Augmented Human 2019

AH 2019


Computer Graphics Computer Vision & Pattern Recognition



Call for Papers (CFP)
10th Augmented Human International Conference (AH2019)
Faculty of Medicine, University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne, France
March 11-12 2019
http://www.augmented-human.com
The Faculty of Medicine of the University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne will be hosting AH2019, the 10th Augmented Human (AH) International Conference on March 11-12, 2019. To celebrate the 10 years anniversary of the conference, the social dinner will happen in a Champagne cellar. As in previous years, the conference proceedings are planned to be published in the ACM Digital Library as a volume in its International Conference Proceedings Series (ICPS). Previous years’ conferences information and proceedings links are archived here: http://www.augmented-human.com The Augmented Human (AH) international conference focuses on scientific contributions towards augmenting human capabilities through technology for increased well-being and enjoyable experiences.
The topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
Augmented Taste (Special theme of AH2019)
Augmented and Mixed Reality
Brain-Computer Interfaces and Artificial Intelligence
Bionics and Biomechanics
Exoskeletons and Super Human Technologies
Muscle Interfaces and Implanted Interfaces
Interactions between Augmented Humans and Smart Cities
Wearable Computing and Ubiquitous Computing
Augmented Fashion, Art and Tourism
Smart Objects, Smart Textiles an IoT Augmenting Humans
Augmented Sports and Serious Games, including Augmented Winter Sports
Assistive Augmentation, Rehabilitative Interfaces and Games
Alternative or Novel Feedback Modalities
Interfaces, Services and Applications for Human Enhancement
Augmented Healthcare, Quality of Life & Well-being
Human Augmentation, Sensory Substitution and Fusion
Holograms, HMDs and Smart Glasses
Hardware and Sensors for Augmented Human Technologies
Safety, Ethics, Trust, Privacy and Security Aspects of Augmented Humanity
Human-Factor Study, Field Study and User Study of Augmented Human Technologies
Submission Categories
Full papers: 8 pages maximum (including references), anonymized, long presentation
Short papers: 4 pages (including references), anonymized, short presentation
Demonstration papers: 2 pages (including references), anonymized, demo at the conference
Poster papers: 2 pages (including references), anonymized, poster at the conference
Important Dates (All deadlines by end of day CET)
November 1st, 2018: Deadline Submission
December 10th, 2018: Author Acceptance/Rejection
January 10th, 2019: Camera-ready Deadline
March 11th-12th 2019: Conference at Champagne University
Submissions shall be made to the conference management system via the following link:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ah2019
At least 3 double-blind reviews per paper will be done. All papers must be original and not simultaneously submitted to another journal or conference. At least one author per accepted paper will have to come to the conference to present.
Full/Short, Poster and Demonstration accepted will be published in the ACM digital library and must follow the ACM SIG Proceedings template on this page: http://www.acm.org/publications/article-templates/proceedings-template.html
We encourage authors to submit supporting video material in addition to the PDF submission. Authors of all accepted papers will also be invited and encouraged to participate in the demo sessions. All accepted long papers will be recommended for publication in a Journal with sufficiently new added content.
General Chair
Redha Taiar, University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne, France
Program Co-Chairs
Jean-Marc Seigneur, University of Geneva, Switzerland
François Constant Boyer, University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne, France
Steering Committee
Masahiko Inami, University of Tokyo, Japan
Ellen Do Yi Luen, National University of Singapore
Hideki Koike, Tokyo Institute of Technology
Pranav Mistry, Samsung Research America, USA
Suranga Nanayakkara, The University of Auckland, New Zealand
Jun Rekimoto, University of Tokyo / Sony Computer Science Laboratories
Hideo Saito, Keio University, Japan
Tsutomu Terada, University of Kobe, Japan
Jean-Marc Seigneur, University of Geneva, Switzerland
Woontack Woo, KAIST, Korea
Albrecht Schmidt, University of Stuttgart, Germany
Juhyun Eune, Seoul National University, Korea
Program Committee Members
Florian Alt, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Germany
Andreas Bulling, Max Planck Institute for Informatics, Germany
Maurizio Caon, Fribourg HES-SO, Switzerland
Bing-Yu Chen, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
Kwangsu Cho, Yonsei University, South Korea
Junho Choi, Yonsei University, South Korea
Ashley Colley, University of Lapland, Finland
Ellen Yi-Luen Do, Georgia Institute of Technology, United States
Jaroslaw Domaszewicz, Warsaw University of Technology, Poland
Juhyun Eune, Seoul National University, South Korea
Masaaki Fukumoto, NTT DoCoMo Research Labs., Japan
Patricia Gouveia, Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal
Axel Graeser, University Bremen, Germany
Cathal Gurrin, Dublin City University, Ireland
Jeakweon Han, Hanyang University, South Korea
Jeongyun Heo, Kookmin University, South Korea
Christian Holz, Hasso Plattner Institute, Germany
Jochen Huber, Synaptics, Switzerland
Emin Huseynov, University of Geneva, Switzerland
Jane Hwang, Korea Institute of Science and Technology, South Korea
Masahiko Inami, University of Tokyo, Japan
Yuta Itoh, Technical University of Munich, Germany
Seigneur Jean-Marc, University of Geneva, Switzerland
Seokhee Jeon, Kyung Hee University, South Korea
Jihoon Jeong, Kyung Hee Cyber University, South Korea
Dongsik Jo, ETRI, South Korea
Howon Kim, ETRI, South Korea
Hyungseok Kim, Konkuk University, South Korea
Jounghyun Kim, Korea Universtiy, South Korea
Namgyu Kim, Dong-Eui University, South Korea
Hideki Koike, The University of Tokyo, Japan
Yuichi Kurita, Hiroshima University, Japan
Geehyuk Lee, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, South Korea
François Constant Boyer, University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne, France
Jongwon Lee, Sejong Univ. Seoul, South Korea
Joohaeng Lee, ETRI, South Korea
Fabien Lotte, INRIA, France
Kris Luyten, Hasselt University, Belgium
Shachar Maidenbaum, HUJI, Israel
Paul McCullagh, Ulster University, United Kingdom
René Meier, Lucerne University of Applied Sciences, Switzerland
Guillaume Moreau, Ecole Centrale de Nantes - CERMA, France
Joel Murphy, openBCI, United States
Suranga Nanayakkara, The University of Auckland, New Zealand
Anton Nijholt, University of Twente, Netherlands
Takuya Nojima, University of electro-communications, Japan
Jean-Marie Normand, Ecole Centrale de Nantes, France
Ian Oakley, University of Madeira, Portugal
Yoichi Ochiai, University of Tsukuba, Japan
Jongil Park, Dep. of Electronics and Computer Engineering, Hanyang University, South Korea
Jun Park, Hongik University, South Korea
Isabel Pedersen, University of Ontario Institute of Technology, Canada
Martin Rieser, De Montfort University, United Kingdom
Enrico Rukzio, Ulm University, Germany
Hideo Saito, Keio University, Japan
Gionata Salvietti, University of Siena, Italy
Johannes Schoening, University of Bremen, Germany
Roy Shilkrot, Stony Brook University, United States
Redha Taiar, université de reims, France
Kristof Van Laerhoven, University of Siegen, Germany
Athanasios Vourvopoulos, Madeira-ITI, Universidade da Madeira, Portugal
Daniel Wessolek, Futurium gGmbH, Germany
Raphael Wimmer, University of Regensburg, Germany
Anusha Withana, Singapore University of Technology and Design, Singapore
Woontack Woo, KAIST UVR Lab, South Korea