UBICOMP / ISWC 2022
WORKSHOPS

These 7 workshops will be held as part of the UbiComp/ISWC 2022 conference:

WellComp 2022: 5th International Workshop on Computing for Well-Being

ORGANIZERS

Dimitris Spathis, Nokia Bell Labs, Cambridge, United Kingdom
Miguel Bordallo López, University of Oulu, Oulu, Finland
Shkurta Gashi, Università della Svizzera italiana (USI), Lugano, Switzerland
Wataru Sasaki, Keio University, Fujisawa, Japan
Shin Katayama, Nagoya University, Nagoya, Japan

WORKSHOP SUMMARY

With the advancements in ubiquitous computing, ubicomp technology has deeply spread into our daily lives, including office work, home and house-keeping, health management, transportation, or even urban living environments. Furthermore, beyond the initial metrics commonly applied in computing, such as “efficiency” and “productivity”, the benefits that people (users) get from well-being-aware ubiquitous technology have been greatly emphasized in the recent years. Through the fifth “WellComp” (Computing for Well-being) workshop, we will discuss and debate the contribution of ubiquitous computing towards users’ well-being covering both physical, mental, and social wellness (and the combinations thereof), from the viewpoints of various different layers of computing. Organized by a diverse international team of ubicomp researchers, WellComp 2022 will bring together researchers and practitioners from both academia and industry to explore versatile topics related to well-being and ubiquitous computing.

Call for papers

https://wellcomp-workshop.github.io/2022/

LOCATION AND DATE

Cambridge, UK on September 15, 2022

EarComp 2022: Third International Workshop on Earable Computing

ORGANIZERS

Alessandro Montanari, Nokia Bell Labs, Cambridge, United Kingdom
Dong Ma, Singapore Management University (SMU), Singapore, Singapore
Andrea Ferlini, Nokia Bell Labs, Cambridge, United Kingdom
Xiaoran “Van” Fan, Google, Technology Directions Office (TDO), Irvine, CA, USA

WORKSHOP SUMMARY

The objective of the 3rd ACM International Workshop on Earable Computing (EarComp 2022) is to provide an academic forum and bring together researchers, practitioners, and design experts to discuss how sensory earables technologies have and can complement human sensing research. It also aims to provide a launchpad for bold and visionary ideas and serve as a catalyst for advancements in this emerging new Earable Computing research space.

Call for papers

https://www.esense.io/earcomp2022/

LOCATION AND DATE

Cambridge, UK on September 15, 2022

Delivering Sensing Technologies for Education and Learning

ORGANIZERS

Andrew Vargo, Osaka Metropolitan University, Sakai, Japan
Victoria Abou-Khalil, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
Shoya Ishimaru, German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI), University of Kaiserslautern, Kaiserlsautern, Germany
Benjamin Tag, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Australia
Mathilde Hutin, LISN-CNRS, Orsay, France
Laurence Devillers, LISN-CNRS, Orsay, France
Andreas Dengel, German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI), University of Kaiserslautern, Kaiserslautern, Germany
Koichi Kise, Osaka Metropolitan University, Sakai, Japan

WORKSHOP SUMMARY

Pervasive and ubiquitous sensing technologies have been frequently leveraged in experimental settings within the Ubicomp, ISWC, and HCI community. In the recent past, we have seen advances in the use of ubiquitous sensing technologies to understand and support learning. Recent work investigated a wide range of education-related technologies that detect attention, postures, behaviors, and emotions. However, the promise of delivering these technologies to potential users en-masse remains difficult to fulfill. At this time it is important to understand the factors hindering the use of these technologies, to critically evaluate methodologies for technological development, and to discuss in what ways developed technologies can be safely delivered to students. In this workshop, we bring together experts from the fields of ubiquitous and pervasive computing, HCI, and education to discuss and develop an agenda for moving sensing technologies for learning and education from research to practice.

