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    UMUAI 2011 - Special Issue on Context-Adaptive Collaboration Support for Knowledge-intense Work User Modeling and User-Adapted Interaction: The Journal of Personalization Research

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    Category UMUAI 2011

    Deadline: March 31, 2011 | Date: October 19, 2011

    Venue/Country: call for papers, U.S.A

    Updated: 2011-02-03 11:13:32 (GMT+9)

    Call For Papers - CFP

    Special Issue on

    Context-Adaptive Collaboration Support for Knowledge-intense Work

    User Modeling and User-Adapted Interaction:

    The Journal of Personalization Research

    (An international journal published by Springer Verlag)

    Web site: http://www.umuai.org/

    Knowledge work in modern organizations is to a large extent collaborative.

    Free riding, dominance, group think, hidden agendas, and especially

    ill-structured tasks that emerge in the course of the collaborative process

    are but a few phenomena in group work that make it a non straight-forward

    effort. Users participating in a collaborative project may find themselves

    in different physical environments or settings and may use a variety of

    different devices. Also, users are often involved in more than one project

    at a time, raising the need for frequent task or tool switches and for

    rapid

    cognitive adjustments to the subject at hand. For a successful

    collaboration, these challenges need to be addressed.

    A promising approach to solving these challenges are collaboration support

    systems that can flexibly adapt themselves to the context of knowledge

    workers. Context can here be understood in the widest sense: it comprises

    external factors such as location, device used or time, but also factors

    derived from the user?s interaction behavior such as interest profiles or

    tasks the user is engaged in. Considering both external (exogenous) and

    interaction-based (endogenous) factors creates an interesting intersection

    between conventional, sensor-based context-adaption and adaptation based on

    user models.

    The proposed special issue aims at attracting use-oriented contributions

    that discuss models, methods, techniques and empirical studies related to

    collaborative context in this wide sense as well as to adaptation

    techniques

    for collaboration environments. Furthermore, we aim to discuss resulting

    implications regarding the technical design of interfaces as well as soft-

    and hardware architectures. Special attention is given to context modeling

    and implementation of the various application scenarios as well as to the

    issues related to manual (adaptability) or automatic (adaptivity)

    in-use-adjustment.

    We would like to invite in particular researchers and practitioners to

    contributions dealing with the following questions:

    - What practical experiences - positive as well as negative - have been

    made

    with regard to the usage of context-adaptive computing and collaboration in

    real organizational settings? What experiences have been made with

    adaptation mechanisms (automatic as well as interactive) of such systems in

    these settings?

    - What are different forms of adaptations for groups? How can this design

    space be structured?

    - How can relations between context descriptions/models, context sensors

    and

    context-based services be described in a way that they can be understood

    and

    used by end users? What framing conditions apply for interfaces that aim to

    achieve this?

    - What are suitable models for context management? How can context concepts

    be represented and retrieved? How can privacy issues be dealt with?

    - How can individual contexts dynamically aggregated into group context?

    - How can context architectures be effectively designed for sustainable

    usages (context evolution, context adaptation, traceability for end-users)?

    - What are appropriate architectures for context-adaptive collaboration

    support systems? How can such architectures be designed to support context

    evolution, context adaptation, and traceability for end-users?

    HOW TO SUBMIT

    Submissions to the special issue should follow the UMUAI formatting

    guidelines and submission instructions available at:

    http://www.umuai.org/paper_submission.html

    Each submission should note that it is intended for the Special Issue on

    Context-Adaptive Collaboration Support for Knowledge-intense Work.

    Potential authors are asked to submit a tentative title and short abstract

    (which can be altered for the actual submission) to assist in the formation

    of a panel of appropriate reviewers.

    UMUAI is an archival journal that publishes mature and substantiated

    research results on the (dynamic) adaptation of computer systems to their

    human users, and the role that a model of the system about the user plays

    in

    this context. Many articles in UMUAI are quite comprehensive and describe

    the results of several years of work. Consequently, UMUAI gives "unlimited"

    space to authors (so long as what they write is important). Authors whose

    paper exceeds 40 pages in journal format (including illustrations and

    references) are however requested to supply a short justification upon

    submission that explains why a briefer discussion of their research results

    would not be advisable.

    IMPORTANT DATES

    Notification of tentative intent to submit: as soon as possible

    Title and abstract submission deadline: February 28, 2011

    Paper submission deadline: March 31, 2011

    REVIEW PROCESS

    Submissions will undergo the normal review process, and will be reviewed by

    three established researchers selected from a panel of reviewers formed for

    the special issue. Barring unforeseen problems, authors can expect to be

    notified regarding the review results within three months of submission.

    GUEST EDITORS

    Stephan Lukosch

    Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands

    s.g.lukoschattudelft.nl

    http://www.tudelft.nl/sglukosch

    Mark W. Newman

    University of Michigan, USA

    mwnewmanatumich.edu

    http://mwnewman.people.si.umich.edu/

    Jürgen Ziegler

    University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany

    juergen.ziegleratuni-due.de

    http://www.interactivesystems.info/Mitarbeiter/Personen/Ziegler

    --

    Dr. rer. nat. Stephan G. Lukosch

    Associate Professor

    Delft University of Technology

    Faculty of Technology, Policy, and Management

    Systems Engineering Section

    Postal address: PO box 5015, 2600 GA Delft

    Visitors' address: Jaffalaan 5, 2628 BX Delft

    P: +31 (0)15-2783403

    F: +31 (0)15-2783429

    E: s.g.lukoschattudelft.nl

    W: http://www.tudelft.nl/sglukosch


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