Tuesday, April 13, 2010

CFP: Workshop on Exploring Collaboration with Shareable Interfaces

WORKSHOP ON EXPLORING COLLABORATION WITH SHAREABLE INTERFACES

16th and 17th of September 2010

– Call for participation: deadline 28th May 2010 –

This 2-day workshop at the University of Sussex aims to bring together researchers from across disciplines who are analyzing interaction, talk and gesture, involved in the development of collaboration. It will focus on how shareable interfaces can both support and help us understand processes of collaboration associated with typical and atypical development. It follows from the highly successful workshops on shareable interfaces held in 2008 at the University of Sussex (http://www.shareitproject.org/25) and 2007 at the Open University (http://mcs.open.ac.uk/pm5923/si2007/index.html).

Shareable interfaces are designed to support co-located collaboration. They include technologies such as interactive multi-touch walls and tables, tangibles, single display groupware and multiple personal devices used to interact with a shared representation. These technical innovations provide both opportunities and challenges to educators and designers who aim to build systems to better support co-located collaborative learning. On the one hand, these technologies would intuitively seem to support collaborative activity better than the single user PC or the one-to-many whiteboard presentation. For example, tabletop interfaces might encourage equity of participation and be less restrictive of embodied aspects of collaboration such as gesturing and establishing joint visual attention than a keyboard and mouse interface. Carpet sensors, gesture recognition and large wall-mounted displays may support broad channels of communication. On the other hand, shared interfaces can dissipate joint attention, with each person engaged in their own action, or can require negotiation of turn-taking rules that draws effort away from the task in hand. Since the ShareIT project began, there is more research and better understanding of design guidelines to suggest how new technologies might best be used to support collaboration. In addition, a little-explored aspect of shareable interfaces is that they show us forms of interaction we may not have seen before, as users negotiate shared use in a new environment, with different tools at their disposal. In particular, children are growing up in a world populated by such tools as they develop abilities required for collaboration such as self-regulation, joint attention, turn-taking and coordination of social interaction with peers. How do these new tools for collaboration illuminate developmental processes and how might they be used to support these processes?

This workshop, sponsored by the ShareIT project (www.shareitproject.org), will draw together researchers using a range of analytic techniques, whether or not in the sphere of new technology, to illustrate productive ways of bringing out the possible benefits of shareable interfaces. Workshop themes will include:

- analysis of conversation in collaborative working using shareable interfaces, and how such conversation might support learning and conceptual change

- the role of gesture and the body in supporting collaboration, e.g. simulation, analysis of gestures that support mutual knowledge, methods of assessing gesture and its importance

- planning and coordination of joint activity, turn-taking and reciprocity, perspective taking, speaking and listening skills

- the role of shareable interface technology in illuminating and supporting coordination of joint action in typical and atypical development e.g. autism

- developmental prerequisites for joint action and collaboration and the use of shareable interfaces to understand and support these


The workshop will feature 3 invited talks and several activity sessions to ground discussion and provide a shared focus. The invited speakers will be:

- Andy Tolmie: Department of Psychology and Human Development, Institute of Education, University of London (http://www.ioe.ac.uk/study/PHDT_80.html)

- Claire O'Malley: Learning Sciences Research Institute, School of Psychology, University of Nottingham (http://www.psychology.nottingham.ac.uk/staff/Claire.O'Malley/)

- and one other to be announced


In addition, it will be associated with two future publications:

- A CSCL flash issue on supporting and illuminating co-located collaboration and conversation with technology

- A Special issue of BJEP on new directions in conversation and collaborative learning.


SUBMISSION AND PARTICIPATION

Please email a 1 page document including your name, affiliation, research keywords, summary of your work in relation to the themes of the workshop, and short statement of what you hope to get out of the workshop to r.m.m.fleck@sussex.ac.uk A template can be downloaded here: http://shareitproject.org/uploads/24/ShareIT%20workshop%20Application.doc In order to facilitate coherent discussion participation will be based on accepted submissions only.

Participation is free and will be funded by the ShareIT project. Lunch and refreshments during the workshop will be provided. There will be charge of around £30 for the conference dinner to be paid in cash on arrival at the workshop. Some financial assistance may be available to PhD students to enable participation.

LOCATION

University of Sussex, Brighton, UK

TIME AND DATE

10am 16th – 4pm 17th September 2010.

