Thursday, November 19, 2009

CFP 10th International Symposium on Smart Graphics, Banff, Canada, June 24-26, 2010

10th International Symposium on SMART GRAPHICS

http://www.smartgraphics.org/


June 24-26, 2010

Banff, Canada

Submission deadline February 14, 2010

Graphics become Smart Graphics when their design and implementation are
grounded in an understanding of human abilities, activities, and motivations
from design experience and the broad spectrum of cognitive and
social sciences.

When knowledge from these diverse fields is combined with new methods,
tools and techniques in AI, HCI, artistic practice and computer graphics,
environments are created that:

(1) engage the user and are aesthetically satisfying;

(2) participate in human cognition as external or distributed representations;

(3) are sensitive to the real-time demands of the interaction in the context
of
the available informational and computational resources;

(4) adapt the form of the output according to a wider set of constraints such
as an individual's perceptual, attentive, and motor abilities and the nature
of the presentation media and available interaction devices.

The International Symposium on Smart Graphics aims at gathering people from
the fields of Cognitive Science, Computer Graphics, Artificial Intelligence,
Interactive Art and Graphics Design to share experiences and experiments in
this new and emerging area of study.

*** Come and Join the Smart Graphics Experience ***

Smart Graphics 2010 welcomes submissions from researchers and practitioners,
as well as artists and graphic designers interested in an interdisciplinary
approach to the design of smart interactive displays.

In 2010, we propose a specific emphasis on the integration of scientific
research and digital media technology into the design of aesthetic experience
and artistic practice. In particular, we encourage discussion of research that
locates the site of an interactive experience within the everyday world, using
smart graphics, technologies, and responsive media to enrich and augment the
public, private and personal spaces in which we live our lives.


Submission categories are divided into:

* Full research papers: these will encompass comprehensive descriptions of
original work within the scope of the symposium (limited to 12 pages in
Springer LNCS format).

* Posters: tentative or preliminary results of research or design work with
emphasis on the interdisciplinary evaluation of the ideas (limited to 4 pages
in Springer LNCS format). Poster papers will be included in the proceedings.

* System demonstrations: short descriptions of research or design work that
the authors intend to show and discuss in a demo session at the symposium
(limited to 2 pages in Springer LNCS format). System demonstration papers
will be included in the proceedings.

* Arts track: computer animations, multimedia performance, interactive art,
digital music, hybrid art, etc. Artists must submit a two to three page
proposal outlining the concept and technique of the artwork, including a
discussion of the relationship between smart technologies and their artistic
and creative practice. An international jury of renowned scientists and
artists will select the submissions that best represent the idea of <<Smart
Graphics Arts>>. Selected works will be displayed during the Smart Graphics
symposium, and presented to the public via an evening of performance,
installation, and gallery exhibition. A report of the arts track including all
the selected works will be included in the proceedings.

Smart Graphics specially encourages young researchers to submit their ideas
and results. As in previous conferences, proceedings will be published in the
Springer Lecture Note in Computer Science (LNCS) series.

Topics of interest include (but are not restricted to):

* computer graphics
* artificial intelligence
* virtual and mixed reality
* interactive media
* user interaction
* digital art
* information visualization
* visual analytics
* multimodal information presentation
* non-desktop interfaces
* graphical abstraction
* sketch-based interfaces
* interaction science
* scene perception
* cognitive sciences
* user studies
* graphics design


INVITED SPEAKER:

* John Bowers (Goldsmiths, University of London)
* Maria Lantin (Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design)


IMPORTANT DATES:

February 14th, 2010 (submission deadline)
March 8th, 2010 (notification of results)
March 20th, 2010 (camera ready copy due)
June 24-26, 2010 (Symposium in Banff, Canada)


ORGANIZERS:

Robyn Taylor (University of Alberta, Canada)
Pierre Boulanger (University of Alberta, Canada)
Andreas Butz (University of Munich, Germany)
Marc Christie (IRISA/INRIA Rennes, France)
Brian Fisher (Simon Fraser University, Canada)
Antonio Krueger (University of Muenster, Germany)
Patrick Olivier (Newcastle University, UK)


COMMITTEE (tentative):

