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Tutorials and Workshops
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Workshop 1
First International Workshop on Cognitive Prostheses and Assisted Communication (CPAC)
Various prostheses have been developed to help people with physical impairments, by replacing lost or underdeveloped abilities, and these have played an important part in facilitating the person's social participation. Providing prostheses for lost or underdeveloped cognitive abilities, however, presents a challenge of a different order. Some work on memory aids and daily schedule management systems has shown promise, but progress in this field will depend upon keeping up to date with our advancing knowledge about cognition generally as well as emerging technologies which could be platforms for various kinds of cognitive support. This workshop will offer the opportunity for researchers in the fields of assistive technology, cognitive psychology, user interface design and context-awareness to present the state of the art in each field and to discuss an approach and a research agenda for realizing effective cognitive prostheses. While the intended audience for this workshop includes those with experience or interest in Assistive Technology especially for people with dementia and their care, it is also crucial to have participation by those with expertise in other areas such as Artificial Intelligence, Intelligent User Interface Design, Context-aware systems, and Cognitive Psychology. For the full call for papers and information on previous workshops, please refer to http://www.irc.atr.jp/cpac2006
Workshop 2
Multi-User and Ubiquitous User Interfaces (MU3I '06)
The third workshop on multi-user and ubiquitous user interfaces (MU3I) aims at bringing together researchers and practitioners in the field to discuss open questions such as
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shared use of multiple services by multiple users using multiple devices |
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spatial, temporal and conceptual consistency of user interfaces |
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new 'devices' such as tags or everywhere displays |
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new UI paradigms such as tangible, physical and hybrid UIs |
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new UI metaphors for bridging the physical and virtual world |
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larger and 3-dimensional space of interaction |
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spatial and temporal mappings between real and virtual world |
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dynamic sets of devices (i.e. people moving in and out) |
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shared devices, such as public displays |
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dynamic adaptation among several dimensions: devices, users, services |
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restrictions of technical resources in the environment |
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restrictions of cognitive resources of users |
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presentation planning for single users vs. groups |
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use of virtual characters as moderators, mediators and/or contact personas |
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tracking and modeling social behavior and protocols |
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physical, visual, and auditory design of ubiquitous Interfaces |
This year, we want to emphasise two issues, namely interface consistency across multiple devices and interfaces for public displays. MU3I 2006 is a discussion-oriented workshop inviting position papers of up to two pages. For the full call for papers and information on previous workshops, please refer to http://www.mu3i.org
Workshop 3
Intelligent User Interfaces for Intelligence Analysis
ACM International Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces IUI-2006
Intelligence analysis is a difficult and complex activity due to the nature of the task, inherent limitations in human cognitive processes, and the environment. However, it is becoming an increasingly important area for many sectors (e.g., government, finance, manufacturing, pharmaceuticals). The main purpose of this workshop is to bring together researchers and practitioners who are interested in developing and applying the state-of-art intelligent user interface (IUI) technologies to enhance intelligence analysis. Ideally, the developed IUI technologies or tools can capitalize on human strength (e.g., reasoning and detecting visual patterns) and compensate for human weakness (e.g., attention and memory limitations, cognitive biases). We welcome paper submissions (long paper 8 pages, short paper 4 pages), system demos (2 pages), and panel proposals (2 pages) that address issues in the following areas:
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Research:key research areas and challenges in designing and developing intelligent user interface technologies for intelligence analysis. |
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Systems and Architectures: practical applications that can leverage IUI technologies to benefit intelligence analysis |
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Standards and Evaluation: unclassified data sets for evaluation and activities to create common standards |
The paper format should follow the standard IUI paper format. For the full call for papers and information on previous workshops, please refer to http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~shaw/ia2006/
Workshop 4
Effective Multimodal Dialogue Interfaces
This workshop addresses the issue of evaluating multimodal dialogue systems, in particular the characteristics and interaction styles that are particularly effective for human-machine collaborative task performance. These may include features that are known to be effective and important in human-human interaction. Conversely, it may be the case that certain effective interaction design decisions (e.g. for overcoming speech-recognition error) are less .natural..
We encourage participation by dialogue system and HCI researchers, interaction designers, as well as linguists, psychologists, and sociologists interested in human-human interaction and in evaluation of effective human-machine interaction. The workshop format will involve both longer presentations and shorter responses and position statements, as well as discussion sessions and panels.