ORGANISERS

Rowanne Fleck and Nicola Yuill (Department of Psychology, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK: r.m.m.fleck, nicolay@sussex.ac.uk)

Paul Marshall, Jochen Rick and Yvonne Rogers (Pervasive Interaction lab, The Open University, Milton Keynes, UK: p.marshall, j.rick, y.rogers@open.ac.u

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

ANN: CHI 2010 SIG : Best Practices in Longitudinal Research

CHI 2010 SIG : Best Practices in Longitudinal Research

When: Tue, 13 April 2010 @ 9:00 to 10:30am
Where: Room: Chicago ABC


Abstract:
This SIG will help to identify best practices for longitudinal research
through a collaborative discussion of methods and metrics for collecting and
analyzing user data over time. This is the fifth event in an ongoing effort
by the facilitators to enhance our current body of knowledge about
longitudinal research.


Introduction:
As user experience issues become more central to HCI, the value of
longitudinal research—collecting user data over time—is increasingly
recognized. Design researchers understand the importance of observing
extended use of products and systems, and seek to improve methodology and
develop best practices for longitudinal research.

Traditional user research and evaluation methods tend to focus on
'first-time' experiences with products, which trends the results more
towards discoverability or learnability problems, rather than usability
concerns that may persist over time. This SIG seeks to extend current
thinking by providing a forum for discussion of methods and metrics that
have proven effective for longitudinal data collection.


Goals of the SIG:
The goal of this SIG is to help participants gain a better understanding of
the longitudinal user experience research taking place in both industry and
academia. The desired SIG outcomes are:
• Collaborative discussion of key issues, both appropriate methodology and
research questions that lend themselves to longitudinal study
• Sharing and capturing detailed experiences of longitudinal research to
fulfill the immediate need for use cases
• Publishing in the longitudinal research wiki the information supplied by
participants


Questions to be Addressed:
- What are the methods for longitudinal research?
- What are the risks associated with longitudinal research?
- What research questions can longitudinal studies can help answer?
- What techniques/tools can I use for comparative data analysis?
- Is iterative design/testing considered longitudinal?


We look forward to meeting researchers and practitioners with shared
interests in Atlanta. Please contact one of the organizers if you want to
propose discussion points or find out more about this SIG.

Jhilmil Jain, HP Labs (jhilmil.jain@hp.com)
Stephanie Rosenbaum, Tec-Ed (stephanie@teced.com)
Catherine Courage, Citrix Systems (catherine.courage@gmail.com)

Visit http://longitudinalusability.wikispaces.com/ for more details

Friday, April 2, 2010

ANN: ISCRAM2010 PLENARIES ANNOUNCED

As many of you know, ISCRAM has the tradition of launching each
conference day

with a plenary session that sets a powerful tone for the sessions and
activities that follow. We are pleased to announce our 2010 plenary sessions:

1. An NGO-led Plenary on Haiti led by George Fenton, Associate Director,
Humanitarian Logistics at World Vision Internaitonal and Chairman of
Humanitarian Logistics Association. This session will cover (a) early stages
of assessment among the chaos, (b) challenges of communication and
coordination, and (c) recovery and resilience issues.

2. A session on next generation precision information environments for crisis
management decision-making by Dr. Joseph Kielman, Science Advisor, Science and
Technology Directorate (S&T) at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security
(DHS). Dr. Kielman is Chief Scientist and Lead for Basic/Futures Research in
the DHS Command, Control and Interoperability Division (CID)

3. A session on visualization and geo-collaboration by Alan M. MacEachren,
Ph.D., Professor of Geography, Affiliate Professor of Information Sciences and
Technology, and Director of the GeoVISTA Center at the Pennsylvania State
University. Dr. MacEachren's focus includes geographic visualization,
geo-collaboration, visual analytics, interfaces to geospatial information
technologies, spatial cognition, human-centered systems, and user-centered
design

Please go to our recently updated website at www.iscram.org/iscram2010 for
more information and other news such as our banquet speaker and a draft list
of reviewed papers. The full program will be posted soon.

We have over 120 registrants already and are looking forward to seeing you all
in Seattle for an exciting international event.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

CFP: Mobile HCI and Technical ICTD: A Methodological Perspective, Workshop at MobileHCI 2010

Call for Papers for the Workshop

"Mobile HCI and Technical ICTD: A Methodological Perspective"

A Workshop at the Mobile HCI 2010 Conference

September 7, 2010

------------------------------------------------------------

Workshop at MobileHCI 2010

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Lisbon, Portugal

http://www.uctictd2010.org/

Submission Deadline: Friday April 30, 2010


THEME
-----
The workshop "Mobile HCI and Technical ICTD: A Methodological
Perspective" invites papers with focus on experiences, lessons
learned, success stories and failures of technical ICTD research
especially with focus on the utilization of User Centered Design
and Mobile HCI research methods.

