posted by user: nbee || 3352 views || tracked by 5 users: [display]

EGIHMI 2011 : 2nd Workshop on Eye Gaze in Intelligent Human Machine Interaction

FacebookTwitterLinkedInGoogle

Link: http://www.ci.seikei.ac.jp/nakano/GAZEWS_IUI2011/index.html
 
When Feb 13, 2011 - Feb 13, 2011
Where Palo Alto, California, USA
Submission Deadline Nov 8, 2010
Notification Due Dec 6, 2010
Final Version Due Dec 20, 2010
Categories    eye gaze   intelligent interfaces
 

Call For Papers

In interactive systems, eye-gaze and attentional information have
great potential in improving the communication between the user and
the systems. For instance, by combining with situational and
linguistic information, user's focus of attention is useful in
interpreting the user's intentions. Eye-gaze also serves as a
nonverbal signal in mediated communication using avatars as well as
during interaction with humanoid autonomous agents. Moreover, recent
studies have shown that eye gaze can be measured using brain
activities, and such eye-tracking technologies provide new
opportunities to design novel attention-based intelligent user
interfaces.
The first eye-gaze workshop held at IUI 2010 covered various
research issues concerning eye-gaze: eye-tracking technologies,
analyses of human eye-gaze behaviors, multimodal interpretation, user
interfaces using an eye-tracker, and presenting gaze behaviors in
humanoid interfaces. This year's workshop aims to continue exploring
this important topic by bringing together researchers including human
sensing, intelligent user interface, multimodal processing, and
communication science, with the long term goal of establishing a
strong interdisciplinary research community in "attention aware
interactive systems".


TOPICS

This workshop solicits papers that address the following topics (but
not limited to):

* Technologies for sensing human attentional behaviors in IUI
- Sensing attentional behaviors using bodily motions such as pupil movements,
head movements and torso directions
- Sensing attentional behaviors using brain activities
- Issues in tracking attentional behaviors in IUI

* Interpreting attentional behaviors as communicative signals in IUI
- Incorporating attentional information in multimodal understanding
- Using attentional information in interpreting user’s intentions,
attitude towards the
system, grounding and engagement in conversational interactions

* Gaze model for generating eye-gaze behaviors by conversational humanoids
- Selecting appropriate eye-gaze behaviors for virtual agents and
communication robots
- User’s perception of the attentional signals presented by the humanoids
- Difference of gaze expressiveness between virtual agents and robots

* Analysis of human attentional behaviors
- Attentional behaviors in interaction with computer systems
- Attentional behaviors in dyads and multiparty face-to-face conversations
- Implications of analysis of human attentional behaviors towards IUI design

* Evaluation of gaze-based IUI
- Evaluation method for attentional IUI
- Designs of user studies to identify the real impact of gaze-based
information in IUI



SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

There are three categories of paper submissions.
Long paper: The maximum length is 8 pages.
Short paper: The maximum length is 4 pages.
Poster presentations and Demos: The maximum length is 2 pages.

All submissions should be prepared according to the standard SIGCHI
publications format.
- Microsoft Word document template
(http://www.iuiconf.org/chi2009pubsformat.doc)
- LaTeX class file (http://www.iuiconf.org/chi2009_LaTeX.zip)

Each submission will be reviewed by three members of the program committee.
The accepted papers will be published in the workshop proceedings.
We plan to publish revised versions of selected paper in a special
issue of a journal.


IMPORTANT DATES

Paper Submission: November 8, 2010
Notification of Acceptance: December 6, 2010
Camera-ready due: December 20, 2010
Workshop: February 13, 2011


ORGANIZATION

WORKSHOP CO-ORGANIZERS

Yukiko Nakano (Seikei University, Japan)
Cristina Conati (University of British Columbia, Canada)
Thomas Bader (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany)
Neil Cooke (University of Birminghan, UK)

PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Elisabeth André (University of Augsburg, Germany)
Nikolaus Bee (Augsburg University, Germany)
Justine Cassell (Carnegie Mellon University, USA)
Joyce Chai (Michigan State University, USA)
Andrew Duchowski (Clemson University, USA)
Jürgen Geisler (Fraunhofer IOSB, Germany)
Patrick Jermann (Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland)
Yoshinori Kuno (Saitama University, Japan)
Kasia Muldner (Arizona State University, USA)
Toyoaki Nishida (Kyoto University, Japan)
Catherine Pelachaud (TELECOM Paris Tech, France)
Christopher Peters (Coventry University, UK)
Shaolin Qu (Michigan State University, USA)
Matthias Rötting (University of Berlin, Germany)
Candy Sidner (Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA)

Related Resources

ICMLT--EI 2025   2025 10th International Conference on Machine Learning Technologies (ICMLT 2025)
WCSE--EI 2025   2025 The 15th International Workshop on Computer Science and Engineering (WCSE 2025)
ICHMI--EI 2025   2025 5th International Conference on Human–Machine Interaction (ICHMI 2025)
ISAI--EI 2025   2025 the 5th International Symposium on AI (ISAI 2025)
SPIE-Ei/Scopus-DMNLP 2025   2025 2nd International Conference on Data Mining and Natural Language Processing (DMNLP 2025)-EI Compendex&Scopus
IMCOM 2025   19th International Conference on Ubiquitous Information Management and Communication
SPIE-Ei/Scopus-CMLDS 2025   2025 2nd International Conference on Computing, Machine Learning and Data Science (CMLDS 2025) -EI Compendex & Scopus
Hong Kong-MIST 2025   2025 Asia-Pacific Conference on Marine Intelligent Systems and Technologies (MIST 2025)
CONVERSATIONS 2024   International Workshop on Chatbots and Human-Centred AI
TIST 2024   ACM Transactions on Intelligent Systems and Technology Special Issue on Transformers