* Elisabeth Andre (University of Augsburg)
* William Bares (Millsaps College)
* Marc Cavazza (University of Teesside)
* Luca Chittaro (University of Udine)
* Sara Diamond (Ontario College of Art and Design)
* Steven Feiner (Columbia University)
* David S. Ebert (Purdue University)
* Knut Hartmann (Flensburg University of Applied Science)
* Hiroshi Hosobe (Tokyo National Institute of Informatics)
* Christian Jacquemin (LIMSI/CNRS)
* Tsvi Kuflik (University of Haifa)
* Rainer Malaka (European Media Lab)
* Shigeru Owada (Sony CSL)
* W. Bradford Paley (Digital Image Design)
* Bernhard Preim (University of Magdeburg)
* Thomas Rist (University of Applied Sciences, Augsburg)
* Mateu Sbert (University of Girona)
* Shigeo Takahashi (University of Tokyo)
* Lucia Terrenghi (University of Munich)
* Massimo Zancanaro (ITC-irst Trento)

Smart Graphics will be held in cooperation with:

* Association for Computing Machinery Special Interest Group on Artificial
Intelligence (ACM SIGART)
* European Association for Computer Graphics (Eurographics)
* Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI).

For a full description of the scope of the Symposium, and details of previous
events, see the website:

http://www.smartgraphics.org

--
Marc Christie -- BUNRAKU Team
Assistant Professor (Maître de Conférences / délégation INRIA)
IRISA-INRIA Rennes - Bretagne Atlantique
Campus de Beaulieu
F-35042 RENNES CEDEX
+33 2 99 84 75 25

Saturday, November 14, 2009

CFP: BodyNets 2010 - 5th International Conference on Body Area Networks

============================================================
CALL FOR PAPERS BodyNets 2010
The 5th Annual International Conference on Body Area Networks
September 10-12, 2010, Corfu Island, Greece.
http://www.bodynets.org/index.shtml
============================================================

Submission deadline: March 10, 2010

============================================================
ACM MONET special issue on "Ubiquitous Body Sensor Networks".
http://www.bodynets.org/docs/MONET-SI-UBSN-CFP.pdf
============================================================

OVERVIEW:

Recent advances in the field of wireless sensor networks have moved
them beyond their
traditional areas of application in monitoring of remote and mobile
environments. Sensor
networks are increasingly being deployed within and around the human
body to form Body
Area Networks (BodyNets). In addition to monitoring focused
applications BodyNets allow
also for closed loop systems incorporating actuators. They can be
utilized in diverse
applications such as physiological monitoring, human computer
interactions, education and
entertainment through interactive games. This conference will explore
and explain the
scope and challenges of designing, building, and deploying BodyNets.
In this regard, the
conference aims to establish a forum to bring together research
professionals from
diverse fields including computer science, biomedical engineering and
medicine in both
academia and industry to address the technical, social, system and
application issues
related to BodyNets.

TOPICS:
The conference invites original technical papers that were not
previously published and
are not currently under review for publication elsewhere. Topics
include, but are not
limited to:

1 Communications and Networking:
* In-body, on-body, and around body networks
* Communication techniques and protocols for BodyNets
* Scalable, flexible network architectures & deployments
* Networking and security issues for BodyNets
* Advanced propagation and channel model for BodyNets

2 Medical applications:
* Pervasive health care and patient monitoring
* Integrating BodyNets into the healthcare system
* Novel closed-loop applications of BodyNets

3 Systems and Technology:
* System design issues, and performance modeling
* Signal processing, reliability and fault-tolerance issues
* Emerging self-powered BodyNets
* Novel wireless communication technologies

4 Wearable computing:
* Wearable system design issues
* Entertainment and lifestyle applications
* Assistive technologies for independent aging
* Interactive Arts

PAPER SUBMISSION:
Authors are invited to submit full papers of up to 8 pages, short
papers of up to 4
pages, and poster paper up to 2 pages, in ACM conference proceeding
format through ASSYST
(http://assyst-online.org/submission/login/loadHome.do.php). If you
have problems in
accessing the ASSYST system, please contact the Conference Coordinator
(Maria Morozova)
at: maria.morozova@icst.org. Detailed Instructions for ASSYST
submission can be found
from:
http://manual.icst.org/uploads/Submission%20instructions/Submission%20instructions%20ASSYST%2027012009.doc