Call for papers

https://www.lecycl.org/ubicompiswc22 

LOCATION AND DATE

Cambridge, UK on September 15, 2022

10th International Workshop on Human Activity Sensing Corpus and Applications (HASCA)

ORGANIZERS

Dr. Kazuya Murao, Ritsumeikan University, Shiga, Japan
Yu Enokibori, Nagoya University, Nagoya, Japan
Hristijan Gjoreski, Ss. Cyril and Methodius University, Skopje, Macedonia, The Former Yugoslav Republic of
Paula Lago, Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, Concordia University, Canada
Tsuyoshi Okita, Kyushu Institute of Technology, Kitakyushu city, Japan
Pekka Siirtola, University of Oulu, University of Oulu, Oulu, Finland
Kei Hiroi, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan
Dr. Philipp M. Scholl, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
Mr Mathias Ciliberto, Wearable Technologies Lab, Sensor Technology Research Centre, University of Sussex, Brighton, East Sussex, United Kingdom
Kenta Urano, Graduate School of Engineering, Nagoya University, Nagoya, Aichi, Japan

WORKSHOP SUMMARY

The recognition of complex and subtle human behaviors from wearable sensors will enable next-generation human-oriented computing in scenarios of high societal value (e.g., dementia care). This will require large-scale human activity corpus and much improved methods to recognize activities and the context in which they occur. This workshop deals with the challenges of designing reproducible experimental setups, running large-scale dataset collection campaigns, designing activity and context recognition methods that are robust and adaptive, and evaluating systems in the real world. We wish to reflect on future methods, such as lifelong learning approaches that allow open-ended activity recognition.

Call for papers

http://hasca2022.hasc.jp/ 

LOCATION AND DATE

Cambridge, UK on September 15, 2022

CPD 2022: The 5th International Workshop on Combining Physical and Data-Driven Knowledge in Ubiquitous Computing

ORGANIZERS

Linqi Song, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China
Zhengxiong Li, University of Colorado Denver, Denver, Colorado, United States
Amir H. Alavi, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States

WORKSHOP SUMMARY

In the real-world ubiquitous computing systems, it is difficult to require a significant amount of data to obtain accurate information through pure data-driven methods. The performance of data-driven methods relies on the quantity and ‘quality’ of data. They perform well when a sufficient amount of data is available, which is regarded as ideal conditions. However, in real-world systems, collecting data can be costly or impossible due to practical limitations. On the other hand, it is promising to utilize physical knowledge to alleviate these issues of data limitation. The physical knowledge includes domain knowledge from experts, heuristics from experiences, analytic models of the physical phenomena and etc. The goal of the workshop is to explore the intersection between (and the combination of) data and physical knowledge. The workshop aims to bring together domain experts that explore the physical understanding of the data, practitioners that develop systems and the researchers in traditional data-driven domains. The workshop welcomes papers, which focuses on addressing these issues in different applications/domains as well as algorithmic and systematic approaches to applying physical knowledge. Therefore, we further seek to develop a community that systematically analyzes the data quality regarding inference and evaluates the improvements from physical knowledge. Preliminary and on-going work is welcomed.

Call for papers

https://ubicomp-cpd.com/2022.html

LOCATION AND DATE

Atlanta, US on September 15, 2022

7th International Workshop on Mental Health and Well-being: Sensing and Intervention

ORGANIZERS

Varun Mishra, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Akane Sano, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Rice University, Houston, Texas, United States
Sahiti Kunchay, Pennsylvania State University, State College, Pennsylvania, United States
Saeed Abdullah, Information Sciences and Technology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, United States
Professor Jakob E. Bardram, Department of Health Technology, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
Elizabeth L. Murnane, Thayer School of Engineering, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, United States
Tanzeem Choudhury, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, United States
Mirco Musolesi, Department of Geography, University College London, London, United Kingdom
Giovanna Nunes Vilaza, Copenhagen Center for Health Technology, Danish Technical University DTU, Kongens Lyngby, Denmark
Rajalakshmi Nandakumar, Cornell Tech, New York City, New York, United States
Tauhidur Rahman, University of California, San Diego, California, United States
Xuhai Xu, University of Washington, Washington, United States
Zachiary King, Rice University, Houston, Texas, United States
Manasa Kalanadhabhatta, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, United States
Dan Adler, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, United States
Rony Krell, Optum Labs, Eden Prairie, Minnesota, United States

WORKSHOP SUMMARY

Mental health issues affect a significant portion of the world’s population and can result in debilitating and life-threatening outcomes. To address this increasingly pressing healthcare challenge, there is a need to research novel approaches for early detection and prevention. Toward this, ubiquitous systems can play a central role in revealing and tracking clinically relevant behaviors, contexts, and symptoms. Further, such systems can passively detect relapse onset and enable the opportune delivery of effective intervention strategies. However, despite their clear potential, the uptake of ubiquitous technologies into clinical mental healthcare is slow, and a number of challenges still face the overall efficacy of such technology-based solutions. The goal of this workshop is to bring together researchers interested in identifying, articulating, and addressing such issues and opportunities. Following the success of this workshop for the last five years, we aim to continue facilitating the UbiComp community in developing a holistic approach for sensing and intervention in the context of mental health.