Targeted outcomes of the workshop include a better understanding of how to design and build multimodal dialogue interfaces that support successful collaborative task performance, and a method and set of metrics for evaluating such interfaces and their effectiveness.
For the full call for papers and information on previous workshops, please refer to http://www.cs.mu.oz.au/~lcavedon/emmdi-wshop.html
Tutorial 1
Introduction to Human-Robot Interaction (full day tutorial)
Jean Scholtz
National Institute of Standards and Technology
Holly Yanco
University of Massachusetts Lowell
Jill Drury
The MITRE Corporation
This tutorial presents a new and exciting topic that needs the skills of IUI experts - human-robot interaction. Robots are beginning to move out of the laboratory and into our homes and workspaces. While the capabilities of robots are increasing, the design of the human-robot interface is just now receiving attention. While some guidelines from human-computer interaction apply, one challenging difference in human-robot interaction is working with semi-autonomous systems. The tutorial presents the current status of research in interactions with robots including adaptive robots/interfaces, speech, gestures, virtual reality, and social interactions. Different user interface designs will be shown and discussed during the tutorial. Human-robot interaction (HRI) guidelines, evaluation methodologies and metrics currently used by the community will be presented. Research needs will also be discussed. Participants will work in small groups to design a robotic application as well as an evaluation plan.
The instructors have experience working with ground and air robots, in urban search and rescue, in on and off-road driving, in explosive ordnance disposal, and in assistive technologies.
Tutorial 2
Interfaces Everywhere - Interacting with the Pervasive Computer (half day tutorial)
Alois Ferscha, Clemens H. Holzmann, and Michael H. Leitner Johannes Kepler University Linz
An overview of the emerging research challenges related to everywhere interfaces, caused by computing devices that disappear within objects of everyday life, and thus enabling omnipresent physical interfaces to the digital world. The tutorial will explore the interaction paradigms, interface engineering issues, challenges and enabling technologies associated with the provision of context aware interaction styles within ad-hoc, highly dynamic and frequently changing computing environments, where computers are "invisible", but physical interfaces are "omnipresent". Implicit and explicit interaction approaches will be analysed at the frontiers of pervasive, integrated and thus "hidden" technology. Perceived invisibility and the invisibility of technology will spawn the interaction design space challenge, and help identifying strategies for embedding interaction into everyday objects and environments, into literally every "thing".
Students and others who are new in the field of embodied interaction can get a general overview of this emerging field and hands-on experience in the practical part of the tutorial. Experienced researchers will be interested in the state-of-the-art technological overview and should find the exchange of ideas and views valuable.
The instructors of this tutorial are Alois Ferscha, Clemens Holzmann, and Michael Leitner, all from the Department of Pervasive Computing at the Johannes Kepler University Linz.
URL of Tutorial: http://www.soft.uni-linz.ac.at/Research/Conferences/_Tutorial_IUI_2006/
Tutorial 3
Constructive Dialogue Management for Speech-based Interaction Systems (half day tutorial)
Kristiina Jokinen University of Helsinki
In dialogue system and interface design, there has occurred a change in the metaphor used to describe the user's interaction with the system: while the computer has traditionally been regarded as a tool, a new view of the computer as an agent capable of mediating between the user and the complex application has emerged from the more demanding applications and tasks that dialogue systems are employed for. Research on the models and techniques related to user modelling, personalization, affective computing and multimodal interaction has contributed to the development of the conversational systems which are equipped with richer interaction capabilities.
The tutorial will focus on the technological and theoretical challenges in designing adaptive and intelligent conversational systems. As the technology is mature enough to allow build interactive dialogue systems that possess spoken natural language capabilities, there are also several issues dealing e.g. with the planning and presentation of the content so that it addresses the user's particular skill levels, requirements and wishes, as well as with the integration of flexible dialogue management and multimodal presentation components. Also, from the usability point of view, important questions focus on designing enjoyable and attractive products which are also useful, understandable, and work well.
