European Conference on Cognitive Ergonomics

ECCE 2017


Human Computer Interaction Social Sciences (General)



ECCE 2017 is the 35th annual conference of the European Association of
Cognitive Ergonomics. This leading conference in human-technology interaction and cognitive engineering provides an opportunity for both researchers and practitioners to exchange new ideas and practical experiences from a variety of domains.

We invite papers from researchers and practitioners, which address the broad spectrum of challenges and opportunities in this area.

The main theme of ECCE 2017 is Transforming the everyday. The role of digital technologies in our life has dramatically changed in the last decades, and the scope of cognitive ergonomics has extended accordingly. While industrial, safety-critical, applications and systems remain an essential object of analysis and design, an increasingly important focus of ECCE conferences is on how digital technologies become a part of our everyday environments and practices. The theme of ECCE 2017 reflects this development.

Submission Topics

We invite various types of contributions from researchers and practitioners
- long and short papers, demos, posters, doctoral consortium applications, and proposals for workshops and panel sessions
- which address the broad spectrum of cognitive ergonomics challenges in the analysis, design, and evaluation of digital
technologies.
This includes, but is not limited to, the following topics:

· Design methods, tools, and methodologies for supporting cognitive tasks
· Affective/emotional aspects of human interaction with IT artefacts
· Motivation, engagement, goal sharing
· Ecological approaches to human cognition and human-technology interaction
· User research concepts, methods, and empirical studies
· Cognitive processes in design
· Collaborative creativity
· Collaboration in design teams
· Cognitive task analysis and modeling
· Methods and tools for studying cognitive tasks
· Decision aiding, information presentation and visualization
· Human Factors and simulation
· Trust and control in complex systems
· Situation awareness
· Human error and reliability
· Resilience and diversity

Submission Guidelines

All submissions should be written in English and authors should anonymise their papers. All submissions fulfilling the submission requirements will be peer-reviewed, and accepted papers will be published in the conference proceedings that will be made available in the ACM digital library.
Submissions must follow the ACM conference proceedings formatting guidelines. Submissions via EasyChair must be in PDF format.
Proposals for workshops and panel sessions should be submitted by email to program chairs Victor Kaptelinin (victor.kaptelinin@umu.se) and Gerrit van der Veer (gerrit@acm.org).

Submission Categories

Submissions can be long papers, short papers, posters, and demonstrations. In addition, we invite applications for panel sessions and workshops, and doctoral candidates may
submit to the ECCE 2017

Doctoral Consortium.
Long papers (max. 8 pages) should describe original, completed research work that contributes to the conference topics. Short papers (max. 4 pages) may describe work-in-progress, practical experiences, and innovative concepts or approaches, which can promote discussion.

The poster and demonstration sessions aim to show work in a setting, which facilitates open discussion. These sessions are suitable for authors who wish to present and demonstrate their work, smaller projects, systems or prototypes in a more interactive and informal setting during ECCE2017.
Poster and demonstration papers, up to 2 pages, should explain the work to be presented, how it will be presented, and the relevance of the presentation to conference attendees.
If there are any particular requirements for the demonstration (e.g. size of equipment, power, networking etc.) please inform the programme chairs about that to ensure that we can accommodate your needs.