Call for papers

https://ubicomp-mental-health.github.io/ 

LOCATION AND DATE

Atlanta, US on September 15, 2022

The Second Workshop on Multiple Input Modalities and Sensations for VR/AR Interactions (MIMSVAI)

ORGANIZERS

Prof. Chuang-Wen You, Interdisciplinary Program of Technology and Art, National Tsing Hua University, Hsinchu, Taiwan
Yi-Chao Chen, Computer Science and Engineering, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, China
Hsin-Ruey Tsai, National Chengchi University, Taipei, Taiwan
Chu-Yin Chen, Paris 8 University, Paris, France

WORKSHOP SUMMARY

With the advance of VR/AR technology, more and more VR/AR applications are emerging and have been popular among new users. Interacting with virtual reality and augmented reality technologies will require the development of alternative input modalities as well as coherent integration of multiple realistic sensations to increase the level of perceived realism. These developments will create a more immersive VR/AR experience. However, a lack of robust and intuitive interaction interfaces and realistic sensations hinders users’ experience for achieving a fascinating acceptance in various application areas of VR/AR interactions. This workshop discusses the challenges and applications of designing a higher coherence between different input modalities and sensations to offer more engaging VR/AR experiences, which can create opportunities for the researchers from both UbiComp and VR/AR fields to jointly discuss and brainstorm alternative input modalities and sensations for VR/AR interactions.

Call for papers

https://mimsvai.github.io/ 

LOCATION AND  DATE

Virtual on September 11, 2022

IMPORTANT DATES

Conference:
September 11-15, 2022

Workshops:
September 11 and 15, 2022

CONTACT

These 9 workshops will be held as part of the UbiComp / ISWC 2020 virtual conference:

Saturday’s Workshops


W1 HASCA 2020

8th International Workshop on Human Activity Sensing Corpus and Applications
http://hasca2020.hasc.jp

W2 BEYOND STEPS

Challenges and Opportunities in Fitness Tracking
https://beyondsteps2020.github.io

W4 UBITTENTION 2020

5th International Workshop on Smart & Ambient Notification and Attention Management
https://www.ubittention.org/2020/

W5 MENTAL HEALTH AND WELL-BEING

5th International Workshop on Mental Health And Well-Being: Sensing And Intervention
https://ubicomp-mental-health.github.io

Sunday’s Workshops


W7 APPLENS 2020

3rd International Workshop on Mining and Learning from Smartphone Apps
http://www.shazhao.net/applens2020/

W8 UPA 2020

5th International Workshop on Ubiquitous Personal Assistance
https://upa20.weebly.com

W9 CPD 2020

3rd Workshop on Combining Physical and Data-driven Knowledge in Ubiquitous Computing
https://ubicomp-cpd.com/2020

W11 CML-IOT 2020

2nd Workshop on Continual and multimodal learning for Internet of Things
https://cmliot2020.github.io

W13 WELLCOMP 2020

3rd International Workshop on Computing for Well-Being
http://wellcomp.org/2020

How To Submit

Workshop papers for the accepted workshops should be submitted electronically through https://new.precisionconference.com/submissions.

  • Please select “SIGCHI” as Society, “UbiComp / ISWC 2020” as Conference / Journal and “Ubicomp 2020 / ISWC Workshop: xyz” as the track in the submission page (with “xyz” being the name of the selected workshop).

  • In the submission page, please enter the title, authors, and abstract of the paper, and upload your workshop paper, and any supplemental files as required by the specific workshop.

  • Each workshop paper (independently of the selected workshop) will have to use the same ACM template detailed in the template information page.

If you have any further inquiries, please contact workshops-2020@iswc.hosting2.acm.org, or the organizers of the specific workshop (see below).