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Invited Talk: Hiroshi Ishiguro
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Interactive Humanoids and Androids as Ideal Interfaces for Humans
Prof. Hiroshi Ishiguro, Department of Adaptive Machine Systems, Osaka University
About Hiroshi Ishiguro
Hiroshi Ishiguro is the leading researcher in human robots (androids). He is a Professor in the Department of adaptive machine systems, Osaka University, and a group leader of ATR Intelligent Robotics and Communication laboratories. His current interests are interactive robots, android robots and perceptual information infrastructure. He specializes in particular in humanoids and androids with an eye not only at how to make them move but also how to make them interact. Prof. Ishiguro received D.Eng. degree from Osaka University in 1991. He then began working as a research assistant of Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Yamanashi University, followed by a research assistantship in the Department of Systems Engineering, Osaka University. In 1994, he was an associate professor of Department of Information Science, Kyoto University, Japan, and started research of distributed vision using omnidirectional cameras. He spent a year in 1998 to 1999, as a visiting scholar in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of California, San Diego. In 1999, he was a visiting researcher in ATR Media Information Science Laboratories and developed the interactive humanoid robots, known as Robovie. In 2000, he moved to Department of Computer and Communication Sciences, Wakayama University, as an associate professor and then professor, before moving to Osaka University.
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Invited Talk: Jeffrey Shaw
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Meaningful Interfaces in Immersive Environments
Prof. Jeffrey Shaw, University of New South Wales iCinema Centre
About Jeffrey Shaw
Professor Jeffrey Shaw is regarded as one of the key international researchers in the field of interactive digital cinema. Professor Shaw is now at the Center for Interactive Cinema Research in Sydney (Australia). He is a foundation Professor for Media Art at the University of Art and Media, Karlsruhe and the foundation Director for the Research Institute for Visual Media at ZKM, Centre for Art and Media, Karlsruhe. Under his direction the Research Institute for Visual Media has become, alongside the MIT Lab, USA, the GMD, National Research Centre for Information Technology, Germany and KTH, Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden, one of the world's premier research institutes in the field of interactive digital cinema. In both roles he has initiated and supervised some of the most important international research projects in interactive narrative formsincluding: the European Union's eRENA, 1998, and eSCAPE, 1999, projects and the Skoda/Volkswagon Pavilion, 2000. In addition he has commissioned a number of ground breaking research projects in the field for example, The Tree of Knowledge, 1998, by Bill Viola (the world's leading video art researcher) and Sonomorphosis by Bernd Lintermann.
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Papers: Gestural Input
Monday
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Posture and Activity Silhouettes for Self-Reporting and Attentive Interfaces
Alejandro Jaimes, Jianyi Liu, FXPAL Japan, Fuji Xerox Co. Ltd.
Head Gesture Recognition in Intelligent Interfaces: The Role of Context in Improving Recognition
Louis-Philippe Morency, Trevor Darrell, MIT
Eye-Tracking to Model and Adapt to User Meta-cognition in Intelligent Learning Environments
Christina Merten, Cristina Conati, University of British Columbia
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Papers: Natural Language in the Interface
Monday
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Taking Advantage of the Situation: Non-Linguistic Context for Natural Language Interfaces to Interactive Virtual Environments
Michael B. Fleischman, MIT, Eduard Hovy, USC/ISI
Three Phase Verification for Spoken Dialog Clarification
Sangkeun Jung, Cheongjae Lee, Gary Geunbae Lee, Pohang University of Science and Engineering
Automatic Prediction of Misconceptions in Multilingual Computer-Mediated Communication
Naomi Yamashita, NTT Communication Science Labs, Toru Ishida, Kyoto University
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Papers: Personal Assistants 1
Monday
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Automatically Classifying Emails into Activities
Mark Dredze, University of Pennsylvania, Tessa Lau, IBM Almaden Research Center, Nicholas Kushmerick, University College Dublin
