they may have, and value they may provide
In this new edition of the New Frontiers of Quantified Self workshop, we want to investigate how to go beyond numbers in QS. Our aim is to explore how QS could help people make sense of their own personal information in the future.
To this aim, we are looking for:
i) Novel technologies for gathering data, capable of detecting new aspects of the individual’s life (e.g., cognitive states, social activities, habits)
ii) Novel solutions for mashing-up heterogeneous sources of personal data to provide users with a multifaceted mirror of themselves.
iii) Solutions for mining personal data to find new knowledge (e.g. machine learning techniques, data mining).
iv) Novel ways to engage users in exploring their data and in extracting value from them (e.g., through sense-making, storytelling, gamification).
v) Novel visualizations for easing the sense making of the collected data, going beyond graphs and stats and allowing experiences to emerge from numbers.
vi) Novel applications that exploit the increasing amount of personal data for improving users’ self-knowledge or providing them with new valuable services (e.g., through targeted recommendations, adaptive interfaces).

TOPICS
Relevant workshop topics include but are not limited to: 
i) Novel technologies for self-tracking
ii) Mash-up platforms
iii) Novel visualizations of personal data
iv) Methodologies and technologies for transforming data into knowledge
v) Novel methods and tools for making sense of data
vi) Novel applications and services enabled by personal data
vii) Thought-provoking insights on how to refocus QS technologies on the individual’s subjectivity
viii) Theoretical reflections on how QS technologies could evolve in the future
ix) Methodologies for evaluating the subjective experience of QS applications
x) Use cases that investigate the effectiveness of novel solutions for QS

SUBMISSION
We will accept both position papers and research papers, case studies, future research challenges and reflections, up to six pages long, suggesting new ways for making the data collected by QS tools more valuable, interpretable and subjective. Papers will be reviewed by the program committee based on their pertinence with the workshop topics, quality of the exposition and, mainly, potential to trigger discussions and insights for inspiring the design of new solutions during the workshop.
All the accepted manuscripts will be included in the ACM Digital Library and supplemental proceedings of the main conference. All workshop papers must be up to six pages long in the SIGCHI Extended Abstract format.
The deadline for submission is June 14, 2016.
Papers should be in pdf format and should not be anonymized.

ORGANIZERS
Amon Rapp, University of Torino
Federica Cena, University of Torino
Judy Kay, University of Sydney
Bob Kummerfeld, University of Sidney
Frank Hopfgartner, University of Glasgow
Till Plumbaum, Technische Universität Berlin
Jakob Eg Larsen, Technical University of Denmark
Daniel A. Epstein, University of Washington
Rúben Gouveia, Madeira Interactive Technologies Institute

Related Resources

NAACL 2025   North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics
IEEE-Ei/Scopus-ITCC 2025   2025 5th International Conference on Information Technology and Cloud Computing (ITCC 2025)-EI Compendex
ICSTTE 2025   2025 3rd International Conference on SmartRail, Traffic and Transportation Engineering (ICSTTE 2025)
SPIE-Ei/Scopus-DMNLP 2025   2025 2nd International Conference on Data Mining and Natural Language Processing (DMNLP 2025)-EI Compendex&Scopus
PCA 2025   Disasters and Apocalypses: CFP Pop Culture Association
MAT 2024   10th International Conference of Advances in Materials Science and Engineering
ITNG 2024   The 21st Int'l Conf. on Information Technology: New Generations ITNG 2024
IJCSA 2024   International Journal on Computational Science & Applications
IARIA Congress 2025   The 2025 IARIA Annual Congress on Frontiers in Science, Technology, Services, and Applications
MLSC 2025   6th International Conference on Machine Learning and Soft Computing