Get Even More Visitors To Your Blog, Upgrade To A Business Listing >>

Workshop Engendering Health with RecSys (HealthRecSys 2016) @ ACM RECSYS'16

CALL FOR PAPERS 

International Workshop on Engendering 
 Health with RecSys (HealthRecSys 2016)
to be held in Boston, USA
co-located with ACM RECSYS 2016 (https://recsys.acm.org/)

Website: http://healthrecsys.ur.de

Important Dates:


** June, 24th, 2016 Paper submission deadline

** July, 15th, 2016 Notification to authors

** July, 29th, 2016, Camera-Ready Version

** September, 15th-19th, 2016 Recsys conference


Workshop Organizers:

David Elsweiler (University of Regensburg, Germany)

Bernd Ludwig (University of Regensburg, Germany)

Alan Said (Recorded Future, Sweden)

Hanna Schaefer (TU-Muenchen, Germany)

Christoph Trattner (Know-Center, Austria)


Program Committee:

Francesco Ricci - University of Bolzano

Morgan Harvey - Northumbria University

Ge Mouzhi - University of Bolzano

Georg Groh - TU Munich

Jill Freyne - CSIRO

Marko Tkalcic - University of Bolzano

Shlomo Berkovsky - CSIRO

Neal Lathia - University of Cambridge

Cathal Gurrin - Dublin City University

Mark Dunlop - University of Strathclyde

Andreas Komninos - University of Strathclyde

Aiden Doherty - University of Oxford

Christoph Palm - OTH Regensburg

Eelco Herder - L3S

Robert West - Stanford

Munmun De Choudhury - Georgia Tech

Ingmar Weber - Qatar Computing Research Institute

Kjetil Norvag - NTNU

Objectives & Topics:


Busy lifestyles, abundant options, lack of knowledge ... there are many reasons why
people make poor decisions relating to their health. Yet these poor decisions are leading
to epidemics, which represent some of the greatest challenges we face as a society today.
Noncommunicable Diseases (NCDs), which include cardiovascular diseases, cancer, chronic
respiratory diseases and diabetes, account for approx. 60% of total premature deaths worldwide.
These diseases share the same four behavioural risk factors: tobacco use, unhealthy diet,
physical inactivity and harmful consumption of alcohol and can be prevented and sometimes
even reversed with simple lifestyle changes. Eating more healthily, exercising more appropriately,
sleeping and relaxing more, as well as simply being more aware of one's state of health are all
things that would lead to improved health. Yet knowing exactly what to change and how,
implementing changes and maintaining changes over long time periods are all things people
find challenging. These are also problems, for which we believe recommender systems can provide
assistance by offering specific, tailored suggestions for behavioural change.
In recent years recommender systems for health has become a popular topic within the RecSys
community and a selection of empirical contributions and demo systems have been published.
Efforts to date, however have been sporadic and lack coordination. We lack shared infrastructure
such as datasets, appropriate cross-disciplinary knowledge, even agreed upon goals.

It is our aim to use this workshop as a vehicle to:

** Establish the problem as a prominent RecSys topic
** Create a community of researchers who will determine a concrete research agenda for health in RecSys
** Attract scientists from other domains to RecSys: health (e.g. sports, nutrition, medicine), psychology, signal processing, wearables, HCI, etc.
** Create new ideas for collaboration, particularly cross-domain collaborations
** Establish shared infrastructure (datasets and tools)

We invite submissions that may include the following topics, but are not limited to

** Motivation - increasing motivation, understanding motivation, utilising psychological models, gamification
** Algorithms for Health Recommendations
** Interfaces - Explanations/Presentation, Feedback, Usability
** Persuasive Design
** Sensors - e.g. activity tracking, context detection, quantified self, motivation by self assessment
** Mobile devices
** Gamification - e.g. Making exercise or diet fun
** Social Motivation - Inclusion of Social Context, Coactivity and Group Recommenders
** Knowledge representation - Transfer of domain knowledge to digital systems
** Ethics - Gap between recommendations and medical advice
** Ease of use - embedding systems into everyday life Learning about health
** User modelling, behavioural analytics and behavioural change

Submissions:


We solicit short research papers (up to 4 pages) & short postion papers (up to 2 pages), both in the ACM conference paper style.

Papers should be submitted in EasyChair to https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=healthrecsys2016

Submission guidelines:

All submitted papers must be written in English;

* contain author names, affiliations, and email addresses;
* be formatted according to the ACM SIG Proceedings template (http://www.acm.org/sigs/publications/proceedings-templates) with a font size no smaller than 9pt;
* be in PDF (make sure that the PDF can be viewed on any platform), and formatted for US Letter size;

All papers will be peer-reviewed, must not be under review in any other conference, workshop or journal (at the time of submission),
and must contain novel contributions. Accepted papers will be published according to the ACM RECSYS 2016 WS publication rules.

Location:

The workshop will take place at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) or the IBM Research campuses in Boston, MA, USA (venue not fixed yet)
and will be held in conjunction with the 10th ACM Conference on Recommender Systems.


Further information of this location can be found on the ACM RecSys website: https://recsys.acm.org/.

Contact:

David Elsweiler - [email protected]

Bernd Ludwig - [email protected]

Alan Said - [email protected]

Hanna Schaefer - [email protected]

Christoph Trattner - [email protected]







This post first appeared on Beamtenherrschaft, please read the originial post: here

Share the post

Workshop Engendering Health with RecSys (HealthRecSys 2016) @ ACM RECSYS'16

×

Subscribe to Beamtenherrschaft

Get updates delivered right to your inbox!

Thank you for your subscription

×