Time plan for the Workshop

The workshop well be held on Wednesday, September 17th 2014 from ca. 09:00 AM till 5:00 PM, starting with individual short presentations (PechaKucha style or ad-hoc) in the morning and proceeding with group discussions, a substantial part for the success of the workshop, afterwards.

Workshop location: University of Washington, Seattle, WA, US; room no. 1 (details about workshop room and workshop venue will be provided later).

Meeting point (for transfer service): Lobby ofMotif Seattle Hotel, 1415 Fifth Avenue, Seattle (main conference venue). A bus transfer will be organized for workshop attendees from/to the workshop venue in the morning/evening. More details on the organization will be given later.

Participation: The workshop is open to all interested researchers (as long as we can accommodate space/seats), i.e., we allow participation without a accepted position paper. Please register for the workshop or send an Email to the workshop organizers or Syd Fredrickson (local arrangement chair). We explicitely invite participants without accepted submissions to discuss their visions of social, natural driving, peripheral interaction, etc. with us at the workshop. For that, we recommend to prepare short presentations (10x20 Pecha Kucha style; see below) describing their research interests in the field and the reason for attending the workshop; attendence as "passive participant" without any presentation is, however, also possible ;-)

Individual presentations: All the authors (presenters) of accepted position papers have to prepare a short presentation of their approach in Pecha Kuche style (see http://www.pechakucha.org for details). Please stick to the time schedule (10 images, 20 seconds each) by using timings in PowerPoint.

Schedule (tentative, as of September 9th, 2014)

09:00-09:15 Social, Natural, and Peripheral Interactions
Opening and introduction
09:15-09:45 Session 1: Wake-up - World Cafe
More information on the format will be provided in the workshop.
09:45-10:30

Session 2: Idea presentation by participants
(Presentations in a 10x20 Pecha Kucha style)

Session chair: TBA
10:30-10:45 Coffee break (15min.)
10:45-11:30 Session 3: "Speed-Dating"
More information on the format will be provided in the workshop.
11:30-12:15 Session 4: Group discussion on "Grand Challenges"
(possibly split in 2-3 groups)
12:15-13:45 Joint lunch (provided by the conference)
13:45-14:45

Session 5, part I: Break-out session "Designing interfaces"
(45min. group work, 15min. presentation/discussion)

Session chair: TBA
14:45-15:15 Coffee break (15min.)
15:15-16:15

Session 5, part II: Break-out session "Interaction concepts"
(45min. group work, 15min. presentation/discussion)

Session chair: TBA
16:15-16:30 Closing
(wrap-up of group discussions, identification of key points, next steps, follow-up survey paper, conclusion)
At night Joint dinner or beer (optional; restaurant will be negotiated during the workshop)

 

Accepted position papers

The following position papers have been accepted for presentation at this years workshop at AutoUI. All submissions were reviewed by 2 to 3 individual reviewers and ranked on a 5-level Likert scale (1...clear reject, 5...clear acceptance). Acceptance criteria was a minimum score of 4.0 or higher.

Nr Authors, "Title", Affiliation
1 Mario Chiesa, Alessandro Branciforti, Riccardo Toppan and Francesco Posca, "Social parking: basic elements and core concepts", ISMB, Italy
2 Jonna Häkkilä, Ashley Colley, and Juho Rantakari, "Exploring Mixed Reality Window Concept for Car Passengers", University of Lapland/Oulo, Finland
3 Myounghoon Jeon, "Advanced Vehicle Sonification Applications", Michigan Technological University, Hougthon, US
4 Raphael Lamas, Gary Burnett, Sue Cobb, and Catherine Harvey, "A Driver-to-Driver Communication Device to Improve Drivers' Interaction", The University of Nottingham, UK
5 David Miller and Wendy Ju, "Does The First Officer Concur? Shared Control With Smart Vehicle Systems", Standord University, US
6 Brian Mok and Wendy Ju, "The Push / Pull of Information Between Autonomous Cars and Their Drivers", Standord University, US
8 Shadan Sadeghianborojeni, Andreas Löcken, and Heiko Müller, "Using Peripheral Cues to Support Task Resumption", OFFIS - Institute for Information Technology, Germany
7 Simon Ramm, "A First Approach to Measuring Naturalness in Driver-Car Interaction", Human Centred Design Institute, Brunel University, UK
8 Andreas Riener, "Social Driving Services: Very Cool, But How To Guarantee Application On Broad-Scale?", Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria
10 Chao Wang, Jacques Terken, and Jun Hu, "Give him a "Like": validation of a gestural interaction design for driving behavior credit system", Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands