HAI 2018: Human-Agent Interaction 2018 University of Southampton Southampton, UK, December 15-18, 2018 |
Conference website | http://hai-conference.net/hai2018/ |
Submission link | https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=hai20180 |
Abstract registration deadline | July 20, 2018 |
Submission deadline | July 23, 2018 |
CALL FOR PAPERS
* 6th International Conference on Human-Agent Interaction (HAI 2018) *
*** Southampton, UK --- 15-18 December 2018 ***
http://hai-conference.net/hai2018/
HAI 2018 is the 6th annual International Conference on Human-Agent Interaction. It aims to be the premier interdisciplinary venue for discussing and disseminating state-of-the-art research and results that reach across conventional interaction boundaries from people to a wide range of intelligent systems, including physical robots, software agents and digitally-mediated human-human communication. HAI focusses on technical as well as social aspects.
The theme for HAI 2018 is *Trustworthy Interaction*. During the last decade, much research has been devoted to increasing the interaction quality between humans and artificial intelligent agents. At the same
time, more and more intelligent systems are generating decisions, either autonomously or with people "in-the-loop". Many questions arise when considering the trustworthiness of intelligent systems, operating on their own or in collaboration with people. Do users trust these systems? Do the systems trust people? How can systems gain users' trust, and vice versa? What happens if trust is lost? How is trust modelled? How is trust evaluated?
As robots and agents enter our everyday lives, interactions will require more initiative and flexibility from agents, i.e., greater autonomy and intelligence; however, outcomes may be less predictable. Current research trends which emphasise statistical behaviour models constructed from observations may only capture rather shallow structures and may overlook more complex aspects that underly less restricted exchanges. We strive for better understanding and models of interaction principles that take into account not only situational and task aspects but also detailed user models. More research is necessary to lead the way towards deeper and more robust models of human-agent interaction. HAI encourages contributions that tackle these questions in realistic, practical settings.
The HAI conference seeks contributions from a broad range of fields spanning engineering, computer science, psychology and sociology, covering diverse areas, including:
- human-robot interaction;
- intelligent systems;
- affective computing;
- computer-supported collaborative work;
- gaming/serious games; and
- artificial intelligence.
Topics include, but are not limited to:
- studies of Human-Agent Interaction, with quantitative/qualitative results;
- theoretical models;
- technological advances;
- experimental methods;
- impacts of embodiment;
- character and avatar design; and
- agents in social networks.
Results that have implications to the broader HAI communities are encouraged (e.g., HRI, human-virtual agent interaction, and interaction with smart homes and autonomous vehicles), as well as position papers and preliminary, high-impact studies.
Full papers, posters, late-breaking results, tutorial/workshop overviews will be archived in the ACM Digital Library. Selected papers will be invited to submit to a special issue of the Knowledge Engineering Review journal (https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/knowledge-engineering-review).
IMPORTANT DATES.
* Full Papers (Short: 4 pages; Long: 8 pages) *
20 July 2018 - Abstract Submission - EXTENDED!
23 July 2018 - Full-Paper Submission - EXTENDED!
10 September 2018 - Notification - EXTENDED!
* Workshop Proposals *
16 July 2018 - Proposal Submission
30 July 2018 - Notification
* Tutorial Proposals *
30 July 2018 - Proposal Submission
13 August 2018 - Notification
* Late-breaking & Demo Papers (2 pages) *
1 October 2018 - Short-Paper Submission
22 October 2018 - Notification
* Conference in Southampton, UK *
15-16 December 2018 - Workshops, Tutorials
16-18 December 2018 - Main Programme
SUBMISSION FORMAT:
Format will follow the ACM Conference Proceedings template (https://www.overleaf.com/latex/templates/acm-conference-proceedings-new-master-template/pnrfvrrdbfwt#.Wx2jw2X5OlJ).
LOCATION.
HAI will take place at the University of Southampton (https://www.southampton.ac.uk). Southampton is a vibrant port city located in the south of England, rich in history and culture, and easily reached from London airports.
ORGANISING COMMITTEE.
General Co-Chairs:
-- Michita Imai, Keio University, Japan
-- Tim Norman, University of Southampton, UK
Program Chairs:
-- Elizabeth Sklar, King's College London, UK
-- Takanori Komatsu, Meiji University, Japan
Workshops Chair:
-- Marc Hanheide, University of Lincoln, UK
Tutorials Chair:
-- Wolmet Barendregt, Univ of Gothenburg, Sweden
Local Chairs:
-- Long Tran-Thanh, Univ of Southampton, UK
-- Theodora (Lela) Koulouri, Brunel University, UK
Sponsorships Chair:
-- Masahiko Osawa, Keio University, Japan
Finance Chair:
-- Sebastian Stein, University of Southampton, UK
Publicity Chair:
-- Mohammad Obaid, Uppsala University, Sweden
Publications Chair:
-- Avi Rosenfeld, Jerusalem College of Tech, Israel
Posters Chair:
-- Tin Leelavimolsilp, Univ of Southampton, UK
Web Chair:
-- Nhat Truong, University of Southampton, UK
PROGRAM COMMITTEE.
M. Q. Azhar, City University of New York, USA |
Paul Baxter, University of Lincoln, UK |
Tony Belpaeme, University of Plymouth, UK |
Oya Celiktutan Dikici, Imperial College, UK |
Louise Dennis, University of Liverpool, UK |
Christian Dondrup, Heriot-Watt University, UK |
Patrick Finn, University of Calgary, Canada |
Kotaro Funakoshi, Honda Research Institute Japan, Japan |
Marc Hanheide, Lincoln University, UK |
Laura Hiatt, Naval Research Lab, USA |
Hung-Hsuan Huang, RIKEN AIP Center , Japan |
Michita Imai, Keio University, Japan |
Daisuke Katagami, Tokyo Polytechnic University, Japan |
Theodora Koulouri, Brunel University, UK |
Severin Lemaignan, University of the West of England, UK |
Yanan Li, Imperial College, UK |
Katrin Lohan, Heriot-Watt University, UK |
Haipeng Mi, Tsinghua University, China |
Tatsuya Nomura, Ryukoku University, Japan |
Emma Norling, University of Sheffield, UK |
Tim Norman, Univeristy of Southampton, UK |
Tetsuo Ono, Hokkaido University, Japan |
Nir Oren, University of Aberdeen, UK |
Hirotaka Osawa, University of Tsukuba, Japan |
Simon Parsons, King's College London, UK |
Rui Prada, Instituto de Engenharia de Sistemas e Computadores - Investigação e Desenvolvimento, Portugal |
Sarvapali (Gopal) Ramchurn, University of Southampton, UK |
Daniel Rea, University of Manitoba, Canada |
Francesco Rea, Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Italy |
Daisuke Sakamoto, Hokkaido University, Japan |
Masahiro Shiomi, Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International, Japan |
Kazuaki Tanaka, Osaka University, Japan |
Long Tran-Thanh, Univeristy of Southampton, UK |
Tomoko Yonezawa, Kansai University, Japan |
James Young, University of Manitoba, Canada |
Karolina Zawieska, De Montfort University, UK |