Time plan for the Workshop

The workshop well be held on Wednesday, November 30th 2011 from 09:00AM till 1:00PM, starting with individual presentations (of active participants) in the morning and proceeding with group discussions, a substantial part for the success of the workshop, afterwards.

Workshop location (and meeting point): Meeting room, ground floor, ICT&S Center, University of Salzburg (Sigmund Haffner Gasse 18, 5020 Salzburg), next door to the conference registration desk

We allow "passive participation" in the workshop, i.e. participation without a accepted position paper. Please register for the workshop or send an Email to one of the organizers. We invite passive participants to prepare short presentations (3-5min.) describing their research interests in the field of subliminal perception and the reason for attending the workshop.

Schedule

09:00-09:15 Opening and introduction
09:15-10:30 Presentation session I
6 presentations (12min. each, accepted position papers see below)

Session chair: Andreas Riener
10:30-10:45 Coffee break
10:45-11:45 Group work I (hot topic presented at workshop; 2 parallel groups 40min.,
short presentations á 5min., discussion round 10min.)

Group leaders/presenters: assigned during workshop
11:45-12:45 Group work II (hot topic presented at workshop; 2 parallel groups 40min.,
short presentations á 5min., discussion round 10min.)

Group leaders/presenters: assigned during workshop
12:45-13:00 Closing (wrap-up, identification of key points, next steps,
follow-up Journal Special Issue, conclusion)
13:00-14:30 Joint lunch
afternoon Time for further discussions (all participants; decided on the fly) and poster preparation for the Conference poster session (Organizers)

Accepted position papers

The following position papers have been accepted for presentation at the workshop of subliminal perception in cars.

1 Peter Sinclair, "Road Music – Music for your drive from your drive", ESAA, UAL, University of Newcastle, France
2 Myounghoon Jeon and Bruce Walker, "In-Vehicle Affect Detection and Mitigation Interfaces: Strategies and Research Questions in Designing Unobtrusive Interactions", Georgia Institute of Technology, US
3 Angela Mahr, "From Spearcons towards ‘Semanticons’: Transferring Crossmodal Speech Priming of Visual Objects to the Driving Context", German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI), Germany
4 Andreas Riener, "Information injection below conscious awareness: Potential of sensory channels", JKU Linz, Austria
5 Joseph Fellner, "Subliminal Perception in Cars from the Automotive Industry’s Perspective", AUDIO MOBIL, Ranshofen, Austria
6 Marco Pasetto and Stefano Damiano Barbati, "Experimental investigation on speed control using a driving simulator", University of Padua, Italy