IARIA

ACHI 2010 (St. Maarten, Netherlands Antilles)

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009 by Conference Editor
February 10, 2010toFebruary 15, 2010

The Third International Conferences on Advances in Computer-Human Interactions targets traditional and advanced paradigms for computer-human interaction in multi-technology environments. The conference covers also fundamentals on interfaces and models, and highlights new challenging industrial applications and research topics. The conference has the following tracks:

  • INTER: Interfaces
  • OUI: Organic user interfaces
  • HAPTIC: Haptic interfaces
  • SYSTEMS: Interactive systems
  • DEVICES: Interaction devices
  • DESIGN & EVAL: Interaction & interface design & evaluation
  • MODELS: Principles, theories, and models
  • USER: User modeling and user focus
  • PARADIGMS: Traditional and emerging paradigms
  • ACCESS: Usability and universal accessibility
  • HUM-ROBOTS: Human-robot interaction
  • HUM- AGENTS: Agents and human interaction
  • SOCIAL: Social aspects of human-computer interaction
  • GAMES: Computer games and gaming
  • EDUCATION: Human-computer interaction in education and training
  • MED APPS: Applications in medicine
  • TELECONF: Teleconferencing
  • APPLICATIONS: Other domain applications

See iaria.org for more information.

UBICOMM 2008 (Valencia, Spain)

Monday, January 21st, 2008 by Conference Editor
September 29, 2008 10:00 amtoOctober 4, 2008 10:00 am

The goal of the International Conference on Mobile Ubiquitous Computing, Systems, Services and Technologies, UBICOMM 2008, is to bring together researchers from the academia and practitioners from the industry in order to address fundamentals of ubiquitous systems and the new applications related to them.

Topics include Ubiquitous computing, Design and development of ubiquitous services, and Users and applications of ubiquitous technology.

ACHI 2008 (Sainte Luce, Martinique)

Tuesday, January 1st, 2008 by Conference Editor
February 10, 2008toFebruary 15, 2008

The inaugural conference on Advances in Computer-Human Interaction, ACHI 2008, is a result of a paradigm shift in the most recent achievements and future trends in human interactions with increasingly complex systems. Adaptive and knowledge-based user interfaces, universal accessibility, human-robot interaction, agent-driven human computer interaction, and sharable mobile devices are a few of these trends. ACHI 2008 brings also a suite of specific domain applications, such as gaming, e-learning, social, medicine, teleconferencing and engineering.

The conference has the following sessions:

  • Interfaces (5 sessions)
  • Applications
  • Educations
  • Design and evaluation
  • Human robots and agents
  • Users
  • Access
  • Systems

ACHI 2008 is colocated with ICDS 2008 (Digital Society) and ICQNM 2008 (Quantum, Nano, and Micro Technologies).

The conference is organized by The International Academy, Research, and Industry Association (IARIA), whose aim is to promote scientific and industrial interchanges between existing associations to bring bridges between different scientific and industrial cultures.