PUBLICATION:
Distinguished papers accepted and presented in BodyNets-10, after
further revisions, will
be published in International Journal of Autonomous and Adaptive
Communications Systems
(IJAACS), http://www.inderscience.com/browse/callpaper.php?callID=1254
and ACM MONET
special issue on "Ubiquitous Body Sensor Networks".
http://www.bodynets.org/docs/MONET-SI-UBSN-CFP.pdf

IMPORTANT DATES:

Abstract Due: March 10, 2010 by 11:59pm PDT
Full Paper Due: March 22, 2010 by 11:59pm PDT
Notification of Acceptance: May 21, 2010
Camera-ready Manuscripts due: June 21, 2010

CONFERENCE ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

GENERAL CHAIRS
Victor C.M. Leung, University of British Columbia, Canada
Athanasios V. Vasilakos, University of Western Macedonia, Greece

TECHNICAL PROGRAM CHAIRS
Thomas Falck, Philips Research, Switzerland
Karim Qayumi, University of British Columbia, Canada
Xinbing Wang, Shanghai Jiaotong University, China

PROGRAM TRACK CHAIRS
Yan Zhang, Simula Research Lab, Norway
Min Chen, University of British Columbia, Canada
Hassan Ghasemzadeh, Univ. of Texas at Dallas, USA
Jelena Misic, Ryerson University, Canada

INDUSTRY CHAIRS
David M. Davenport, GE Global Research, USA
Panos Nasiopoulos, University of British Columbia, Canada

CONFERENCE COORDINATOR
Gergely Nagy, ICST

PUBLICITY CHAIRs
Andreas Bulling, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Lei Shu, Digital Enterprise Research Institute, Ireland

PUBLICATION CHAIR
Foad Dabiri, University of California Los Angeles

Demo Chair
Ilangko Balasingham, Rikshospitalet University Hospital

STEERING COMMITTEE CHAIR
Imrich Chlamtac, Create-Net, Italy

WEB CHAIR
Min Chen University of British Columbia, Canada

TPC Members:
Hsiao-Hwa Chen, National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan
Konstantina Nikita, National Technical University of Athens, Greece
William Scanlon, Queens University Belfast, Ireland
Tommaso Melodia, University at Buffalo, USA
Christine Lisetti, Florida International University, USA
Jun Suzuki, University of Massachusetts, USA
Yuan-ting Zhang, Chinese University of Hong Kong, HK
Ming Li, California State University, USA
Roozbeh Jafari, University of Texas at Dallas, USA
Han-Chieh Chao, National ILan University, Taiwan
Maulin Patel, Philips Research North America, USA
Hui Chen, Virginia State University, USA
Jie Liang, Simon Fraser University, Canada
Sergio Gonzalez, University of British Columbia, Canada
Yu Wang, Univ. of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA
Sangheon Park, Korea University, Korea
Xiaole Bai, The Ohio State University, USA
Yong He, TsingHua University, China
Robert C. Hsu, Chong Hwa Univesity, Taiwan
Dave Davenport, GE Global Research
Victor C.M. Leung, University of British Columbia, Canada
Steffen Leonhardt, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
Costas Pattichis, University of Cyprus, Greece
Ilangko Balasingham, Rikshospitalet University Hospital, Norway
Henry Chan, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, HK
Emil Jovanov, University of Alabama in Huntsville, USA
Mohammad H. Mahoor, University of Denver, USA
Qiang Ni, Brunel University, UK
Bor-rong Chen, Harvard University , USA
Gert Cauwenberghs, University of California, USA
John Lach, University of Virginia, USA
Mike Yu Chi, University of California, USA

--
Andreas Bulling
PhD Candidate
Research Assistant

ETH Zurich
Wearable Computing Laboratory

www.andreas-bulling.eu

Thursday, November 12, 2009

ANN: Latest Issue of the International Journal of Mobile Human Computer Interaction (IJMHCI)

I am delighted to announce the latest issue of the International Journal
of Mobile Human Computer Interaction (IJMHCI) - the details of the
latest issue are as follows:

International Journal of Mobile Human Computer Interaction (IJMHCI)
Official Publication of the Information Resources Management Association
Volume 1, Issue 4, October-December 2009
Published: Quarterly in Print and Electronically
ISSN: 1942-390x EISSN: 1942-3918
Published by IGI Publishing, Hershey-New York, USA
www.igi-global.com/ijmhci<http://www.igi-global.com/ijmhci>

Editor-in-Chief: Joanna Lumsden, Aston University, UK

Special Issue: Mobile Internet User Experience

GUEST EDITORIAL PREFACE

Mobile Internet User Experience: Introduction to the Special Issue

Virpi Roto, Nokia Research Center, Finland
Eija Kaasinen, VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland, Finland

This special issue of IJMHCI is on Mobile Internet User Experience (MIUX). This issue was inspired by two MIUX workshops (Roto & Kaasinen, 2007; Roto & Kaasinen, 2008) held in conjunction with the 2007 and 2008 Mobile-HCI conferences in Singapore and Amsterdam, respectively. In the workshops, researchers and practitioners presented different solutions for improving user experience when using the internet on mobile devices. This special issue continues the work on these topics and includes fully-fledged articles from some of the workshop attendees, as well as papers from other researchers working in this field.

To read the guest editorial preface, please consult this issue of IJMHCI in your library.

PAPER ONE

How It Started: Mobile Internet Devices of the Previous Millennium

Evan Koblentz, Consultant, USA

Internet access on cellular phones, after emerging as a new technology in the mid-1990s, is now a thriving activity despite the global economic recession. IDC reported smartphone sales of 1.18 billion units in 2008 (IDC, 2009), compared to the unconnected personal digital assistants approaching merely 1 million units per quarter in the second half of 2003; however, the concept of using handheld devices for wide area data applications began 25 years prior to the beginning of the end of PDAs. The key year in the history of PDA devices is 1978. That year, a start-up called Lexicon sold its handheld electronic language translator (Levy, 1979) called the LK-3000. Its interchangeable modules included database and notepad applications, and the product was licensed by Siemens-Nixdorf. Meanwhile independent inventors Robert Hotto and Judah Klausner patented what may be the world's first PDA (Klausner & Hotto, 1977). Toshiba acquired the rights and produced it as the Memo Note 30 model LC-836MN. Data advances in handheld devices finally began changing from wired into wireless in the first half of the 1990s.

To obtain a copy of the entire article, click on the link below.
http://www.infosci-on-demand.com/content/details.asp?ID=34976

PAPER TWO

User Experience of Mobile Internet: Analysis and Recommendations

Eija Kaasinen, VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland, Finland
Virpi Roto, Nokia Research Center, Finland
Kristin Roloff, Swisscom(Switzerland) Ltd., Switzerland
Kaisa Väänänen-Vainio-Mattila, Tampere University of Technology, Finland
Teija Vainio, Tampere University of Technology, Finland
Wolfgang Maehr, Opera Software ASA, Norway
Dhaval Joshi, Nokia Research Center, India
Sujan Shrestha, Brunel University, UK

Mobile access to the Internet with handheld devices has been technically possible for quite a while and consumers are aware of the services but not so ready to use them. A central reason for the low usage is that user experience of the mobile Internet is not yet sufficiently good. This article analyses the mobile Internet from the end-user perspective, identifying factors and solutions that would make the Internet usage on a mobile device an enjoyable experience. User experience can be improved by a better understanding of users and usage contexts, developing mobile services that better serve the needs of mobile users, easing service discovery, and developing the infrastructure needed for the mobile Internet. This article discusses all these aspects and gives development recommendations.

To obtain a copy of the entire article, click on the link below.
http://www.infosci-on-demand.com/content/details.asp?ID=34977

PAPER THREE

Always On: A Framework for Understanding Personal Mobile Web Motivations, Behaviors, and Contexts of Use

Carol A. Taylor, Motricity, Inc., USA
Nancy Samuels, University of Washington, USA
Judith A. Ramey, University of Washington, USA

Mobile data services offer a growing alternative means of accessing the Web and have drawn significant attention from the mobile industry; however, design efforts are hampered by people's motivations, behaviors, and contexts of use when they access the Web on their phones. To help address this need, the authors conduct a study to explore the following questions for U.S. mobile phone users: 1) What motivations lead people to access the Web on their mobile phones?; 2) What do they do?; and 3) Where do they do it? Based on the findings from part one of the study, the authors construct a taxonomy of behaviors, motivations, and contexts associated with mobile Web usage. In parts two and three, the authors validated the taxonomy as well as compared iPhone versus non-iPhone user behaviors. This article concludes by considering the design implications of our findings and future research directions.

