HuFaMo' 21: Fifth International Workshop on Human Factors in Modeling Co-located with MODELS 2021 Virtual, Japan, October 15, 2021 |
Conference website | https://www.monash.edu/it/humanise-lab/hufamo21 |
Submission link | https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=hufamo21 |
The Fifth International Workshop on Human Factors in Modeling / Modeling of Human Factors (HuFaMo’ 21) at MODELS conference provides an opportunity for the modeling community to further advance the research in two areas of modeling and design of human factors and human factors in modeling and design.
Submission Guidelines
All papers must be original and not simultaneously submitted to another journal or conference. There are five possible submission types: Empirical Study Papers, Study Design Papers, HuFaMo Theory Papers, Tool Papers and Position Papers, detailed below.
- EMPIRICAL STUDY of human factors in modeling and modeling of human factors, including replication studies and negative results. We strongly encourage authors to submit raw data and analysis scripts.
- STUDY DESIGNS investigating human factors in modeling and modeling of human factors. These contributions will be evaluated based on the quality of the study design alone, i.e., whether the reviewers deem them promising to obtain meaningful, valid, and interesting results. No actual study results are expected.
- THEORY PAPERS contributing to, or developing, a theory of some aspect of human factors relevant in modeling and also modeling languages and frameworks for incorporating human factors into the design of software systems. No empirical validation is required, but a thorough analysis of the existing work is expected.
- TOOL PAPERS that present any software developed to support experiments related to human factors in modeling and tools developed to model human factors. We intend here to promote tools that can speed up the software implementation of an experiment. We typically seek libraries, frameworks, API... that gather data about human actions and/or interactions between humans and electronic devices.
- POSITION PAPERS (submissions of 2-5 pages) describing initial ideas or visions. Such papers may describe research positions or preliminary approaches on human factors in modeling and modeling of human factors that does not fit the previous paper categories.
All of these should have between 8 and 10 pages in length (except position papers limited to 2-5 pages), including references, appendices, and figures. All submissions should clearly state in their title, to which of the above category they belong.
List of Topics
Relevant topics to modeling and design of human factors include:
- New theories and design principles on human factors modeling and design;
- New methods and techniques to incorporate human factors into requirements and design models;
- New tools to assist in modeling, requirements capturing, and design of human factors;
- Modeling human factors and supporting human-centric issues in model-driven software engineering;
- Better modeling the human aspects of stakeholders and end-users of the software, such as age, gender, personality, emotions, language, disability, preferences and so on;
- Industrial experience reports in modeling human factors in software development;
- Reviews and surveys of approaches in human factors modeling and design.
Relevant topics to the human factors in modeling and design include:
- Emotions and preferences of users in the face of modeling-related tools and activities;
- Stress, load and performance involving modeling activities and artifacts;
- Communicative and cognitive strategies and styles connected to modeling activities;
- Training and testing of modeling tools and related practices;
- Capabilities and competencies;
- Team and group behavior, including behavior across (social) media.
Committees
Program Committee
- Michel Chaudron, TU Eindhoven (Nederland)
- Marco Winckler, Université Côte d'Azur (France)
- Jennifer Horkoff, Chalmers | University of Gothenburg (Sweden)
- Gregorio Robles, Rey Juan Carlos University (Spain)
- Uwe Zdun, University of Vienna (Austria)
- Jean Vanderdonckt, Université catholique de Louvain (Belgium)
- Grischa Liebel, Reykjavik University (Iceland)
- Juha-Pekka Tolvanen, MetaCase (Finland)
- Joanne Atlee, University of Waterloo (Canada)
- Jean-Guy Schneider, Deakin University (Australia)
- Tomaz Kosar, University of Maribor (Slovenija)
- Marjan Mernik, University of Maribor (Slovenia)
- Andrew Simmons, Deakin University (Australia)
- Arnaud Blouin, INSA Rennes (France)
- Timothy Lethbridge, University of Ottawa (Canada)
- Omar B Badreddin, The University of Texas (United States)
- John Hosking, University of Auckland (New Zealand)
- Matthias Tichy, Ulm University (Germany)
- David Redmiles, University of California, Irvine (United States)
- Parsa Pourali, University of Waterloo (Canada)
Organizing committee
- Hourieh Khalajzadeh, Monash Univerity (Australia)
- Silvia Abrahão, Universitat Politecnica de Valencia (Spain)
- Miguel Goulão, NOVA LINCS, Universidade Nova de Lisboa (Portugal)
- John Grundy, Monash Univerity (Australia)
- Rodi Jolak, Chalmers University of Technology and Gothenburg University (Sweden)
- Xavier Le Pallec, University of Lille (France)
- Emmanuel Renaux, University of Lille (France)
- Bran Selic, Monash Univerity (Australia)
Publication
HuFaMo' 21 proceedings will be published by Proceedings of ACM/IEEE 24th International Conference on Model Driven Engineering Languages and Systems (MODELS). If a submission is accepted, at least one author of the paper is required to register for and attend the conference and present the paper.
Venue
The conference will be held virtual and is co-located with MODELS 2021: ACM/IEEE 24th International Conference on Model Driven Engineering Languages and Systems (MODELS).
Contact
All questions about submissions should be emailed to Hourieh Khalajzadeh and Rodi Jolak.