Third
Workshop on Human-Computer Interaction and Information Retrieval
The
3rd Annual Workshop on Human-Computer Interaction and
Information Retrieval (HCIR '09) was held at the Catholic
University of America in Washington, DC on October 23, 2009. Our
keynote speaker was
Ben Shneiderman,
professor at the University of Maryland and founding director of the
Human-Computer Interaction Laboratory.
The
workshop
proceedings and the
workshop
report are now available. The slides from Ben
Shneiderman's
keynote address are also available.
HCIR 2010 will be co-located with the 2010
Information Interaction in Context Symposium (IIiX 2010), on
Sunday, August 22, 2010, in New Brunswick, NJ, USA. We hope
to see you there!
WORKSHOP
CHAIRS
Bill
Kules, The Catholic University
of America
Daniel
Tunkelang, Endeca
Ryen
White, Microsoft Research
BACKGROUND
When
we held the first HCIR workshop in 2007, the idea of uniting the
fields of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) and Information Retrieval
(IR) was a battle cry to move this research area from the fringes of
computer science into the mainstream. Two years later, as we organize
this third HCIR workshop on the heels of a highly successful HCIR 2008,
we see some of the fruits of our labor. Topics like interactive
information retrieval and exploratory search are receiving increasing
attention, among both academic researchers and industry practitioners.
But
we have only begun this journey. Most of the work in these two
fields still stays within their silos, and the efforts to realize more
sophisticated models, tools, and evaluation metrics for information
seeking are still in their early stages.
In
this year's one-day workshop, we will continue to explore the
advances each domain can bring to the other.
FORMAT
We
invite 4-page position papers that will be reviewed by the workshop
chairs and additional reviewers. Position papers will be judged based
on relevance to HCIR. Idea diversity across all submissions may also be
considered. The revised versions will be produced in hardcopy for
attendees
and published on the website. The workshop time will be used for what
participants have told us that they found most valuable: posters and
directed
group discussions.
We
will select 4-6 position papers for presentation in a workshop panel.
All
other attendees are strongly encouraged to present posters during the
morning
"poster boaster" session.
Our target is
to have 40-50 participants.
Possible
topics for discussion and presentation at the workshop include,
but are not limited to:
- Novel
interaction techniques for information retrieval.
- Modeling
and evaluation of interactive information retrieval.
- Exploratory
search and information discovery.
- Information
visualization and visual analytics.
- Applications
of HCI techniques to information retrieval needs in
specific domains.
- Ethnography
and user studies relevant to information retrieval and
access.
- Scale and
efficiency considerations for interactive information
retrieval systems.
- Relevance
feedback and active learning approaches for information
retrieval.
Demonstrations
of systems and prototypes are particularly welcome.
NOTE ON
TRAVEL/ACCOMMODATION SUPPORT
In
the past, people have asked whether there are funds available to
defray travel or accommodation expenses. Unfortunately, our funds only
allow us to cover the costs of the workshop itself. It is our hope that
the growing success of this workshop will attract additional funding in
future years. If your company or organization is interested in
sponsoring travel scholarships, please let us know as soon as possible.
SUPPORTERS:
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