SCOPE
This thematic issue is focused on the design and development of Ambient Intelligent systems which take into account cognitive issues when modelling the users, apply human understandable representations or reasoning or learn users' preferences and adapt to them. This call is expecting contributions from an international audience on recent developments and experiments that:
- Present innovative and state-of-the-art designs,
- Describe real-world or virtual/simulated deployments,
- Share experiences, insights, best-practices and lessons-learned,
- Report the results of technical and social evaluations,
- Discuss and highlight the key challenges and future developments within the domain.
In terms of real applications, proactive, adaptive and real-time solutions for the final user are a big challenge, especially when complex activities and multiple-users are considered. The quality, cost, efficiency and reliability of the systems are important but also their usability, in which taking into account cognitive issues is fundamental.
In this thematic issue we want to put together Ambient Intelligent systems (AmI) centred in humans which use and apply cognitive approaches in their design. We are keen to encourage the submission of papers from a wide variety of backgrounds and perspectives that relate designs and developments in both research and industry.
The topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Human-Computer Interaction
- Emotion detection and/or prediction
- Human-centred interfaces
- Handling preferences of the individual users and user groups
- Logic and Reasoning
- Automated reasoning: deductive, probabilistic, diagnostic, causal, qualitative reasoning, etc.
- Automated learning (i.e. Support Vector Machines, Neural Networks, etc.)
- Knowledge Representation and Cognition (e.g. Qualiative representations, Ontologies and representation of common sense etc.)
- Computational Linguistics, Natural Language Processing & Understanding
- Embodied vs. ambient intelligence
- Context awareness
- Mobile and wearable computing
- Ubiquitous computing
- Computational Creativity
- Decision Support Systems
- Applications in health care: assisted living, fall detection, elderly care, patient monitoring
- Applications in smart homes: home safety, energy efficiency, entertainment, ambience, multimedia
- Applications in smart buildings, smart cities, living-labs, smart classrooms, smart cars, in safety, energy efficiency, services
- Robotics applied to Smart Environments
- Intuitive user interface design
- Usability of AmI systems
- Evaluation of cognitively driven AmI systems
- Methodological open questions on AmI and Cognition
SUBMISSION
Papers should be of 12 pages or longer (papers of up to 30 pages can be accepted, but authors should aim for between 15 and 20 pages) and adhere to the guidelines given on the Web page: http://www.mstracker.com/submit1.php?jc=jaise
When submitting, authors should highlight that the submission is for this particular special issue (HCogRL).
Tentative DATES
- 1 November 2016: submission deadline - 1 March 2017: notifications to the authors - 1 June 2017: final camera ready version submission
Publication Date September 2017
EDITORS
- Zoe Falomir (Guest Editor), Bremen Spatial Cognition Centre (BSCC), Universität Bremen, Germany, zfalomir@informatik.uni-bremen.de
- Juan Antonio Ortega (Guest Editor), Universidad de Sevilla, Spain, jortega@us.es
- Natividad Martínez (Guest Editor), Reutlingen University, natividad.martinez@reutlingen-university.de
- Hans Guesgen (Editorial Board), Massey University, H.W.Guesgen@massey.ac.nz
We encourage potential authors to contact the editors to notify them of their intention to submit a manuscript for the special issue or for any questions they might have regarding scope of special issue or the editorial schedule.
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