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    PERVASIVE HEALTH 2012 - 6th International ICST Conference on Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare

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    Website pervasivehealth.org | Want to Edit it Edit Freely

    Category PERVASIVE HEALTH 2012

    Deadline: February 01, 2012 | Date: May 21, 2012-May 24, 2012

    Venue/Country: California, U.S.A

    Updated: 2011-10-05 14:02:58 (GMT+9)

    Call For Papers - CFP

    Pervasive Health 2012 Call for Papers

    Paper Submission: February 1st, 2012

    Notification of Acceptance: March 31st, 2012

    Camera Ready: April 10th, 2012

    Conference Dates: 21st May - Workshops, 22-24 Main Track

    Conference Aims

    The overall goal of the conference remains tightly coupled with the original aims of the field, to address a set of related technologies and concepts that help integrate healthcare more seamlessly into everyday life, regardless of space and time. To achieve this, it is necessary to take a multidisciplinary approach to Pervasive Healthcare Technology research and development. The Pervasive Healthcare Community has a broad scope of research topics and concerns:

    -identifying and understanding problems from a technological, social, and medical perspective (with a particular emphasis on understanding and supporting patient needs); -design, implementation, and evaluation of supporting hardware and software infrastructures, algorithms, and applications; and -organisational strategies that facilitate integration of Pervasive Healthcare Technology into the healthcare enterprise.

    The 2012 Pervasive Healthcare conference aims to gather technology experts, practitioners, industry and international authorities contributing towards the assessment, development and deployment of pervasive medical based technologies, standards and procedures.

    The theme of this year's conference is: Coping with the Challenges and Opportunities within Pervasive E-Healthcare (COPE), with a special focus on pervasive healthcare management and its ability to deliver timely, quality based information to medical practitioners in providing high levels of patient care. The challenges and opportunities within e-Healthcare are immense. A multidisciplinary and coordinated approach is needed from 1) user requirements, 2) technology development and 3) application integration, to help deliver a successful pervasive healthcare management system.

    Traditional healthcare environments are extremely complex and challenging to manage, as they are required to cope with an assortment of patient conditions under various circumstances with a number of resource constraints. Pervasive healthcare technologies seek to respond to a variety of these pressures by successfully integrating them within existing health care environments.

    Technologies, standards and procedures on their own provide little and or no meaningful service. It is essential that pervasive healthcare environments, through a combined approach of data collection, data correlation and data presentation, assist health care professionals in delivering high levels of patient care, and empower individuals and their families for self-care and health management.

    Contributions

    We welcome contributions from the following fields:

    Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health Professions

    Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) and Computer Supported Cooperative Work(CSCW)

    Sensing Technologies and Distributed Computing

    Hardware and Software Infrastructures

    Each paper will be blind peer-reviewed by members of the Pervasive Health 2012 program committee with additional expert reviewers drawn from relevant research domains.

    Submissions will be evaluated based on their originality, significance of the contribution to the field, technical correctness and presentation. The paper should make explicit how the work offers unique and substantial contribution beyond what has already been published or submitted.

    We seek novel, innovative, and exciting work in areas including but not limited to:

    Pervasive Healthcare Management

    Challenges surrounding data quality

    Identifying and addressing stakeholder conflicts: patient needs, caregiver needs, health professional needs, organisational needs

    Standards and interoperability in pervasive healthcare

    Business cases and cost issues

    Security and privacy issues

    Training of healthcare professional for pervasive healthcare

    Legal and regulatory issues

    Insurance payments and cost aspects

    Staffing and resource management

    Understanding Users

    User requirements

    Identifying and addressing stakeholder conflicts: patient needs, caregiver needs, health professional needs, organisational needs

    Usability and acceptability

    Barriers to adoption, and enablers

    Social implications of pervasive health technology, and social inclusion

    Coverage and delivery of pervasive healthcare services

    Patient empowerment

    Diversity: population and condition-specific requirements

    Inclusive research and design: engaging underepresented populations

    Knowledge Representation and Reasoning

    Physiological models for interpreting medical sensor data

    Activity recognition

    Fall detection

    User modelling and personalization

    Modelling of Pervasive Healthcare environments

    Technology

    Sensor-based decision support systems

    Design and evaluation of patient and ambient-related sensors

    Wearable and implantable sensor integration

    Data fusion in pervasive healthcare environments

    Data mining medical patient records

    Software architectures e.g. Agent, SOA, distributed middlewares

    Electronic Health Records (EHR)

    Applications

    Autonomous systems to support independent living

    Clinical applications, validation and evaluation studies

    Telemedicine

    Chronic disease and health risk management applications

    Health promotion and disease prevention

    Home based health and wellness measurement and monitoring

    Continuous vs event-driven monitoring of patients

    Smart homes and hospitals

    Using mobile devices in the storage, update, and transmission of patient data

    Wellbeing and lifestyle support

    Systems to support individuals with auditory, cognitive, or vision impairements

    Systems to support caregivers

    Type of Submissions

    All accepted submissions will be published in IEEE Xplore Digital Library (to be confirmed). The acceptance rate was under 30% for Pervasive Health 2010 and 2011. Pervasive Health will accept submissions in the following categories:

    Full papers (up to 8 pages submissions) - Full papers are submissions describing results and original research work not submitted or published elsewhere in one of the four main categories listed below. Full papers should properly place the work within the field, cite related work, and clearly indicate the innovative aspects of the work and its contribution to the field.

    Posters (up to 4 pages submissions) - Authors are invited to submit work in progress whose preliminary results are already interesting to Pervasive Health audience. The poster track will give Pervasive Health attendees a way to learn about ongoing research initiatives and will provide presenters with an excellent opportunity to receive invaluable direct feedback from experts.

    Demos (2 pages submissions) - The demos track will showcase the latest developments and prototypes related to the topics of interest of the conference. The expected demo submissions should describe the technical details of the demo alongside its contribution to the healthcare domain.

    Position Papers (2 pages submissions) - Position papers are envisioned to provide insight into the lessons learnt from current (industrial, practitioners, government, etc.) pervasive healthcare practice. The position papers track is envisioned to provide the view of practitioners to the pervasive health community in order to have a more clear understanding about the real needs of healthcare operators and in this way shorten the gap between technologists and the every-day needs of practitioners.

    Workshop proposals (2 pages submissions) Several workshops will be run in conjunction with the conference. The purpose of these workshops is to discuss work in progress and explore opportunities for new research related to pervasive healthcare. Proposals for workshops should be submitted directly to the workshops co-chairs at "workshops" [at] "prevasivehealth" [dot] "org", and proposals should indicate the preferred duration for the workshop (half/full-day).

    Doctoral Consortium (4 pages) - We are pleased to announce the first Pervasive Healthcare Doctoral Consortium. This one day event will enable doctoral students to present and reflect on their work alongside other doctoral students and a panel of experts. Submissions should include a description of work done, intended future work, alongside a specific research question or challenge that you would like to be discussed at the consortium.

    All accepted submissions will be published in IEEE Xplore Digital Library (to be confirmed).

    Workshops and Doctoral Consortium

    Please visit the Workshops and Doctoral Consortium pages for detailed submission requirements and procedures (upcoming).

    Submission Instructions

    Submission information will be available in due course.


    Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
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