-------- Weitergeleitete Nachricht -------- Betreff: [tciin] 2nd Call for Papers - CASPer 2015, the 2nd International Workshop on Crowdsensing in Conjunction with IEEE PerCom 2015 Datum: Tue, 21 Oct 2014 09:29:59 +0200 Von: Casper 2015 casper2015@uns.ac.rs Organisation: Faculty of technical sciences An: ukubinet-announce@doc.ic.ac.uk, ifip_nm@lists.utwente.nl, DataAI@ee.oulu.fi, edm@uhasselt.be, ambienttalk@soft.vub.ac.be, hiit-info@hiit.fi, ukubinet-admin@doc.ic.ac.uk, iuii@ua.es, ahsntc-mailing-list@list.trlab.ca, cfpc@cfpc.dk, pakgrid@yahoogroups.com, tciin.isat@u-bourgogne.fr, office@pervasive.jku.at, itc@comsoc.org, tccc@lists.cs.columbia.edu
******************************************************************** CASPer 2015 2nd International Workshop on Crowd Assisted Sensing, Pervasive Systems and Communications St. Louis, USA, March 27, 2015
In Conjunction with IEEE PerCom 2015 St. Louis, USA, March 23-27, 2015 ********************************************************************
Dear Colleagues,
Please, find below the CfP for the 2nd International Workshop on Crowd Assisted Sensing, Pervasive Systems and Communications (CASPer 2015), held in conjunction with the 13th IEEE International Conference on Pervasive Computing and Communications (PerCom 2015).
This call for papers and other information about the workshop can be found at the following website:
Call for Papers
With phones in their pockets, millions of people have access to sensing, computation, and connectivity, making it possible to harness the power of the crowd to collect and share data about their surroundings and experiences on a massive scale. Crowdsensing/ crowdsourcing is a novel data collection paradigm that leverages this vast mobile sensor network, making it possible to expand the scope of research endeavors and address civic issues without requiring the purchase of specialized sensors or the installation and maintenance of network infrastructure. Data collected using such applications may come from unexpected yet interesting and valuable sources and may allow for collecting data in previously inaccessible locations and contexts.
This new data collection paradigm introduces several research challenges. Privacy is a primary concern for users that are contributing sensitive or identifying data. Incentive mechanisms for participation may be needed to encourage people to volunteer their resources to collect data. Methods are needed for processing large- scale, user-generated data sets into meaningful information, and for assessing and understanding the quality of information to help guide decision-making. Approaches that involve the crowd in such data analysis tasks, with humans serving as a source of semantic information, interpretation, and evaluation of crowdsensing/ crowdsourcing data, can also help to build an understanding of the physical, computational, and socio-technical environment.
The objective of this workshop is to provide a forum for discussion, debate, and collaboration focused on ideas, trends, techniques, and recent advances in crowdsensing/crowdsourcing. We invite original research contributions that advance the state of the art as well as position papers that pose a new direction or present a controversial point of view. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
* Algorithms to handle, process, and visualize large-scale crowdsensing/crowdsourcing data sets * Data integrity, security, privacy, and provenance for crowdsensing/crowdsourcing data * Determining and assessing Quality of Information for crowdsensing/crowdsourcing data * Crowd-assisted (human-in-the-loop) approaches to analyzing crowdsensing/crowdsourcing data * Context modeling and reasoning in crowdsensing/crowdsourcing applications * Incentive mechanisms for participation in crowdsensing/crowdsourcing applications * Supporting crowdsensing/crowdsourcing in heterogeneous networks * Crowdsensing/crowdsourcing for pervasive systems * Novel use of sensors for crowdsensing/crowdsourcing applications * Energy-efficient mechanisms for crowdsensing/crowdsourcing applications * Programming abstractions and middleware for crowdsensing/crowdsourcing applications * Novel large-scale crowdsensing/crowdsourcing applications
Submitted papers must be original contributions that are unpublished and are not currently under consideration for publication by other venues. Submissions are limited to a maximum length of 6 pages and must adhere to IEEE format (2 column, 10 pt font). Templates are available via the workshop website. Accepted papers will be published in the IEEE PerCom Workshop Proceedings.
Note, that each accepted paper requires a full PERCOM registration (no registration is available for workshops only)!
Important Dates
Paper submissions: November 26, 2014 Paper notifications: January 9, 2015 Camera ready submissions: January 28, 2015
General Chairs
Miguel Labrador, University of South Florida, USA Thomas Silverston, University of Lorraine/Inria-Nancy, France
Programme Chairs
Karoly Farkas, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary Luke Dickens, Imperial College London, UK
Publicity Chair
Imre Lendak, University of Novi Sad, Serbia
Technical Program Committee
Joel Branch, IBM, USA Licia Capra, University College London, UK Murat Demirbas, University of Buffalo, USA Salil Kanhere, University of New South Wales, UK Daniel Fernandez Lanvin, Universidad de Oviedo, Spain Andres Marin Lopez, Universidad Carlos III. Madrid, Spain Paul Lukowicz, DFKI, Germany Emil Lupu, Imperial College London, UK Mary Lou Maher, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA Paulo Mendes, COPELABS - University Lusofona, Portugal Archan Misra, Singapore Management University, Singapore Ilona Murynets, AT&T, USA Andrea Passarella, IIT-CNR, Italy Jamie Payton, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA Paul Roe, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Gerhard Troster, ETH Zurich, Switzerland Zhiwen Yu, Northwestern Polytechnical University, China
We hope to see you next March in St. Louis.
Best regards,
Imre Lendak, Publicity Chair CASPer 2015