| *ACM DEV 2010: First ACM Annual Symposium on Computing for Development*
The First ACM Annual Symposium on Computing for Development (DEV 2010) will be co-located with ICTD 2010 and the focus of the symposium will be on new computing innovations for development. The scope of DEV 2010 is broad covering a wide range of research areas within computer science with a direct focus on development. ACM DEV 2010 aims to bring together all CS researchers with an interest in computing for development.
The deadline for paper submissions is July 10th, 2010.
We strongly encourage you to submit your best works here. The conference website is: http://dev2010.news.cs.nyu.edu
*Call for Papers*
DEV 2010 provides an international forum for research in the design and implementation of information and communication technologies (ICTs) for social and economic development. In particular, we focus on emerging contexts where conventional computing solutions are often inappropriate due to various contextual factors - including, but not limited to, cost, language, literacy, and the availability of power and bandwidth. Focusing on innovative technical solutions to these unique application, infrastructure and user challenges, DEV fosters exchange between computer scientists, engineers, and other scholars and practitioners interested in the use of ICTs for development. DEV provides a high-quality, single-track forum for presenting results and discussing new ideas. We expect paper contributions from different existing sub-areas of Computer Science and Engineering with a direct relevance to development. Papers should describe original and previously unpublished research. Three metrics will be applied to judge papers: (a) Relevance of the problem for development; (b) Novelty of the technical solution; (c) Evaluation of the solution, making a case for development-focused impact. All ACM DEV paper submissions should either provide or directly motivate a novel technical solution that has direct implications for development.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to: Networks/Systems/Security/Architecture * Low-cost wireless connectivity * Intermittent networks and systems * Power-efficient systems * Low-cost computing devices * Mobile systems and applications * Security challenges in developing regions HCI/Applications * User interfaces for low-literacy populations * Multi-lingual computing * User-interfaces for low-cost devices * Participatory methods and user-centered design * Accessibility to disabled populations in developing regions * Design and evaluation of applications for health, microfinance, education, agriculture, entertainment AI/NLP/Data Mining/Speech/Vision * Machine learning techniques for large-scale data analysis in development contexts * Adapting content and applications to local languages and education levels * Understanding social relationships and information flows in disadvantaged societies * Speech interfaces and speech recognition for low-resource languages * Development of new AI-centric tools/solutions for development * Computer vision challenges in development We also welcome papers outside of these topics that address the DEV focus on computing innovations supporting social and economic development.
*Important Dates * Registration Deadline July 3, 2010 Submission Deadline July 10, 2010 Paper Acceptance September 5, 2010 Final Version October 5, 2010 Conference December 17-18, 2010
General Chair
Andrew Dearden, Sheffield Hallam University PC Chairs Tapan Parikh, UC Berkeley Lakshminarayanan Subramanian, NYU
*Steering Committee *
Saman Amarasinghe, MIT Gaetano Borriello, University of Washington Eric Brewer, UC Berkeley Deborah Estrin, UCLA Margaret Martonosi, Princeton Roni Rosenfeld, CMU Kentaro Toyama, UC Berkeley
*Program Committee *
Muneeb Ali, Princeton, USA Saman Amarasinghe, MIT, USA Richard Anderson, Univ of Washington, USA Ravin Balakrishnan, Univ of Toronto, Canada Simone Barbosa, PUC - Rio, Brazil Etienne Barnard, Meraka Institute, South Africa Michael Best, Georgia Tech, USA Gaetano Borriello, Univ of Washington, USA Eric Brewer, UC Berkeley, USA John Canny, UC Berkeley, USA Ed Cutrell, MSR India, India James Davis, UC Santa Cruz, USA Andrew Dearden, Sheffield Hallam University, UK Nathan Eagle, MIT & Santa Fe Institute, USA Deborah Estrin, UCLA, USA Neil Ferguson, Imperial College, UK Beki Grinter, Georgia Tech, USA Eric Horovitz, MSR Redmond, USA Ravi Jain, Google, USA Matt Jones, Swansea, UK Matthew Kam, CMU, USA Srinivasan Keshav, University of Waterloo, Canada Zhengjie Liu, Dalian Maritime University, China Gary Marsden, Univ of Cape Town, South Africa Vanessa Frias Martinez, Telefonica Research, Spain Margaret Martonosi, Princeton, USA Srini Narayanan, UC Berkeley, USA Bonnie Nardi, UC Irvine, USA Tapan Parikh, UC Berkeley, USA Balaji Prabhakar, Stanford, USA John Quinn, Makerere University, Uganda Nitendra Rajput, IBM Research India, India Bhaskaran Raman, IIT-Bombay, India Roni Rosenfeld, CMU, USA Umar Saif, LUMS, Pakistan Lakshmi Subramanian, NYU, USA Bill Thies, MSR India, India Kentaro Toyama, UC Berkeley, USA Terry Winograd, Stanford, USA
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