Publication Date

AUTHORS TAKE NOTE: The official publication date is the date the proceedings are made available in the ACM Digital Library. This date may be up to two weeks prior to the first day of the UbiComp / ISWC 2020 conference. The official publication date affects the deadline for any patent filings related to published work. (For those rare conferences whose proceedings are published in the ACM Digital Library after the conference is over, the official publication date remains the first day of the conference.)

Saturday September 12, 2020

HASCA 2020: 8th International Workshop On Human Activity Sensing Corpus And Applications

http://hasca2020.hasc.jp

ORGANIZERS

Kazuya Murao (Ritsumeikan University, Japan), Yu Enokibori (Nagoya University, Japan), Hristijan Gjoreski (Ss. Cyril and Methodius University, Macedonia), Paula Lago (Kyushu Institute of Technology, Japan), Tsuyoshi Okita (Kyushu Institute of Technology, Japan), Pekka Siirtola (University of Oulu, Finland), Kei Hiroi (Nagoya University, Japan), Philipp M. Scholl (University of Freiburg, Germany), Mathias Ciliberto (University of Sussex, UK)

WORKSHOP SUMMARY

The recognition of complex and subtle human behaviors from wearable sensors will enable next-generation human-oriented computing in scenarios of high societal value (e.g., dementia care). This will require large-scale human activity corpuses and much improved methods to recognize activities and the context in which they occur.

This workshop deals with the challenges of designing reproducible experimental setups, running large-scale dataset collection campaigns, designing activity and context recognition methods that are robust and adaptive, and evaluating systems in the real world. We wish to reflect on future methods, such as lifelong learning approaches that allow open-ended activity recognition.

The objective of this workshop is to share the experiences among current researchers around the challenges of real-world activity recognition, the role of datasets and tools, and breakthrough approaches towards open-ended contextual intelligence. This year HASCA will also welcome papers from participants to the Third Sussex-Huawei Locomotion and Transportation Recognition Competition (http://www.shl-dataset.org/activity-recognition-challenge-2020/) as part of a special session.

Beyond Steps: Challenges And Opportunities In Fitness Tracking

https://beyondsteps2020.github.io

ORGANIZERS

Rushil Khurana (CMU, USA), Abdelkareem Bedri (CMU, USA), Patrick Carrington (CMU, USA), Daniel A. Epstein (UC Irvine, USA), Rúben Gouveia (University of Twente, The Netherlands), Jochen Meyer (OFFIS Institute for Information Technology, Germany), Julian Ramos (CMU, USA), Jason Wiese (University of Utah, USA), Paweł Woźniak (Utrecht University, The Netherlands)

WORKSHOP SUMMARY

The quantified-self is a positive and prevalent aspect of our culture that has progressed during the last decade propelled by technological advances in health and fitness tracking. Prior research has shown that self tracking has a myriad of benefits. And we have the ability to sense and track various aspects of fitness and well-being. However one key challenge that remains is what data needs to be shown to the user, and how to present it to the user. Moreover, when is the right time to deliver key information to the user. Secondly, we have noticed that self-monitoring and tracking research has mostly evolved in isolation i.e., researchers have separately studied or built systems for various aspects of fitness like exercise tracking, diet or sleep monitoring. While in reality many of these areas are intertwined and depend on each other: Poor sleep can lead to overeating and consequently weight gain.

In this workshop, we propose to highlight and address these two challenges and explore opportunities to expand beyond the current paradigm of single health factors tracking to a more comprehensive fitness tracking.

UbiTtention 2020: 5th International Workshop On Smart & Ambient Notification And Attention Management

https://www.ubittention.org/2020

ORGANIZERS

Anja Exler (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany), Alexandra Voit (Adesso AG, Germany), Martin Gjoreski (Jozef Stefan Institute, Slovenia), Tine Kolenik (Jozef Stefan Institute, Slovenia), Niels van Berkel (Aalborg University, Denmark), Tadashi Okoshi (Keio University, Japan), Veljko Pejovic (University of Ljubljana, Slovenia)

WORKSHOP SUMMARY

In the advancing ubiquitous computing, users are increasingly confronted with a tremendous amount of information proactively provided via notifications from versatile applications and services, through multiple devices and screens in their environment. Thus, human’s attention has been getting a new significant bottleneck. Further, the latest computing trends with emerging new devices including versatile IoT devices, and contexts, such as smart cities, attention representation, sensing, prediction, analysis and adaptive behavior in the computer systems, are needed in our computing systems.