Linking Messages and Form Requests
Anthony Tomasic, John Zimmerman, Isaac Simmons, Carnegie Mellon University
A Hybrid Learning System for Recognizing User Tasks from Desktop Activities and Email Messages
Jianqiang Shen, Lida Li, Thomas G Dietterich, Jonathan L Herlocker, Oregon State University
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Papers: Recommendation 1
Tuesday
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Trust Building with Explanation Interfaces
Pearl Pu, Li Chen, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne (EPFL)
Is Trust Robust? An Analysis of TrustBased Recommendation
John O'Donovan, Barry Smyth, University College Dublin
Detecting Noise in Recommender System Databases
Michael P O'Mahony, Neil J Hurley, Guenole C Silvestre, University College Dublin (Ireland)
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Papers: Multimedia and Multimodality
Tuesday
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Enabling Context-Sensitive Information Seeking
Michelle X Zhou, Keith Houck, Shimei Pan, James Shaw, Vikram Aggarwal, Zhen Wen, IBM
Interactive Multimedia Summaries of Evaluative Text
Giuseppe Carenini, Raymond Ng, Adam David Pauls, University of British Columbia
A Conceptual Framework for Developing Adaptive Multimodal Applications
Carlos Duarte, Luís Carriço, University of Lisbon
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Papers: Ubiquitous Computing and Interfaces
Tuesday
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Direct manipulation of User Interfaces for Migration
José Pascual Molina, Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, Jean Vanderdonckt, Université Catholique de Louvain, Pascual González López, Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha
Structuralizing Digital Ink for Efficient Selection
Xiang Ao, Junfeng Li,Xugang Wang, Guozhong Dai, Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Papers: Question Answering
Tuesday
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Deriving Quantitative Overviews of Free Text Assessments on the Web
Timothy Chklovski, USC/ISI
Towards Intelligent QA Interfaces: Discourse Processing for Context Questions
Mingyu Sun, Joyce Y. Chai, Michigan State University
An Intelligent Discussion-Bot for Answering Student Queries in Threaded Discussions
Donghui Feng, Erin Shaw, Jihie Kim, Eduard Hovy, ISI-University of Southern California
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Papers: Personal Assistants 2
Wednesday
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Fewer Clicks and Less Frustration: Reducing the Cost of Reaching the Right Folder
Xinlong Bao, Jonathan L Herlocker, Thomas G Dietterich, Oregon State University
Who's Asking For Help? A Bayesian Approach to Intelligent Assistance
Bowen Hui, Craig Boutilier, University of Toronto
SWISH: Semantic Analysis of Window Titles and Switching History
Nuria M. Oliver, Microsoft Research, Greg Smith, Chintan Thakkar, Arun C. Surendran, Microsoft Research
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Papers: Adaptation to Users
Wednesday
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Augmentation-Based Learning: Combining Observations and User Edits for Programming by Demonstration
Daniel A Oblinger, DARPA, Vittorio Castelli, Lawrence Bergman, IBM Research
Interactive Learning of Structural Shape Descriptions from Automatically Generated Near-miss Examples
Tracy A Hammond, Randall Davis, MIT
Recognizing User Interest and Document Value from Reading and Organizing Activities in Document Triage
Rajiv Badi, Soonil Bae, J. Michael Moore, Konstantinos Meintanis, Anna Zacchi, Haowei Hsieh, Frank Shipman, Texas A&M University, Catherine C. Marshall, Microsoft Corporation
A Goal-Oriented Interface to Consumer Electronics using Planning and Commonsense Reasoning
Henry Lieberman, José Humberto Espinosa, MIT
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Papers: Recommendation 2
Wednesday
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Debugging User Interface Descriptions of Knowledge-based Recommender Applications
Alexander Felfernig, Kostyantyn Shchekotykhin, University Klagenfurt
Social Summarization of Text Feedback for Online Auctions and Interactive Presentation of the Summary
Yoshinori Hijikata, Hanako Ohno, Yukitaka Kusumura, Shogo Nishida, Osaka University
Automatic Construction of Personalized User Interfaces
Bob Price, Russ Greiner, Gerald Haeubl, Alden Flatt, University of Alberta
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Short Papers
Tuesday
Short papers will be presented as posters. Some will also be accompanied by a demo.
