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[Call for Papers]Digital Cities 6: Concepts, Methods and Systems of Urban Informatics Workshop

Digital Cities 6: Concepts, Methods and Systems of Urban Informatics
Workshop at the 4th International Conference on Communities and Technologies
Penn State, USA, 24 June 2009

April 16th, 2009    Workshop position papers due
May 18th, 2009    Author notifications sent
June 24th, 2009    Workshop

1    Theme

http://cct2009.ist.psu.edu/workshops.cfm


2    Topics

Relevant workshop topics include but are not limited to the following:

•    Civic and community engagement strategies to support urban planning
•    Public sphere, participation and online deliberation systems
•    Urban e-government, e-governance, e-participation, e-democracy approaches
•    u-City: Ubiquitous computing, pervasive technology, wireless internet and mobile applications
•    Locative media, navigation and space
•    Urban informatics design and development methods and epistemologies
•    Multi-format user-generated content (narratives, photos, videos, multimedia)
•    Neogeography and 3D virtual environments for urban design and planning
•    Simulations to reproduce and analyse complex social phenomena and city systems
•    Social networking, collective intelligence and crowd sourcing in the urban context
•    Environmental, economic and social sustainability
•    Citizen science
•    Access, trust, privacy, safety and surveillance
•    Implications for residential architecture and the design of cities and public spaces
•    Ethical considerations scrutinizing the assumptions behind urban informatics


3    Organisation and Submission Details

This is a full day workshop. We will start off with a keynote address by an eminent speaker. Rather than formal conference-style paper presentations, we will follow the successful peer interview format and ask each participant to interview another contributing author. Pairs will be assigned in advance to prepare questions and engage with the paper. After lunch, there will be a range of group activities and a closing plenary discussion at the end. The workshop can accommodate a maximum number of between 25 to 30 participants including presenters in order to provide an environment that is conducive to debate and interaction.
We are interested in three types of contributions:

Concepts: Essay style papers discussing theoretical and conceptual ideas and innovation within a cross-disciplinary framework.

Methods: Papers reporting on novel approaches in the area of urban informatics, e.g. network action research, shared visual ethnography, urban probes, cross-disciplinary methods, etc.

Systems: Reports of systems and case studies that ground findings in practice and experience.

Prospective participants are asked to submit a position paper (2-4 pages total, in English, ACM SIGCHI 2-column format, same as for the C&T full papers) related to one of the workshop topics. Each submission should also include a short biography stating the author’s background and motivation for attending the workshop. Workshop position papers are due on April 16th, 2009 and will be reviewed and selected by the organisers with the support from an international program committee. Accepted authors will be notified by May 18th, 2009 – to leave enough time to qualify for the early bird conference registration. The acceptance of a workshop position paper implies that at least one of the authors will register for both the workshop and the Communities & Technologies 2009 conference. The workshop takes place on June 24th, 2009. After the workshop, selected contributors are invited to submit a full paper by October 1st, 2009. Full papers will undergo double blind peer review before being published. Arrangements for an edited book or a special issue of a relevant international journal are currently underway.


4    Bibliography

Each Digital Cities workshop has produced an edited volume containing selected workshop papers and other invited contributions as follows:

Digital Cities 5 -- Foth, M. (Ed.) (2009). Handbook of Research on Urban Informatics: The Practice and Promise of the Real-Time City. Hershey, PA: Information Science Reference, IGI Global.

Digital Cities 4 -- Aurigi, A., & De Cindio, F. (Eds.). (2008). Augmented Urban Spaces: Articulating the Physical and Electronic City. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate.

Digital Cities 3 -- van den Besselaar, P., & Koizumi, S. (Eds.). (2005). Digital Cities 3: Information Technologies for Social Capital (Lecture Notes in Computer Science No. 3081). Heidelberg, Germany: Springer.

Digital Cities 2 -- Tanabe, M., van den Besselaar, P., & Ishida, T. (Eds.). (2002). Digital Cities 2: Computational and Sociological Approaches (Lecture Notes in Computer Science No. 2362). Heidelberg, Germany: Springer.

Digital Cities 1 -- Ishida, T., & Isbister, K. (Eds.). (2000). Digital Cities: Technologies, Experiences, and Future Perspectives (Lecture Notes in Computer Science No. 1765). Heidelberg, Germany: Springer.


5    Organisers

Marcus Foth
Senior Research Fellow, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia
m.foth@qut.edu.au

Laura Forlano
Kauffman Fellow in Law, Yale Law School, New Haven, USA
laura.forlano@yale.edu

Hiromitsu Hattori
Assistant Professor, Department of Social Informatics, Kyoto University, Japan
hatto@i.kyoto-u.ac.jp
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