Call: ISWC 2015 – 19th annual International Symposium on Wearable Computers

Announcement and Call for Papers

ISWC 2015
The 19th annual International Symposium on Wearable Computers
September 7-11, 2015, Osaka, Japan

http://www.iswc.net/

ISWC 2015, the 19th annual International Symposium on Wearable Computers, is the premier forum for wearable computing and issues related to on-body and worn mobile technologies. ISWC brings together researchers, product vendors, fashion designers, textile manufacturers, users, and related professionals to share information and advances in wearable technology.

ISWC invites submissions on everything related to computing on the body: on-body sensing and sensor networks; wearables for professional use, mobile healthcare, or entertainment; wearability and interaction; and “on-the-go” uses of mobile devices and systems. Submissions can be a Full Paper (of maximum 8 pages), a Note (4 pages), or a Brief (2 pages), and are due early April, 2015.

AREAS OF INTEREST

From Mobile to Wearable

  • Wearable system design, wearable displays
  • Smart textile technologies, textile sensing and feedback
  • Wearable sensors, actuators, input/output devices
  • Hardware and software aspects of power management
  • Manufacturing aspects of wearables and smart textiles
  • Wearable sensor networks, on-body networks, and support for interaction with other wearables, pervasive and ubiquitous computing systems, the Internet, communication channels, or multimedia streaming
  • Software and service architectures, infrastructure-based and ad-hoc systems, operating systems, dependability, fault tolerance, security, trustworthiness
  • Wearable apps delivered through smartphones
  • Smartphone services, smartphone designs, smartphones as personal wearables
  • Smartphone technologies with a wearable impact
  • Extending smartphone hardware with novel IO
  • Smartphone interaction, cooperative smartphones or wearables, grids and clouds of smartphones, ensembles of wearable artifacts, coordination of wearables

Applications of wearables

  • Wearables in consumer markets and for entertainment
  • Wearables in industry, in manufacturing, in offices, for the mobile worker, in construction
  • Wearables for teaching and education
  • Environmental sciences, urbanism, and architecture
  • Wearables and smart-clothing in medicine, wellness, healthcare, to support disabilities and enable the elderly
  • Wearables enabling ambient assisted living
  • Wearables in psychology, social sciences
  • Human-robot interactions
  • Wearables in culture, fashion, arts, sports, and music
  • Wearables in crowds, wearables sensing and influencing collective behaviors
  • Integrating wearables into larger systems, such as augmented reality systems, training systems and systems designed to support collaborative work.

Information processing, methods, tools

  • Context recognition methods, including location awareness, activity recognition, cognitive-affective state recognition, and social context recognition
  • Adaptivity, personalization, customization and lifelong learning in activity recognition
  • Robust, fault-tolerant, and power-aware methods
  • Context-awareness through big data, web-mining and cloud computing
  • Data fusion, sensor synergies, advanced machine learning and reasoning for context awareness
  • Automating the design of activity recognition chains
  • Smart or automated data annotation techniques
  • Modeling, simulations, and tools supporting science
  • Formal evaluation of performance of wearable computer technologies
  • Usability, HCI and Human Factors
  • Interaction design, industrial design of wearable systems
  • Human factors, wearability, acceptance, ergonomics
  • User modeling, user evaluation, usability engineering, user experience design
  • Systems and designs for combining wearable and pervasive/ubiquitous computing
  • Explicit and implicit interfaces, including hands-free approaches, speech-based interaction, sensory augmentation, haptics, and context-aware interfaces
  • Societal implications, health risk, environmental and privacy issues
  • Wearable technology for social-network computing, visualization and augmentation

EyeWear and WristWear Systems

  • Cutting edge HMD devices, novel optical design methods
  • Eye & wrist-wear sensors, actuator systems, impact studies
  • Input/output devices and Interaction design for eye- and wrist-based systems, enabling applications
  • Eyewear computing for healthcare
  • Human factors issues with, and ergonomics of, eye-and wrist-worn systems

ORGANIZERS

General Co-Chairs:

Kenji Mase, Nagoya University, Japan
Daniel Gatica-Perez, Idiap and EPFL, Switzerland
Marc Langheinrich, Università della Svizzera Italiana

TPC Co-Chairs:

Tsutomu Terada, Kobe University, Japan
Kristof Van Laerhoven, University of Freiburg, Germany
Technical Programme Committee (TPC)
Andreas Bulling, MPI Saarbrucken, Germany
Asim Smailagic, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Bernt Schiele, MPI Saarbrucken, Germany
Björn Eskofier, Univ. Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany
Bruce Thomas, University of South Australia
Dan Siewiorek, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Daniel Ashbrook, Rochester Inst. of Technology, USA
Ulf Blanke, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Daniel Roggen, Newcastle University, UK
Hiroyki Manabe, NTT DOCOMO, Japan
Holger Kenn, Microsoft EMIC, Germany
Jennifer Healey, Intel Labs, USA
Kai Kunze, Osaka Prefecture University, Japan
Louis Atallah, Philips Research, Netherlands
Kent Lyons, Yahoo Labs, USA
Lucy Dunne, University of Minnesota, USA
Mark Billinghurst, University of Canterbury, New Zealand
Mark T. Smith, Royal Inst. of Technology (KTH), Sweden
Masaaki Fukumoto, Microsoft Research, China
Michael Beigl, Karlsruhe Inst. of Technology, Germany
Oliver Amft, Univeristy of Passau, Germany
Ozan Cakmakci, Google, USA
Paul Lukowicz, DFKI Kaiserslautern, Germany
Ross T. Smith, University of South Australia
Seungyon “Claire” Lee, Google, USA
Steve Feiner, Columbia University, USA
Thad Starner, Georgia Tech, USA
Thomas Ploetz, University of Newcastle, UK
Tom Martin, Virginia Tech, USA
Walterio Mayol-Cuevas, University of Bristol, UK

SUBMISSIONS

Each full paper, note, or brief should be anonymized and must be submitted in ACM Computer Science Press (double column) format (latex and word templates): Full papers not longer than 8 pages in length, a note not longer than 4, a brief not longer than 2. All accepted submissions will be included in the printed conference main proceedings. Full papers and notes are presented in the paper sessions. Submissions to ISWC 2015 must not be under review by any other conference or publication during the ISWC review cycle, and must not be previously published or accepted for publication elsewhere. See also the ISWC Author Guide at http://www.iswc.net/iswc15/calls/authorguide.html. All submissions will be reviewed by at least two members of the TPC and at least two external experts to reach a final decision on acceptance.

Full Paper:

Regular paper submissions must present original, highly innovative, prospective and forward-looking research in one or more of the themes given above. Full papers must break new ground, present new insight, deliver a significant research contribution and provide validated support for its results and conclusions. Successful submissions typically represent a major advance for the field of wearable computing, referencing and relating the contribution to existing research work, giving a comprehensive, detailed and understandable explanation of a device, system, study, theory or method, and support the findings with a compelling evaluation and/or validation.

Note and Brief:

Note (not longer than four pages in length) and brief (not longer than two pages in length) submissions must report new results and provide support for the results, as a novel and valuable contribution to the field – just like full papers. Notes are intended for succinct work that is nonetheless in a mature state ready for inclusion in archival proceedings. A brief is intended to present very concise, yet focused and significant research results. Both note and brief will be held to the same standard of scientific quality as full papers, albeit for a shorter presentation and must still state how they fit with respect to related work, and provide a compelling explanation and validation.

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