| Important Dates | |
|---|---|
| Abstracts due: | January 9, 2013 |
| Papers due: | January 21, 2013 |
| Decisions Sent: | February 11, 2013 |
| Workshop date: | March 19, 2013 |
| Workshop Links |
|---|
| Interactive Machine Learning |
| Interacting with Smart Objects |
| Location Awareness for Mixed and Dual Reality |
| Intelligent User Interfaces for Developing Regions |
Daniel Sonntag - DFKI, Germany
Contact: workshops_tutorialschair2013 at iuiconf.org
Workshops will be held on the first day of the conference (March 19th). Please refer to the workshop websites provided by each workshop organizer for complete details. Each workshop proposal was reviewed and accepted based on a call for organizers.
A growing community of researchers at the intersection of ML and human-computer interaction are making interaction with humans a central part of developing ML systems. These efforts include applying interaction design principles to ML systems, using human-subject testing to evaluate ML systems and inspire new methods, and changing the input and output channels of ML systems to better leverage human capabilities. With this workshop at IUI 2013 we aim to bring this community together to share ideas, get up-to-date on recent advances, progress towards a common framework and terminology for the field, and discuss the open questions and challenges.
The aim of this workshop is to facilitate discussion on the design of interaction with smart objects.
The workshop welcomes researchers, practitioners and experts from the various fields from human-computer interaction.
The workshop explores the interactions between location awareness and Dual/Mixed Reality in smart environments and the impact on culture and society. The main scope of this workshop is: How can the Dual Reality paradigm be used to improve applications in smart environments and which new possibilities are opened up by these paradigms? This includes positioning methods and location-based services using the DR paradigm, such as navigation services and group interaction services (location-based social signal processing). The workshop is also open to discuss sensor and actuator technologies that may help to realize the synchronization of the virtual and real world.
This workshop aims to look at interaction from the viewpoint of users in developing regions. We will identify interesting research challenges and usability obstacles experienced by this user population at the workshop. Related workshops were conducted in 2008 and 2011, and several interesting themes emerged, for example low-literacy and multimodal interfaces. In 2013, we will build on past workshops by focusing on different themes that affect the interactions of this target population. At IUI4DR 2013, we aim to focus on understanding the problem(s) faced by people in developing regions, and how those problems could be addressed by appropriate intelligent user interface technologies.