To obtain a copy of the entire article, click on the link below.
http://www.infosci-on-demand.com/content/details.asp?ID=34978

PAPER FOUR

Improving the User Experience of a Mobile Photo Gallery by Supporting Social Interaction

Elina Vartiainen, Nokia Research Center, Finland

Today, image gallery applications on mobile devices tend to be stand-alone and offline. For people who want to share photos with others, many add-on tools have been developed to connect the gallery applications to Internet services to enable photo-sharing. In this article, the authors argue that photo-centric social interaction is best supported when the gallery application is fully integrated with an Internet service. In this case, no additional tools are needed and the user's image content is fully synchronized with the service. The authors design and implement a service-integrated mobile gallery application with a corresponding Internet service. Moreover, they conduct a field study with ten participants to compare our application with a state-of-the-art gallery application combined with an add-on photo-sharing tool.

To obtain a copy of the entire article, click on the link below.
http://www.infosci-on-demand.com/content/details.asp?ID=34979

PAPER FIVE

Touch-Based Access to Mobile Internet: User Experience Findings

Minna Isomursu, VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland, Finland
Mari Ervasti, VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland, Finland

This article reports user experience findings from two field trials where Mobile Internet access was supported through near field communication (NFC)-based tag infrastructure. The problems related to service discovery can be solved by providing location-based access, and by using visual cues embedded into the environment for discovering content and services. Mobile Internet access through touch solves the problem of memorizing complicated URLs and the challenge of typing with a mobile device keypad. As touch-based access builds a semantic bridge between the physical context of use and the Mobile Internet experience, the user experience converges seamlessly into one where both the physical and digital worlds play a role.

To obtain a copy of the entire article, click on the link below.
http://www.infosci-on-demand.com/content/details.asp?ID=34980

****************************************************
For full copies of the above articles, check for this issue of the International Journal of Mobile Human Computer Interaction (IJMHCI) in your institution's library. This journal is also included in the IGI Global aggregated "InfoSci-Journals" database: www.infosci-journals.com<http://www.infosci-journals.com>.
*****************************************************

CALL FOR PAPERS

Mission of IJMHCI:

The primary objective of the International Journal of Mobile Human Computer Interaction (JMHCI) is to provide comprehensive coverage and understanding of the issues associated with the design, evaluation, and use of mobile technologies. This journal focuses on human-computer interaction related to the innovation and research in the design, evaluation, and use of innovative handheld, mobile, and wearable technologies in order to broaden the overall body of knowledge regarding such issues. IJMHCI also considers issues associated with the social and/or organizational impacts of such technologies.

Coverage of IJMHCI:

Topics to be discussed in this journal include (but are limited to) the following:

Case studies and/or reflections on experience (e.g. descriptions of successful mobile user interfaces, evaluation set-ups, etc.)
Context-aware/context-sensitive mobile application design, evaluation, and use
Design methods/approaches for mobile user interfaces
Ethical implications of mobile evaluations
Field-based evaluations and evaluation techniques
Gestural interaction techniques for mobile technologies
Graphical interaction techniques for mobile technologies
Issues of heterogeneity of mobile device interfaces/interaction
Lab v. field evaluations and evaluation techniques
Lab-based evaluations and evaluation techniques
Mobile advanced training application design, evaluation, and use
Mobile assistive technologies design, evaluation, and use
Mobile commerce application design, evaluation, and use
Mobile HCI lab design/set-up
Mobile healthcare application design, evaluation, and use
Mobile interactive play design, evaluation, and use
Mobile learning application design, evaluation, and use
Mobile technology design, evaluation, and use by special (needs) groups (e.g. elderly, children, and disabled)
Multimodal interaction on mobile technologies
Non-speech audio-based interaction techniques for mobile technologies
Other emerging interaction techniques for mobile technologies
Other related issues that impact the design, evaluation, and use of mobile technologies
Speech-based interaction techniques for mobile technologies
Tactile interaction techniques for mobile technologies
Technology acceptance as it relates to mobile technologies
User aspects of mobile privacy, security, and trust
User interface architectures for mobile technologies
User interface migration from desktop to mobile technologies
Wearable technology/application and interaction design, evaluation, and use

