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 |
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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 |
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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 |