|
Workshop Organizers
Liliana Ardissono
Mark Maybury
Program Committee
Liliana Ardissono
Patrick Baudisch
Michael Bove
Alfred Kobsa
Judith Masthoff
Mark Maybury
Sean McNee
Barry Smyth
Mark van Setten
Howard Wactlar
Important Dates May 31, 2004
For more information about the workshop, contact
|
Previous TV workshops
Workshop Program and electronic papers
TV'04: background and motivationThe diffusion of digital TV and the availability of hundreds of TV channels are exciting challenges for the design, development and exploitation of user modeling, personalization and adaptive user interfaces techniques. First of all, personalized Electronic Program Guides (EPGs) are needed to support the TV viewer in the selection of the interesting programs. Second, the presence of set-top boxes running complex programs facilitates the development of user modeling systems that monitor the viewer's behavior each time (s)he watches TV, acquiring long-term user models. At the same time, however, there are important issues to be solved: for example, viewers typically do not watch TV alone; therefore, household models have to be acquired and efficient unobtrusive identification techniques have to be developed to make the explicit identification of viewers unnecessary. Moreover, the viewer's interests have to be acquired without bothering her/him with questions and, as such interests may abruptly change, the system has to promptly react to such changes to provide suitable recommendations. Finally, privacy issues have to be addressed to make such systems acceptable. Another important challenge for digital TV is the development of suitable user interfaces for TV services. For instance, the transition from a passive type of interaction to an active one and the need to use simple remote control devices constrains the types of actions that the TV viewer can perform. Moreover, as the TV is located far away from its viewers, there are special constraints on the layout of the user interfaces. Finally, increasingly sophisticated and interactive games will provide additional challenges. And new forms of interactive television promise to place the viewer in the drivers/design seat.
Call for papersFor this workshop, we will consider contributions devoted to user modeling and user-adaptive systems in the field of Personalized TV available on the Web and on new generation TV-sets. Relevant topics include, but are not limited to:
Workshop formatThis workshop is aimed at providing a forum in which researchers from diverse fields such as machine learning, knowledge engineering, psychology, cognitive sciences, adaptive user interfaces, user modeling and business intelligence can examine the personalization aspects of the user interface in interactive TV. All contributions will be made available in a Web site before the main conference, so that participants can read them in advance. Proceedings will also be published as an informal Annex to the main Conference Proceedings.
Submission instructionsThe following types of submission are solicited:
All the submissions should be formatted according to the following guidelines:
the first page should include the title, author's name(s),
affiliation, mailing address, phone number, e-mail, home page URL,
and abstract and up to five keywords.
|