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1st Call for papers: TUMAS-A 2009 Workshop
International Workshop Towards User Modeling and Adaptive Systems for All (TUMAS-A 2009): Modeling and Evaluation of Accessible Intelligent Learning Systems. July 6 or 7, 2009, Brighton, UK, in conjunction with AIED 2009 Conference
Deadline submission: April 16, 2009
Contact: ocsantos@dia.uned.es
Workshop website: https://adenu.ia.uned.es/web/en/projects/tumas-a/2009
Printer-friendly version: https://adenu.ia.uned.es/web/en/book/export/html/517
 
Call for papers.
International Workshop Towards User Modeling and Adaptive Systems for  All (TUMAS-A 2009): Modeling and Evaluation of Accessible Intelligent  Learning Systems to be held in conjunction with the 14th International Conference on Artificial Intelligence in Education (AIED 2009), July  6th - 10th 2009, Thistle Hotel, Brighton (England).

Workshop website is https://adenu.ia.uned.es/web/es/projects/tumas-a/2009

Important Dates
- Half-page abstract submissions: April 9, 2009.
- Workshop paper submissions: April 16, 2009.
- Notification of paper acceptance to authors: May 12, 2009.
- Workshop camera-ready copy due: May 26, 2009.
- Workshop day: July 6 or 7 (to be confirmed), 2009.

Workshop Background
There is a growing interest in providing technology-mediated lifelong  learning services for ALL. Although an increasing number of the users interested in these services are adult learners and people with  disabilities most available settings do not consider accessibility  requirements. The lifelong learning paradigm recognizes that, in a  knowledge based society, education and work are integrated throughout  people's lives. In this context, technology is expected to attend the  learning needs of the students in a personalized way. This paradigm,  of increasing importance in current knowledge-based societies, has particularities that make not possible reusing existing solutions from other fields. For instance, users (learners in this case) are moved by objectives and thus more motivated in the activities performed. Efficiency (learning efficiency) is critical, since usually people require getting some skills of knowledge to be immediately applied. Thus, it is a hot research issue how to build learning systems that care which consider the functional diversity of users so that their accessibility needs are met.

TUMAS-A is a series for workshops aimed to foster the research in learning environments that provide a personalized, accessible and ubiquitous support for their users (learners, facilitators, professors, etc) using the appropriate technologies and standards.

Many fields can provide fruitful discussion to these research goals. To take advantage of this multi-disciplinary need, the TUMAS-A workshops are being organized in conjunction with relevant conferences from different but related fields. In this way, the 1st TUMAS-A workshop was organized in 2007 in conjunction with the User Modeling conference. Relevant feedback was obtained regarding how users and their interactions should be modeled. Last year, in the WI/IAT 2008 conference, the 2nd TUMAS-A workshop put the focus on the intelligent technology that could be used to support that modeling. Both conferences provided outcomes to establish the pillars for deploying learning systems that care on the needs of all the users, in all the contexts.

We consider that AIED is an appropriate audience for the 3rd edition of the TUMAS-A workshop and can contribute to enrich aforementioned issues with new insights on knowledge representation for learning systems that care for any type of user, including their interaction and accessibility needs, from their wide perspectives in intelligent systems and cognitive science for educational computing applications. All fields involved in the AIED community are of major relevance for this workshop. Moreover, the benefit is mutual, since this 3rd edition of the TUMAS-A workshop in AIED 2009 brings together the experience from previous editions.

Workshop Topics
Most of the topics addressed by the AIED 2009 main conference are of relevance for the TUMAS-A 2009 workshop. However, our objective is to foster the AIED community to explicitly take into account all users and all contexts when building learning systems that care, that is, this workshop primary focuses on the accessibility aspects of intelligent systems that adapt to the needs of the users, both from the design and the evaluation point of view. In particular, we have selected the most relevant topics from the AIED main conference to the workshop goals and reformulated them to suit the objectives of TUMAS-A 2009 as follows:

- Modeling and Representation. To build learning systems that care for all, the different elements of learning process have to be modeled such as the actors (learners, facilitators, etc), the competence to achieve and the tasks to carry out, the problem-solving processes, and the learning contexts, including device interaction issues (e.g., those supporting mobile learning). In this modeling process, which can consider diverse pedagogical alternatives and intelligent technologies, the accessibility requirements are to be taking into account, following the principles of the user-centered design.

- Learning Contexts and Domains. The workshop was originated from the lifelong learning domain where open, ubiquitous, standard and web-based environments can support all users both individually and in groups taking into account their accessibility preferences.

- Intelligent Technologies. Many different technologies are of application to build learning systems that care for all. In this workshop, we focus on those that can support an inclusive, dynamic and interoperable adaptation, such as data mining and machine learning, knowledge representation and reasoning and semantic web technologies and standards.

- Evaluation. Evaluation methodologies from the human-computer interaction are of high importance when designing usable and accessible systems and evaluating the impact of the learning systems from the users perspective. The compilation of best practices and experiences/lessons learned are crucial for the field.

Workshop Format
The workshop is organized as a half-day workshop that can accommodate an initial round of short presentations from the participants, and a highly interactive discussion following the Learning Cafe methodology. This methodology has been successfully proven at the past editions of TUMAS-A workshops.

Paper authors are asked to provide a short (e.g. 5-minute) presentation where they highlight the open topics from those addressed in the workshop from their experience and research. These key issues will serve as the starting point for the Learning Cafe discussions.

Read more about the Learning Cafe Methodology at
http://adenu.ia.uned.es/workshops/wi-iat08/tumasa08/format.htm
.
Submission and Publication Instructions
Submissions of original on-going works and previously unpublished research related to research challenges and initiatives in Artificial Intelligence in Education domain to support the needs for all in the Lifelong Learning paradigm are requested. See Workshop Topics section at
http://adenu.ia.uned.es/workshops/wi-iat08/tumasa08/topics.htm
.
Different submission categories have been established:
- Full papers (up to 10 pages),
- Short papers (up to 5 pages),
- Posters (2-3 pages).

Moreover, it is recommended (but not mandatory) to submit a half-page abstract with a tentative title and list of authors one week in advance to the workshop submission deadline.

The formatting template should be the same as the template for the main conference, please see at
http://www.aied2009.com/aied-submissions.html for further information about this template.

Submissions should be done via EasyChair in PDF format. Details will be provided on the workshop website.

Workshop Chairs
- Jesus G. Boticario (jgb@dia.uned.es) aDeNu Research Group - UNED, Spain,
- Olga C. Santos (ocsantos@dia.uned.es) aDeNu Research Group - UNED, Spain,
- Jorge Couchet (jorge.couchet@dia.uned.es) aDeNu Research Group - UNED, Spain,
- Ramon Fabregat (ramon@eia.udg.edu) Institute of Informatics and Aplications (IIIA), Universitat de Girona, Spain,
- Silvia Baldiris (baldiris@eia.udg.edu) Institute of Informatics and Aplications (IIIA), Universitat de Girona, Spain,
- German Moreno (gmoreno@eia.udg.edu) Institute of Informatics and Aplications (IIIA), Universitat de Girona, Spain.
posted by Jérôme Zeiliger on 02/27/09 12:32:01
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