First International Workshop on Egocentric Perception, Interaction and Computing Call for Papers

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First International Workshop on Egocentric Perception, Interaction and Computing
                           EPIC@ECCV16

             http://www.eyewear-computing.org/EPIC_ECCV16/

                     Amsterdam, October, 2016

                  in conjunction with  ECCV 2016

            Submission Full Papers (8-14 pages): June 20, 2016
            Submission Extended Abstracts (2-4 pages): July 20, 2016

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CALL FOR PAPERS


Egocentric perception introduces a series of challenging questions for
Computer Vision and Multimedia as motion, real-time responsiveness and
generally uncontrolled interactions in the wild are more frequently
required or encountered. Questions such as what to interpret as well
as what to ignore, how to efficiently represent egocentric actions and
how captured information can be turned into useful data for guidance
or log summaries become central.  Eyewear devices are becoming
increasingly popular, both as research prototypes and off-the-shelf
products. They can acquire images and videos, with different
resolutions and frame rates, and can collect multimodal data such as
gaze information, GPS position, IMU data, etc. Being connected with
head-mounted displays they can also provide new forms of
visualization. Based on this rapid progress, we believe that we are
only at the beginning and these technologies and their application can
have a great impact on our life.  In fact, these Eyewear devices will
be able to automatically understand what the wearer is doing, acting,
manipulating or where his attention goes on. They will also able to
recognize the surrounding scene and understand gestures and social
relationships.

This new EPIC@X series of workshops aims to bring together the various
communities that are relevant to egocentric perception including
Computer Vision, Multimedia, HCI and the Visual Sciences and is
planned to be held on the major conferences in these fields. EPIC@ECCV
will accept Full Papers for novel work, and Extended Abstracts for
ongoing or already published work. Both research and application works
related to Egocentric Perception, Interaction and Computing are
encouraged, including those that can be demonstrated or are in the
prototype stages.

Submissions are expected to deal with human-centric perception including, but not limited to:
- Eyewear devices for egocentric perception and computation
- Eyewear devices for acquisition and visualization
- Egocentric vision for object/event recognition
- Egocentric vision for summarization
- Egocentric vision for social interaction and human behavior understanding
- Egocentric vision for children and education
- Egocentric vision for health
- Head-mounted eye tracking and gaze estimation
- Computational visual behaviour analysis
- Attention modelling and next fixation prediction
- Eye-based human-computer interaction
- Human and wearable devices interaction
- Symbiotic human-machine vision systems
- Affective computing with respect to wearable devices
- Interactive AR/VR and Egocentric perception
- Augmented human performance
- Interactive AR/VR and Egocentric perception
- (Eye-based) daily life and activity monitoring
- Benchmarking and quantitative evaluation with human subject experiments


IMPORTANT DATES

Submission Full Papers (8-14 pages): June 20, 2016
Submission Extended Abstracts (2-4 pages): July 20, 2016
Notification of acceptance: July 20, 2016
Camera ready version: July 25, 2016
Workshop: one day among 8th, 9th October 2016


WORKSHOP ORGANIZERS

Giuseppe Serra, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy
Rita Cucchiara, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy
Walterio Mayol-Cuevas, University of Bristol, United Kingdom
Andreas Bulling, Max Planck Institute for Informatics, Germany
Dima Damen, University of Bristol, United Kingdom


TECHNICAL PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Stefano Alletto, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy
Jenny Benois-Pineau, University of Bordeaux, France
Alejandro Betancourt, University of Genova, Italy
Gabriele Bleser, Technical University Kaiserslautern, Germany
Alberto Del Bimbo, University of Florence, Italy
Javier Civera, University of Zaragoza, Spain
David J. Crandall, Indiana University, USA
Piotr Didyk, Saarland University, Germany
Krishna Sandeep Dubba, Nokia Research - Cambridge, United Kingdom
Giovanni Maria Farinella, University of Catania, Italy
Xavier Giró-i-Nieto, Technical University of Catalonia, Spain
Oliver Grau, Intel Visual Computing Institute, Germany
Cathal Gurrin, Dublin City University, United Kingdom
Jochen Huber, Singapore University of Technology and Design, Singapore
Tae-Kyun Kim, Imperial College London, United Kingdom
Kris Kitani, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Antonio Krüger, DFKI Kaiserslautern, Germany
Kai Kunze, Keio University, Japan
Kristof van Laerhoven, University of Freiburg, Germany
Yong Jae Lee, University of California, DAVIS, USA
Paul Lukowicz, DFKI GmbH, Germany
Päivi Majaranta, School of Information Sciences, Finland
Ana García del Molino, Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore
Ana C. Murillo, University of Zaragoza, Spain
Hyun Soo Park, University of Pennsylvania, USA
Shmuel Peleg, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel
Thies Pfeiffer, Bielefeld University, Germany
Petia Radeva, University of Barcelona, Spain
Daniel Roggen, University of Surrey, UK
Michael S. Ryoo, NASA-JPL, USA
Yoichi Sato, University of Tokyo, Japan
Bernt Schiele Max Planck Institute for Informatics, Germany
Lorenzo Seidenari, University of Florence, Italy
Cheston Tan, Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore
Christian Theobalt, Max Planck Institute for Informatics, Germany

For more information: http://www.eyewear-computing.org/EPIC_ECCV16/