Interested authors should consult the journal's manuscript submission guidelines at www.igi-global.com/ijmhci<http://www.igi-global.com/ijmhci>.

All inquiries and submissions should be sent to:
Editor-in-Chief: Joanna Lumsden at ijmhci@igi-global.com<mailto:ijmhci@igi-global.com>

CfP: CSCW 2010 Workshop - The Changing Dynamics of Scientific Collaborations

Second Call for Participation

** Submission deadline: November 20, 2009 **

CSCW 2010 Workshop, Sunday, Feb 7, 2010

The Changing Dynamics of Scientific Collaborations

The confluence of two major trends in scientific research is leading
to an upheaval in standard scientific practice and collaborative
technologies. A new generation of scientists, working in large-scale
collaborations, is repurposing social software for use in
collaborative science. Existing social tools such as chat, IM, and
FriendFind are being adopted and modified for use as group
problem-solving facilities. At the same time, exponentially greater
and more complex datasets are being generated at a rate that is
challenging the limits of current hardware, software, and human
cognitive capability. A concerted effort to create software that will
support new scientific practices and handle this data tsunami is
redefining the collaboratory and represents a new frontier for
computer supported cooperative work.

This follow-on event to a similarly themed workshop at CHI 2009 is
intended to foster community among researchers and practitioners from
multiple disciplines interested in the changing dynamics of scientific
collaborations.

We encourage papers on the following topics, especially those with a
focus on changing practices in these areas:

* Collaborative scientific applications concerning data gathering,
analysis, sharing, and visualization
* Case studies concerning data gathering, analysis, sharing and visualization
* Socio-technical research on scientific collaborations
* Social networks of scientists
* Repurposing social software for science
* Participatory design and/or rapid prototyping for scientific software
* Distributed data gathering and analysis
* Time-critical scientific applications
* Studies of generational differences in how science is done
* Cross-functional applications and comparisons of a scientific to
a non-scientific field


Paper Submission Instructions:

Submissions should be position papers 2-4 pages in length. Please use
the ACM SIGCHI Template (Word version:
http://www.cscw2010.org/templates/cscw2010pubsformat.doc or LaTeX
version: http://www.cscw2010.org/templates/cscw2010pubsformat.cls) .
All submissions will be reviewed. The possibility of a journal special
issue or book based on expanded versions of the submissions will be
explored following the workshop.

Papers (in .pdf or .doc format) should be submitted via email to
CRAragon@lbl.gov. Please put "CSCW 2010 Workshop Submission" in the
subject of the email.

** Submission deadline: November 20, 2009 **

Notification of acceptance will be sent out on or before December 18, 2009.

For more information, please see the workshop web site:

http://www.sci.utah.edu/cscw2010/

Organizers:
Cecilia Aragon, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, CRAragon@lbl.gov
Jeffrey Heer, Stanford University, jheer@cs.stanford.edu
Charlotte Lee, University of Washington, cplee@u.washington.edu
Claudio Silva, University of Utah, csilva@sci.utah.edu

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

CFP: ICISO2010 in Reading - Int Conf on Informatics and Semiotics in Organisations

CALL FOR PAPERS

Pervasive Informatics in the Digital Economy
12th International Conference on Informatics and Semiotics in
Organisations

July 19-21, 2010, Reading, UK
http://www.orgsem.org/2010

The 12th International Conference on Informatics and Semiotics in
Organisations, (ICISO 2010), previously named International Conference
on Organisational Semiotics (ICOS), is the twelfth in a series of
international events devoted to the latest research in informatics in
organisations and organisational semiotics.