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Ambient Display using Musical Effects
Luke Barrington (University of California, San Diego), Michael J. Lyons, Dominique Diegmann, and Shinji Abe (ATR Intelligent Robotics and Communication Labs)
"When Media Gets Wise: Collaborative Filtering with Mobile Media Agents"
Mattias Jacobsson, Mattias Rost, and Lars Erik Holmquist (Viktoria Institute)
Splitting Rules for Graceful Degradation of User Interfaces
Murielle Florins (Université catholique de Louvain), Francisco Montero Simarro Escuela (Univ. de Castilla-La Mancha), Jean Vanderdonckt, and Benjamin Michotte (Université catholique de Louvain)
MapTable A Tactical Command and Control Interface
Fan Yang and Christopher Baber (University of Birmingham)
Presence Based Collaborative Recommender for Networked Audiovisual Displays
James H Errico and Ibrahim Sezan (Sharp Labs of America)
A TV Agent System that Integrates Knowledge and Answers Users' Questions
Jun Goto, Masaru Miyazaki, Takeshi Kobayakawa, Nobuyuki Hiruma, and Noriyoshi Uratani (NHK Science & Technical Research Laboratories)
A Cognitively Based Approach to Affect Sensing from Text
Mostafa Al Masum Shaikh (University of Tokyo), Prendinger Helmut (National Institute of Informatics), and Mitsuru Ishizuka (University of Tokyo)
Audio Subtle Expressions Affecting User's Perceptions
Takanori Komatsu (Future University-Hakodate)
A Task-Driven User Interface Architecture for Ambient Intelligent Environments
Tim Clerckx, Chris Vandervelpen, Kris Luyten, and Karin Coninx (Hasselt University)
An Approach to Adaptive User Interfaces using Interactive Media Systems
Mithilesh Kumar (Tejas Networks India Ltd.), Akhilesh Gupta, and Sharad Saha (Samsung India Software Operations)
Intelligent Fridge Poetry Magnets
Kavita Thomas, Pierre Emile Proske, and Mattias Rickardsson (Future Applications Lab/ Art & Technology)
The Delivery of Multimedia Presentations in a Graphical User Interface Environment
Nathalie F Colineau, Julien Phalip, and Andrew T Lampert (CSIRO - ICT Centre)
Designing an Intelligent User Interface for Instructional Video Indexing and Browsing
Lijun Tang and John R. Kender (Columbia University)
Training a Training System
Debbie Richards and Nicolas Szilas (Macquarie University)
PastMaster@Storytelling: A Controlled Interface for Interactive Drama
Nicolas Szilas and Manolya Kavakli (Macquarie University)
Multimodal Error Correction for Continuous Handwriting Recognition in Pen-based User Interfaces
Xugang Wang, Junfeng Li, Xiang Ao (Chinese Academic of Science), Gang Wang (France Telecom R&D), and Guozhong Dai (Chinese Academic of Science)
Inducing Shortcuts on a Mobile Phone Interface
Robert Bridle and Eric McCreath (Australian National University)
A Multi Modal Supporting Tool for Multi Lingual Communication by Inducing Partner's Reply
Kazunori Imoto (Toshiba), Munehiko Sasajima (Osaka University), Taishi Shimomori, Noriko Yamanaka, Makoto Yajima, and Yasuyuki Masai (Toshiba)
What's on tonight - User-centered and Situation-aware Proposals for TV Programmes
Bernd Ludwig, Stefan Mandl, and Sebastian von Mammen (University Erlangen-Nürnberg)
Modeling Gaze Behavior for a 3D ECA in a Dialogue Situation
Gaspard Breton, Danielle Pele, and Christophe Garcia (France Telecom R&D)
Modality Preferences in an Instrumented Environment
Rainer Wasinger (DFKI GmbH) and Antonio Krüger (University of Münster)
iCare: Intelligent Customer Assistance for Recommending Eyewear
Edwin Costello, John Doody, Lorraine McGinty, and Barry Smyth (University College Dublin)
Mixing Robotic Realities
Mauro Dragone, Thomas Holz, and Gregory M.P. O'Hare (University College Dublin)
Evaluating Stories in Narrative-Based Interfaces
Daniel Gonçalves and Joaquim A Jorge (Instituto Superior Técnico)
Investigating the Relation between Robot Bodily Expressions and their Impression on the User
Abdelaziz Khiat, Masataka Toyota, Yoshio Matsumoto, and Tsukasa Ogasawara (Nara Institute of Science and Technology)
Group Recommender Systems: A Critiquing Based Approach
Kevin McCarthy, Maria Salamo, Lorcan Coyle, Lorraine McGinty, Barry Smyth, and Paddy Nixon (University College Dublin)
Recovering Semantic Relations from Web Pages Based on Visual Cues
Peifeng Xiang and Yuanchun Shi (Tsinghua University)
Topic Modeling in Fringe Word Prediction for AAC
Keith Trnka, Debra Yarrington, Kathleen McCoy (University of Delaware), and Christopher Pennington (AgoraNet, Inc.)
