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Kenton O'Hara <[log in to unmask]>
Tue, 2 Jul 2002 17:24:37 +0100
text/plain (121 lines)
Apologies for multiple postings


Call for papers and participation
====================================

Public, Community and Situated Displays:
Design, use and interaction around shared information displays

ACM CSCW 2002 Workshop, Saturday, November 16th, CSCW 2002, New Orleans,
Louisiana, USA


Deadline for submissions: 31st August 2002


Organisers
----------

Kenton O’Hara, The Appliance Studio, [log in to unmask]
Elizabeth Churchill, FX PAL, [log in to unmask]
Mark Perry, DISC, Brunel University, [log in to unmask]
Daniel Russell, IBM Almaden Research Center,  [log in to unmask]
Norbert A. Streitz, Fraunhofer IPSI, Darmstadt, [log in to unmask]


Workshop theme
--------------

In recent years, more and more information is being presented on dedicated
digital displays situated at particular locations within our environment. At
their most basic, digital display technologies allow information to be more
easily updated dynamically and remotely.  However, these new kinds of
interaction technologies also allow people to use these situated displays in
novel ways both as for their individuals purposes and in the support of
group work.

Continuing technical advances will offer new form factors reduced costs and
increased opportunities for getting content to and from such displays from a
variety of sources, locations and devices.  This in turn will create the
potential for a huge range of social behaviours to develop around systems of
dedicated situated display technologies and offer new methods for
communication, coordination and co-operation.

The use of situated digital displays to present information in a public
domain and the individual and social orientation around public displays
provokes a great deal of questions as to what might constitute appropriate
design for these technologies.


Aims and perspectives
---------------------

The workshop will bring together a diverse set of disciplinary perspectives
such as computer scientists, sociologists, geographers, psychologists,
interface designers and architects who have an interest in the use of
dedicated display technologies for collaborative purposes.  It is intended
to provide a forum for the exchange of ideas as well as the ability to meet
other key researchers in the field.

The aim of the workshop is to identify and consolidate the characteristics
of display technologies in supporting social collaboration and coordination
behaviours.

Key areas of interest to the workshop include:

·       What is the impact of shared display technologies on social capital,
community building, awareness, and conversation initiation?
·       What are the important design characteristics and properties of a display
that motivate particular behaviours. Can we identify design guidelines for
public community and situated displays?
·       What are the impacts of different interaction designs and techniques for
getting information to and from these displays and their impact on usage?
·       What are the social affordances of the different spaces that might impact
on applications and usage of the displays? Can we articulate the properties
of different types of spaces in this respect?
·       What novel applications will be possible with new display technologies and
form factors?

Participation will be limited to 15 (plus the organisers), with selection
based on submitted position papers. We are interested in a wide range of
perspectives, but as a guide, position papers might include: new
technologies for displaying information within our environment and for
interacting with these displays; social interaction around public displays.
This could include studies of existing non-electronic display technologies
and their role in social coordination and collaboration. Submissions on both
theoretical and practical significance will be considered. Papers that
present work in progress / recent developments / research plans are also
welcomed.


Workshop structure
------------------

The workshop will consist of a series of short presentation and discussion
sessions that will allow participants to give a brief overview of their
research and goals for the workshop, and to share their findings with the
rest of the participants.  This will be followed by a structured design
exercise carried out in small multi-disciplinary groups to help draw
together the knowledge and learning from these papers and the diverse
perspectives in the group.  The workshop leaders will work closely with
individual groups to help identify important emerging ideas and facilitate
design work.  We will follow this with an overview session that will
evaluate learnings developed in these design sessions and draw out common
themes from the different groups and design scenarios.


Deadlines and Outcomes
----------------------

Please send position paper submissions as PDF, HTML or plain text to Kenton
O’Hara ([log in to unmask]) not later than 31st August. Applicants
will be informed of the outcome by Sept 30th at the latest.

Full proceedings of the workshop will be made available to all participants
before the workshop for downloading and review prior to meeting.

A selection of the extended versions of the papers will be put forward for
publication in an edited collection under consideration for Kluwer’s
forthcoming CSCW series.

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