Sign for Notice Everyday    注册| 登陆| 友情链接| English|

Our Sponsors


    CEMOB 2011 - Workshop on Cognitive Engineering for Mobile GIS 2011

    View: 617

    Website | Want to Edit it Edit Freely

    Category CEMOB 2011

    Deadline: May 31, 2011 | Date: September 12, 2011

    Venue/Country: Maine, U.S.A

    Updated: 2011-05-11 20:50:04 (GMT+9)

    Call For Papers - CFP

    Workshop on Cognitive Engineering for Mobile GIS 2011

    In conjunction with the Conference on Spatial Information Theory (COSIT'11)

    http://psumobile.org/?q=content/workshop-cognitive-engineering-mobile-gis-2011

    Belfast, Maine, USA, September 12-16th 2011.

    *Workshop Description & Scope*

    While mobile computing and Location-Based Services (LBS) have been around for more than a decade, it is just now that the availability of open source APIs and GPS-enabled smartphones make them accessible to a broader public. Citizens as sensors, location-based social networks, and lifelogs offer new, highly heterogeneous and timely sources of data that require processing and integration to develop mobile recommender and decision support systems on top of them. In contrast to desktop applications, mobile services are highly affected by contextual information such as the weather, they have reduced user interfaces, and require additional inference to extract user profiles and tasks from implicit information such as local time and location. The combination of these factors makes cognitive engineering methods to user interfaces and recommender services a promising approach. Such methods integrate cognitive and computer science approaches to the design and construction of machines. More specifically, when applying cognitive engineering to Mobile GIS, principles of human spatial cognition regarding the representation and processing of spatial and temporal aspects of phenomena, and aspects of mobile decision-making must be considered.

    *List of Relevant Topics*

    Relevant topics include but are not limited to:

    Cognitive Engineering for a dynamic world

    Cognitive aspects of mobile computing

    Evaluation of cognitive engineering approaches

    Location-based decision support systems

    Mobile aspects of human decision-making

    Spatial learning in a mobile context

    Mobile Human-Computer-Interaction

    Citizens as sensors

    Volunteered Geographic Information for mobile devices

    Communication of geographic information

    Trust and provenance in mobile geographic information

    Representing and reasoning about context

    Semantic similarity and analogy

    Ontology personalization

    Semantics of geographic information

    Mobile Semantic Web

    Personal mobile GIS

    Mobile sensor systems

    Location-based services

    Geovisualization for mobile devices

    *Workshop Format and Structure*

    The workshop will focus on intensive discussions setting a road-map for research on cognitive engineering for Mobile GIS. To prepare the discussion and share thoughts with the research community, participants are requested to submit short vision statements between 4-6 pages in length. These statements of interest will be used by the program committee to select relevant topics for breakout groups. The vision statements will be presented as lightning talks of not more than 5 minutes to inspire discussion and coordinate the breakout groups. The groups will report on their outcomes, identified research topics, and how they relate to each other. We especially welcome demonstrations and will have a session for their presentation. The workshop organizers will take notes and collect feedback during the discussions and prepare a draft version of a poster that outlines the research agenda. This poster will be discussed in a final session and published online.

    *Submissions and Proceedings*

    All presented papers will be made available through the workshop web-page and published as a volume at CEUR-WS online proceedings. Submissions have to be formatted according to Springer's Lecture Notes in Computer Science style. While the workshop will focus on discussion of upcoming research, extended versions of workshop papers will be considered for a fast-track submission to a journal open-call special issue on Cognitive Engineering for Mobile GIS targeted for the first quarter of 2012.

    *Important Dates*

    Submission due: 31. May 2011

    Acceptance Notification: 20. June 2011

    Camera-ready Copies: 30. June 2011

    *Organizers*

    Krzysztof Janowicz, The Pennsylvania State University, USA

    Martin Raubal, ETH Zurich, Switzerland

    Antonio Krüger, Saarland University, Germany

    Carsten Keßler, University of Muenster, Germany

    *Programme Committee*

    Benjamin Adams, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA

    Drew Dara-Abrams, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA

    Boyan Brodaric, Geological Survey of Canada, Canada

    Michael Compton, CSIRO ICT Centre, Australia

    Matt Duckham, The University of Melbourne, Australia

    Andrew Frank, Vienna University of Technology, Austria

    Brent Hecht, Northwestern University, USA

    Stephen Hirtle, University of Pittsburgh, USA

    Christian Kray, University of Muenster, Germany

    Daniel R. Montello, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA

    Silvia Nittel, University of Maine, USA

    Antti Oulasvirta, Aalto University and University of

    Helsinki, Finland

    Tumasch Reichenbacher, University of Zurich, Switzerland

    Kai-Florian Richter, The University of Melbourne, Australia

    Michael Rohs, University of Munich, Germany

    Johannes Schoening, Saarland University, Germany

    Matthew Turk, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA


    Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
    Disclaimer: ourGlocal is an open academical resource system, which anyone can edit or update. Usually, journal information updated by us, journal managers or others. So the information is old or wrong now. Specially, impact factor is changing every year. Even it was correct when updated, it may have been changed now. So please go to Thomson Reuters to confirm latest value about Journal impact factor.