Geometric Anticipation: Assisting Users in 2D Layout Tasks
Jessi Stumpfel (California Institute of Technology), James Arvo (University of California, Irvine), and Kevin Novins (University of Auckland)
Augmenting Kitchen Appliances with a Shared Context using Knowledge about Daily Events
Chia-Hsun Jackie Lee, Leonardo Bonanni, Jose Espinosa, Henry Lieberman, and Ted Selker (MIT Media Laboratory)
Multimodal Interaction Styles for Hypermedia Adaptation
Ronnie Taib and Natalie Ruiz (National ICT Australia)
Activity-oriented Context-aware Adaptation Assisting Mobile Geo-spatial Activities
Guoray Cai and Yinkun Xue (Penn State University)
Constraint-Based Livespaces Configuration Management
Markus Stumptner and Bruce H. Thomas (University of South Australia)
How to Talk to a Hologram
Anton Leuski, Jarrell Pair, David Traum, Peter J. McNerney, Panayiotis Georgiou, and Ronakkumar Patel (USC)
Intelligent Drawing Correction using Place Vocabulary Constraints
Ronald W. Ferguson, Neil Cutshaw, and Huzaifa Zafar (Georgia Institute of Technology)
Are Two Talking Heads Better Than One? When Should Use More Than One Agent in E-learning?
Hua Wang, Mark Chignell (University of Toronto), and Mitsuru Ishizuka (University of Tokyo)
Improving Question-Answering With Linking Dialogues
Sudeep Gandhe, Andrew S Gordon, and David Traum (USC)
Creating Multiplatform User Interfaces by Annotation and Adaptation
Yun Ding and Heiner Litz (European Media Laboratory GmbH)
Interactive Prototyping for Ubiquitous Augmented Reality User Interfaces
Otmar Hilliges (University of Munich), Christian Sandor (Technical University Munich), Gudrun Klinker (Technical University Munich)
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Demonstrations
Tuesday
Besides the demos accompanying the short papers/posters, the following demos will be shown:
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Interactive Multimedia Summaries of Evaluative Text
Giuseppe Carenini, Raymond T. Ng and Adam Pauls (Univ of British Columbia)
GrainPile GrainPile: Deriving Quantitative Overviews of Free Text Assessments on the Web
Timothy Chklovski (USC/ISI)
A Goal-Oriented Interface to Consumer Electronics using Planning and Commonsense Reasoning
Henry Lieberman and José Espinosa (MIT Media Lab)
Developing knowledge-based Recommender Applications with Koba4MS
Alexander Felfernig (Universitaet Klagenfurt)
Conversational Animated Agent System K3
Kotaro Funakoshi, Takenobu Tokunaga and Hozumi Tanaka (Tokyo Institute of Technology)
Interactive Learning of Structural Shape Descriptions from Automatically Generated Near-miss Examples
Tracy Hammond And Randall Davis (MIT)
Posture and Activity Silhouettes for Self-Reporting, Interruption Management, and Attentive Interfaces
Alejandro Jaimes (Fuji Xerox Co.)
Asymmetric Collaboration for Networked Reminiscence Content Authoring
Noriaki Kuwahara, Shinji Abe and Kazuhiro Kuwabara (ATR Intelligent Robotics and Communication Laboratories)
WAX: Web-based Activity Management
Tessa Lau, Stephen Farrell, and Thomas Moran (IBM Almaden Research Center)
Email Activity Assistant: Automated Support for managing activities in email
Rory Parle, Rinat Khusainow, Luke O'Malley and Nicholas Kushmerick (Univ. College Dublin)
TaskTracer System
Jianqiang Chen, Jonathan Herlocker (Oregon State University)
DiamondHelp: A Collaborative Task Guidance Framework for Complex Devices
Candy Sidner and Chuck Rich (Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs)
Enabling Context-Sensitive Information Seeking
Michelle Zhou, Keith Houck, Shimei Pan, James Shaw, Vikram Aggarwal and Zhen Wen (IBM T. J. Watson Research Center)
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