Following the successful UbiTtention 2016 to 2019 workshops, the UbiTtention 2020 workshop brings together researchers and practitioners from academia and industry to explore the management of human attention and smart and ambient notifications with versatile devices and situations to overcome information overload and overchoice. In this workshop, we want to focus on a larger understanding of the different roles notifications can play in a wide variety of computing environments including the office, the home, in cars, and other smart environments. In addition, we introduce an open-data machine learning challenge to advance the field of cognitive load inference in ubiquitous computing. The dataset is the first labelled dataset for cognitive load monitoring with a wristband and it will be fully released after the challenge.

5th International Workshop On Mental Health And Well-Being: Sensing And Intervention

https://ubicomp-mental-health.github.io

ORGANIZERS

Varun Mishra (Dartmouth College, USA), Akane Sano (Rice University, USA), Saeed Abdullah (Penn State, USA), Jakob E. Bardram (TU Denmark, Denmark), Sandra Servia (University of Cambridge, UK), Elizabeth L. Murnane (Stanford University, USA), Tanzeem Choudhury (Cornell University, USA), Mirco Musolesi (UC London, UK), Giovanna Nunes Vilaza (DTU, Denmark), Rajalakshmi Nandakumar (Cornell Tech, USA), Tauhidur Rahman (UMass Amherst, USA)

WORKSHOP SUMMARY

Mental health issues affect a significant portion of the world’s population and can result in debilitating and life-threatening outcomes. To address this increasingly pressing healthcare challenge, there is a need to research novel approaches for early detection and prevention. Toward this, ubiquitous systems can play a central role in revealing and tracking clinically relevant behaviors, contexts, and symptoms. Further, such systems can passively detect relapse onset and enable the opportune delivery of effective intervention strategies.

However, despite their clear potential, the uptake of ubiquitous technologies into clinical mental healthcare is rare, and a number of challenges still face the overall efficacy of such technology-based solutions. The goal of this workshop is to bring together researchers interested in identifying, articulating, and addressing such issues and opportunities. Following the success this workshop in the last four years, we aim to continue facilitating the UbiComp community in developing novel approaches for sensing and intervention in the context of mental health.

Sunday September 13, 2020

AppLens 2020: 3rd International Workshop On Mining And Learning From Smartphone Apps

http://www.shazhao.net/applens2020/

ORGANIZERS

Sha Zhao (Zhejiang University, China), Yong Li (Tsinghua University, China), Sasu Tarkoma (University of Helsinki, Finland), Zhiwen Yu (Northwestern Polytechnical University, China), Anind Dey (University of Washington, USA), and Gang Pan (Zhejiang University, China)

WORKSHOP SUMMARY

Smartphone apps are becoming ubiquitous in our everyday life. Apps on smartphones sense users’ behaviors and activities, providing a lens for understanding users, which is an important point in the community of ubiquitous computing.

The 3rd International workshop AppLens 2020 at UbiComp/iSWC 2020 will fosters discussions covering methodologies and tools, theories and models, design, descriptions or analysis of smartphone app data. We seek participants interested in profiling users from their use of smartphone apps, discovering cultural and social phenomenon by analyzing app usage, modeling app usage behaviors, studying smartphone apps, user privacy issues, etc.

In order to attract more participants, we will open two app datasets consisting of app usage records. This workshop will include paper sessions, invited talks, a panel session, and Best Paper Award, to provide a forum for the participants to communicate and discuss issues to promote the emerging research field. Moreover, we will select a few accepted papers to be extended and published in a prestigious journal special issue.

AppLens 2020: 3rd International Workshop On Mining And Learning From Smartphone Apps

http://www.shazhao.net/applens2020/

ORGANIZERS

Sha Zhao (Zhejiang University, China), Yong Li (Tsinghua University, China), Sasu Tarkoma (University of Helsinki, Finland), Zhiwen Yu (Northwestern Polytechnical University, China), Anind Dey (University of Washington, USA), and Gang Pan (Zhejiang University, China)

WORKSHOP SUMMARY

Smartphone apps are becoming ubiquitous in our everyday life. Apps on smartphones sense users’ behaviors and activities, providing a lens for understanding users, which is an important point in the community of ubiquitous computing.

