Ubicomp 2008:
Seoul,
Korea
Hee Yong Youn, We-Duke Cho (Eds.):
UbiComp 2008: Ubiquitous Computing, 10th International Conference, UbiComp 2008, Seoul, Korea, September 21-24, 2008, Proceedings.
ACM International Conference Proceeding Series 344 ACM 2008, ISBN 978-1-60558-136-1
Activity sensing
- Tim van Kasteren, Athanasios K. Noulas, Gwenn Englebienne, Ben J. A. Kröse:
Accurate activity recognition in a home setting.
1-9
- Tâm Huynh, Mario Fritz, Bernt Schiele:
Discovery of activity patterns using topic models.
10-19
- Kai S. Kunze, Paul Lukowicz:
Dealing with sensor displacement in motion-based onbody activity recognition systems.
20-29
- Derek Hao Hu, Sinno Jialin Pan, Vincent Wenchen Zheng, Nathan Nan Liu, Qiang Yang:
Real world activity recognition with multiple goals.
30-39
- Joseph Modayil, Tongxin Bai, Henry A. Kautz:
Improving the recognition of interleaved activities.
40-43
Portable and wearable
- Matthew L. Lee, Anind K. Dey:
Lifelogging memory appliance for people with episodic memory impairment.
44-53
- Sunny Consolvo, Predrag V. Klasnja, David W. McDonald, Daniel Avrahami, Jon Froehlich, Louis LeGrand, Ryan Libby, Keith Mosher, James A. Landay:
Flowers or a robot army?: encouraging awareness & activity with personal, mobile displays.
54-63
- Donald J. Patterson, Christopher J. O. Baker, Xianghua Ding, Samuel J. Kaufman, Kah Liu, Andrew Zaldivar:
Online everywhere: evolving mobile instant messaging practices.
64-73
- Jaeseok Yun, Shwetak N. Patel, Matthew S. Reynolds, Gregory D. Abowd:
A quantitative investigation of inertial power harvesting for human-powered devices.
74-83
- Andreas Bulling, Daniel Roggen, Gerhard Tröster:
It's in your eyes: towards context-awareness and mobile HCI using wearable EOG goggles.
84-93
Location sensing
Ubicomp methods and tools
- Lucian Leahu, Phoebe Sengers, Michael Mateas:
Interactionist AI and the promise of ubicomp, or, how to put your box in the world without putting the world in your box.
134-143
- Kurt Partridge, Philippe Golle:
On using existing time-use study data for ubiquitous computing applications.
144-153
- Predrag V. Klasnja, Beverly L. Harrison, Louis LeGrand, Anthony LaMarca, Jon Froehlich, Scott E. Hudson:
Using wearable sensors and real time inference to understand human recall of routine activities.
154-163
- Gary Hsieh, Ian Li, Anind K. Dey, Jodi Forlizzi, Scott E. Hudson:
Using visualizations to increase compliance in experience sampling.
164-167
- Danny Wyatt, Jeff A. Bilmes, Tanzeem Choudhury, James A. Kitts:
Towards the automated social analysis of situated speech data.
168-171
Security and privacy
- Kriangsiri Malasri, Lan Wang:
Design and implementation of a secure wireless mote-based medical sensor network.
172-181
- David H. Nguyen, Alfred Kobsa, Gillian R. Hayes:
An empirical investigation of concerns of everyday tracking and recording technologies.
182-191
- Erika Shehan Poole, Christopher A. Le Dantec, James R. Eagan, W. Keith Edwards:
Reflecting on the invisible: understanding end-user perceptions of ubiquitous computing.
192-201
- Vijay Srinivasan, John A. Stankovic, Kamin Whitehouse:
Protecting your daily in-home activity information from a wireless snooping attack.
202-211
- Daniele Quercia, Stephen Hailes, Licia Capra:
MobiRate: making mobile raters stick to their word.
212-221
Design and ethnography
Context-based systems
Location-aware applications
- Robert K. Harle, Andy Hopper:
The potential for location-aware power management.
302-311
- Yu Zheng, Quannan Li, Yukun Chen, Xing Xie, Wei-Ying Ma:
Understanding mobility based on GPS data.
312-321
- Brian Ziebart, Andrew L. Maas, Anind K. Dey, J. Andrew Bagnell:
Navigate like a cabbie: probabilistic reasoning from observed context-aware behavior.
322-331
- Jason Stewart, Sara Bauman, Michelle Escobar, Jakob Hilden, Kumud Bihani, Mark W. Newman:
Accessible contextual information for urban orientation.
332-335
- Alexander Meschtscherjakov, Wolfgang Reitberger, Michael Lankes, Manfred Tscheligi:
Enhanced shopping: a dynamic map in a retail store.
336-339
Augmenting everyday life
- Daniela Karin Rosner, Kimiko Ryokai:
Spyn: augmenting knitting to support storytelling and reflection.
340-349
- Cati Vaucelle, Hiroshi Ishii:
Picture this!: film assembly using toy gestures.
350-359
- Jun-ichiro Watanabe, Arito Mochizuki, Youichi Horry:
Bookisheet: bendable device for browsing content using the metaphor of leafing through the pages.
360-369
- Zachary Pousman, Mario Romero, Adam Smith, Michael Mateas:
Living with tableau machine: a longitudinal investigation of a curious domestic intelligence.
370-379
- Takayuki Kanda, Dylan F. Glas, Masahiro Shiomi, Hiroshi Ishiguro, Norihiro Hagita:
Who will be the customer?: a social robot that anticipates people's behavior from their trajectories.
380-389
Copyright © Mon Mar 15 03:38:11 2010
by Michael Ley (ley@uni-trier.de)