In the present era, information and knowledge are key to the development
of the current society and economy. The digital economy is driven by the
effective use of information and communication technology to help
enhance the quality and transform the lives of individuals, society and
business. Information is the critical resource on which humans are
constantly dependent in conducting purposeful activities and achieving
their objectives.

Pervasive Informatics, as an emergent discipline, studies how
information affects humans in built environments. The built environments
provide spatial contexts for business organisations, government
institutions, commercial enterprises, and other business settings, as
well as buildings and spaces for working and living. The majority of
human activities (e.g. related to social, economic and scientific
purposes) take place in a built environment. Increasingly, information
is provided pervasively to the users within the built environment. With
the support of appropriate technology, the users can access to the
information as they need; although often they may also have to face with
the information even if not wanted. A user may therefore be immersed in
the field of information whether or not it is desired by the user. Such
a phenomenon of pervasiveness has been bringing revolutionary impact to
the human society. Pervasive Informatics helps us to understand the
nature and characteristics of information from its creation,
representation, processing and utilisation, embedded within the complex
interactions between humans and built environments. It is concerned with
approaches and methods on how information can be managed and used to
enhance the effectiveness of work and quality of life.

Following tradition, ICISO 2010 aims to provide a focal forum for active
researchers, practitioners, business and industrial professionals and
academics from diversified domains of information management and
information systems, and from business and engineering. They will be
able to share their latest research achievements and practical
experiences, to exchange in-depth findings and innovative ideas, and in
particular to harness the greatest challenges in the changing era and
thinking seriously into the future. The ICISO 2010 will also continue
the effort of the international research community in the development of
the emergent discipline of informatics and its applications. It will
focus not only on theory building, but also on the practical benefits
gained so far through applications of methods and techniques derived
from various approaches.

Research papers describing original work in relevant areas are invited.
Industrial and work-in-progress papers are also welcome.

Topics
Specific topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
* Organisational Semiotic theory, concepts, methods and
techniques, and their practical applications
* Semiotically motivated approaches to information systems
* Pragmatic web and context-aware approaches and applications
* Semantic web and applications
* Service-oriented architecture, design and implementation
* Business and IT strategies
* Alignment and integration of business and technical systems
* Adaptive architecture for information systems
* Enterprise information systems and value chain management
* Enterprise applications for logistics, customer relationship
management and supply chain management
* Information engineering and complex systems
* Agent-based information systems and business intelligence in
organisations
* Collaborative systems for organisations
* E-government, e-commerce, mobile and pervasive commerce
* Business process and workflow modelling, analysis, integration
and management
* Digital economy: theory, methods and techniques for design and
applications
* Pervasive informatics in organisations
* Intelligent spaces and built environments for working and living

* Construction informatics for sustainable environment
* Information utilisation and technology management for
sustainable economy
* Digital content management

Important dates
Full paper submission: 1 February, 2010
Notification of acceptance: 1 April 2010
Camera-ready version: 15 May 2010
Conference: 19 - 21 July 2010

Submission Guidelines
Authors are invited to submit original, unpublished research papers that
must not be published elsewhere and not currently under review for any
other publication. The manuscripts in English must be submitted in the
provided format (both as Word and Adobe PDF files) and may not exceed 8
pages.

Publication
The papers will be selected based on a peer review by three independent
members of the program committee. This review process will be anonymous
in order to ensure quality and to avoid prejudice. At least one author
per accepted paper is required to register and attend the conference.

Conference proceedings will be published by Aussino Academic Publishing
House. Same as previous conferences, all accepted papers will be
submitted to ISTP and EI for indexing.

Invitation for Proposals of Workshops and PhD Consortium
The ICISO 2010 invites proposals for workshops and PhD consortium.
Please contact the Conference Secretary if anyone intends to submit a
proposal.

It is intended to have parallel teleconference sessions in Beijing for
attendance and paper presentations. More details will be soon available
at the conference website.

Conference Co-chairs
Rene Jorna, University of Groningen, Netherlands
Kecheng Liu, University of Reading, England

Secretariat
Hubert Grzybek, University of Reading, England

Host institution
Informatics Research Centre, University of Reading, England

Conference Contact Details
Conference website:
www.orgsem.org/2010

Conference email address:
ICISO@reading.ac.uk