Technical Information and Communication Technologies for
Development (technical ICTD) research, which refers to ICTD
topics specifically relevant for computer scientists and engineers,
lacks appropriate research methods along the entire development
lifecycle spanning design, development, deployment, evaluation
and monitoring.

Mobile HCI has a great set of research methods but applying
them unchanged in technical ICTD will fail due to the specific
cultural, infrastructural and governmental context of developing
countries. In this workshop we want to bring together people
who are active in Mobile HCI and ICTD research to elaborate
on Mobile HCI methods and discuss their application for
technical ICTD.


GOALS
-----
The aim of this workshop is to elaborate on the application
of Mobile HCI methods for technical ICTD research and to
come up with a set of appropriate research methodologies
for technical ICTD and a roadmap of action items of how to
improve current technical ICTD research. We will provide a
forum to share information, results, and ideas on current
research in this area and encourage discussions about future
topics concerning technical ICTD research.


TOPICS OF INTEREST
-------------------
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

- Experiences and Lessons Learned in technical ICTD research

- Success stories and failures of technical ICTD research

- Utilization and combination of Mobile HCI research methods
in technical ICTD research

- Utilization of User Centered Design in technical ICTD research

- Methodologies and Approaches of technical ICTD development
lifecycle (e.g. rapid prototyping, participatory design)

- Definitions of technical ICTD metrics

- Representation of technical ICTD metrics (e.g. personas,
scenarios, use case definitions)


IMPORTANT DATES
---------------
- Friday April 30, 2010 - Submission Deadline
- Friday May 21, 2010 - Notification of Acceptance
- Friday June 4, 2010 - Camera-ready copies
- Tuesday September 7, 2010 - Workshop Date


PARTICIPATION AND SUBMISSION
-----------------------
We accept original and unpublished contributions that are not
under review somewhere else in the following two categories

1) Participants are expected to submit a 2 page position
paper to state their interest.
2) Participant presenters should submit a 4 page short paper,
covering one or more workshop topics.

Authors of accepted presentation papers are invited to
demonstrate their submission during the workshop.
Each presentation should not exceed 10 minutes and will
be followed up by a 5 minute round of discussion.

Paper submissions must be anonymized and should be submitted
following the submission instructions at the workshop webpage
(http://www.uctictd2010.org/) as PDF file conform to the
Mobile HCI 2010 main proceedings format.

To participate at the workshop at least one author of accepted
papers needs to register for the Mobile HCI 2010 conference
itself.


PUBLICATION
-----------
Workshop results will be summarized and published on the
workshop website. Selected outcomes and contributions will
be considered to be published in a workshop summary paper.
The selected best workshop paper will be nominated for
inclusion in a Special Issue of the International Journal
on Mobile HCI (IJMHCI).


ORGANIZERS
----------
Joerg Doerflinger, SAP Research, Germany
Dr. Tom Gross, Bauhaus-University Weimar, Germany
Dr. Gary Marsden, University of Cape Town, South Africa
Dr. Matt Jones, Swansea University, United Kingdom
Dr. Mark Dunlop, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom

ANN: International Conference on Crisis Mapping ICCM 2010

The International Conference on Crisis Mapping (ICCM 2010): Haiti and Beyond is now Open for Registration!
When: Friday, October 1, 2010

Where: Boston, MA

The agenda is available here, and you can register here.

ICCM 2010 follows the highly successful ICCM 2009 event which brought together many of the actors currently responding in Haiti and beyond to foster a dynamic network of action-oriented collaboration. Participants called ICCM 2009 one of the very best conferences they'd been to. This video on Conference Highlights may explain why. ICCM 2010 will include Ignite Talks, Keynotes and a Tech/Analytics Fair. We expect up to 500 participants to attend given the proximity of Harvard, MIT, etc., and major tech companies in the area. We will send out a "Call for Ignite Talk proposals" and "Tech/Analytics Fair applications" in June.

Early bird registration fees are $100 (standard) and $50 for students before August 1. You can register here. This fee covers access to all Friday events. Note that these are nonrefundable and waivers are not available. For hotel accommodation, please reserve your room at the Sheraton where a block of discounted rooms has been set aside for you. We recommend you book early.  

Thanks for reading, we look forward to repeating the great success of ICCM 2009 with you!

All the best,
Patrick & Jen

---
Co-Founders
International Network 
of Crisis Mappers (CM*Net)

www.CrisisMappers.net



===================================
Sophia B. Liu
Technology, Media and Society PhD Candidate

connectivIT Lab
Alliance for Technology, Learning and Society (ATLAS) Institute
University of Colorado at Boulder
sophiabliu (skype, twitter, facebook)

 
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