The 3rd International workshop AppLens 2020 at UbiComp/iSWC 2020 will fosters discussions covering methodologies and tools, theories and models, design, descriptions or analysis of smartphone app data. We seek participants interested in profiling users from their use of smartphone apps, discovering cultural and social phenomenon by analyzing app usage, modeling app usage behaviors, studying smartphone apps, user privacy issues, etc.

In order to attract more participants, we will open two app datasets consisting of app usage records. This workshop will include paper sessions, invited talks, a panel session, and Best Paper Award, to provide a forum for the participants to communicate and discuss issues to promote the emerging research field. Moreover, we will select a few accepted papers to be extended and published in a prestigious journal special issue.

AppLens 2020: 3rd International Workshop On Mining And Learning From Smartphone Apps

http://www.shazhao.net/applens2020/

ORGANIZERS

Sha Zhao (Zhejiang University, China), Yong Li (Tsinghua University, China), Sasu Tarkoma (University of Helsinki, Finland), Zhiwen Yu (Northwestern Polytechnical University, China), Anind Dey (University of Washington, USA), and Gang Pan (Zhejiang University, China)

WORKSHOP SUMMARY

Smartphone apps are becoming ubiquitous in our everyday life. Apps on smartphones sense users’ behaviors and activities, providing a lens for understanding users, which is an important point in the community of ubiquitous computing.

The 3rd International workshop AppLens 2020 at UbiComp/iSWC 2020 will fosters discussions covering methodologies and tools, theories and models, design, descriptions or analysis of smartphone app data. We seek participants interested in profiling users from their use of smartphone apps, discovering cultural and social phenomenon by analyzing app usage, modeling app usage behaviors, studying smartphone apps, user privacy issues, etc.

In order to attract more participants, we will open two app datasets consisting of app usage records. This workshop will include paper sessions, invited talks, a panel session, and Best Paper Award, to provide a forum for the participants to communicate and discuss issues to promote the emerging research field. Moreover, we will select a few accepted papers to be extended and published in a prestigious journal special issue.

CML-IOT 2020: 2nd Workshop On Continual And Multimodal Learning For Internet Of Things

https://cmliot2020.github.io

ORGANIZERS

Susu Xu (Qualcomm AI Research, USA), Tong Yu (Samsung Research America, USA), Shijia Pan (UC Merced, USA)

WORKSHOP SUMMARY

With the deployment of the Internet of Things (IoT), a large number of sensors are connected to the Internet, providing large-amount, streaming, and multimodal data. These data have distinct statistical characteristics over time and sensing modalities, which are hardly captured by traditional learning methods. Continual and multimodal learning allows integration, adaptation, and generalization of the knowledge learned from experiential data collected from distributed and heterogeneous IoT devices to new situations. Therefore, continual and multimodal learning is an important step to enable efficient ubiquitous computing on IoT devices.

We aim at bringing together researchers from different areas to establish a multidisciplinary community and share the latest research in continual learning and multimodal learning for various IoT applications.

WellComp 2020: 3rd International Workshop On Computing For Well-Being

http://wellcomp.org/2020/

ORGANIZERS

Tadashi Okoshi (Keio University, Japan), Jin Nakazawa (Keio University, Japan), JeongGil Ko (Yonsei University, Republic of Korea), Fahim Kawsar (Nokia Bell Labs, UK), Susanna Pirttikangas (University of Oulu, Finland)

WORKSHOP SUMMARY

We have been experiencing that much of the influence from ubicomp technologies are both contributing to a better quality of life (QoL) of our individual and organizational lives, and causing new types of stress and pain at the same time. The term “well-being” has recently gained attention as a term that covers our general happiness and even more concrete good conditions in our lives, such as physical, psychological, and social wellness. Active research in various ubicomp research areas (systems, mobile/wearable sensing, persuasive apps, different viewpoints and layers of computing.

After two consecutive successful workshops in 2019 and 2020, WellComp2020 will share the latest research in such various areas related to users’ physical, mental, and social well-being. Especially this year’s special attention will be paid for “Well-Being Metrics” and “Well-Being Intervention towards behavior change”.

IMPORTANT DATES

Submission deadline:
July 06, 2020 at 11:59 PM HAST


Notification date:
July 24, 2020


Camera-ready deadline:
July 31, 2020


Virtual Conference:
September 12-16, 2020