Time plan for the Workshop

The workshop well be held on Tuesday, September 1st 2015 from 09:00 AM till 1:00 PM, starting with individual short presentations (4min. presentations + Q&A) in the morning and proceeding with brainstorming and group discussions, a substantial part for the success of the workshop, afterwards.

Workshop location: "The Learning and Conference Centre", University of Nottingham on the Jubilee Campus (Rooms 1a and 1b)

Participation: The workshop is open to all interested researchers (as long as we can accommodate space/seats), i.e., we allow participation without accepted position paper but require registration for the workshop (either with the conference registration or later via Email to the workshop organizers or the local arrangement chair). We explicitely invite participants (in particular also from industry!) without accepted submissions to discuss their experiences in the field of modeling and measuring drivers and driving with us at the workshop.

Individual presentations: All the authors (presenters) of accepted contributions are requested to convey their experiences, lessons learned, best practices or problems, etc. to the auditorium. This will be done in the form of very short PowerPoint presentations (ca. 4 minutes each + few minutes time for quick Q&A). There will be time allotted for more extensive discussions later in the workshop.
When preparing your presentation, please use only a few slides, focus on pictures and avoid having (much) text on your slides!

Tentative schedule (September 1st, 2015)

09:00-09:10 Measuring and Modeling Workshop
Opening and introduction
09:10-10:00 Session 1: Presentations by participants [Chair: A. Riener]
(ca. 4 minutes/author, followed by short Q&A)
10:00-10:30 Session 2: „Speed dating“ [Chair: Andreas R.]
10:30-11:00 Coffee break (30min.; West Atrium)
11:00-11:30 Session 3: "Brainstorming wall" [Chair: Ignacio A.]
Exercise to loosen up everybody for the next session. More information on the format will be provided in the workshop.
11:30-12:30 Session 4: Group discussion [Chair: Wendy J.]
Split into 3-5 groups and discuss topics like:
- State of the art sensor placement & data capture practices (simulator vs. real car)
- Sensor data analysis methods & challenges (sensor fusion)
- Modeling drivers & vehicle occupants (history vs. real-time)
12:30-12:50 Session 3b: Group discussion presentations [Chair: Wendy J.]
1 PowerPoint slide or poster/group.
12:50-13:00 Closing
Recap and next steps (publication plan, etc.)
13:00-14:00 Lunch break (60min.; West Atrium)
lunch provided by the conference.
18:15-late Drinks reception and Barbeque dinner (meet at „The Learning & Conf. Centre“)

 

Accepted position papers

The following position papers (no particular order) have been accepted for presentation at the workshop at AutoUI 2015. All submissions were reviewed by 2 to 3 individual reviewers and ranked on a 5-level Likert scale (1...clear reject, 5...clear acceptance). Only highly-ranked papers with no "reject" ranking were accepted.

ID Authors, "Title", Affiliation
139 Ignacio Alvarez and Laura Rumbe, "How my car got to know me: reflection on in-vehicle user modelling", Intel Research, US.
140 Nikolas Martelaro, "CRUISE: Measuring and Smoothing Driver Behavior Through Haptic Feedback", Stanford University, US.
127 Andreas Loecken, "Experiences with User Studies when Investigating Light Displays", University of Oldenburg, Germany.
131 Myounghoon Jeon, Pavlo Bazilinskyy, Jan Hammerschmidt, Thomas Hermann, Steven Landry and Katieanna Wolf, "Report on the In-vehicle Auditory Interactions Workshop: Taxonomy, Challenges, and Approaches", Michigan Tech, US.
109 Katharina Oeltze and Mandy Dotzaue, "Towards a best practice for multi-driver simulator studies", German Aerospace Center, Germany.
138 Nikhil Gowda, Srinath Sibi, Sonia Baltodano, Nikolas Martelaro, Rohan Maheshwari, Dave Miller and Wendy Ju, "Nudge: Haptic Pre-Cueing to Communicate Automotive Intent", Stanford University, US.
129 Nidzamuddin Md Yusof and Juffrizal Karjanto, "Multi-Dimensions Motivational Factors in Autonomous Driving", Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands.
134 Lewis Chuang, "Does Gaze-tracking Reflect Information-Processing?", Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Germany.
130 Andreas Riener and Juergen Noldi, "Cognitive load estimation in the car: Practical experience from lab and on-road tests", Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria