From: Mark Billinghurst <grof@hitl.washington.edu>
Subject: ANNOUNCE: IEEE Vrais 98 Workshop
Date: Wed, 24 Dec 1997 14:20:50 -0800
Message-ID: <34A18AC2.41C6@hitl.washington.edu>
Organization: University of Washington


IEEE VRAIS 98
Interfaces for Wearable Computers

We are pleased to announce that a workshop on Interfaces for Wearable
Computers will be held at the IEEE Virtual Reality Annual Internation
Symposium (VRAIS 98). The conference takes place on March 14th-18th in
Atlanta, Georgia. The workshop is by invitation only and takes place
on Sunday March 14th.

Futher information about the conference can be found at:
http://tularosa.eece.unm.edu/eece/conf/vrais/

Prospective attendees are asked to read this workshop announcement and
send 
a two-page position paper to the address below. Workshop participants
will 
be selected based on these papers. 

Deadline for applications for participation in the workshop must be
received 
no later than Friday, January 30th, 1998 

Mark Billinghurst, Thad Starner.

Introduction:
Wearable computing is a new and rapidly developing field that poses
unique 
interface requirements. Most current wearable interfaces are variants of
2D 
desktop interfaces. These are often inappropriate for the input and
output 
devices commonly used on wearable computers. The virtual reality
community has 
a long history of innovative interfaces and many of the approaches used
in 
immersive or augmented reality interfaces are directly relevant to
wearable 
computers. A particularly promising application area for wearable
interfaces 
is commputer supported collaboration. Many of the techniques for
developing 
distributed virtual environments are also directly relevant for wearable 
computer supported collaboration. 

The goals of this workshop are to:

  Identify common problems and research directions in wearable
interfaces.
  Discuss the interface requirements for collaborative wearable
applications. 
  Identify promising research areas in the field of wearable interfaces.
  Publish a report summarizing the workshop findings.

By presenting this workshop in the VRAIS setting it is hoped that the
wearable 
community will benefit from the experience of the VR community and the
VR 
community will be exposed to new research areas.

Format and Organization:
Designed as a full day highly interactive workshop, participants will 
be invited to give a brief summary of their position paper at the
beginning of 
the workshop to stimulate discussion throughout the day. They will also
be 
encouraged to bring their own wearable computers to demonstrate innovate 
interface ideas. The bulk of discussion will be conducted in small group 
session with summaries to the workshop as a whole at the end. Specific
themes 
for the small group discussions will be developed beforehand through a 
workshop mailing list.

Preliminary Schedule:
Time            Activity
9:00 - 9:30     Introductions, presentation of problem statement
9:30 - 11:30    Presentation of position statements.
11:30 - 11:50   Break
11:50 - 12:30   Discussion of interface problems in current wearable
computers 
12:30 - 1:30    Lunch & Participant demonstrations of wearable
interfaces
1:30 - 2:30     Discussion of alternate interfaces for wearable
computers
2:30 - 2:50     Break
2:50 - 4:30     Discussion of collaborative wearable interfaces.
4:30 - 5:30     Identification of issues for further research
5:30 - 6:00     Group summaries, presentation of future action items

Pre-workshop Activities:  
Attendees will be encouraged to develop demonstrations 
of their ideas on their wearable computers to show at the workshop.

Submission Details:
If you are interested in participating in this workshop, please email a 
two-page position statement in text format to vr-wear@media.mit.edu or
mail 
paper versions of the position statement to: 

      Mark Billinghurst
      Human Interface Technology Laboratory
      University of Washington
      Box 352-142
      Seattle, WA 98195
      USA

Position statements should focus on interfaces for wearable computers
and/or 
the use of wearable computers to support collaboration. Workshop
participants 
will be selected based on these statements and they will be used to draw
up a 
more detailed program for the workshop. 
Important Dates:

    Two-page position papers due:             Friday, January 30th 1998

    Notification of acceptance:               Friday, February 6th 1998

    Workshop starts:                          Sunday, March 14th 1998

Contacts:
  For more information contact Mark Billinghurst
                               email: grof@hitl.washington.edu
                               phone: +1-206-616-1430
                               fax: +1-206-543-5380    

Workshop Organizers:

Mark Billinghurst.

Mark Billinghurst is a researcher at the Human Interface Technology
Laboratory (HIT Lab), the University of Washington where he co-manages
their wearable computing effort. He organized the VRAIS 1996 and VRST
1996 tutorials on Multimodal Interfaces. He has published over 30
papers in the areas of Virtual Reality (VR) and Advanced Interface
design.  His current work involves using VR techniques to develop
interfaces for wearable computers, particularly interfaces that
support collaboration on a wearable platform.  More information can be
found at http://www.hitl.washington.edu/people/grof/

Thad Starner.

Thad Starner is a researcher at the MIT Media Laboratory where he
co-founded the wearable computing project. He served on the program
committee for 1996 Boeing Wearable Computing workshop and proposed the
recent successful IEEE International Symposium on Wearable Computing
(ISWC 97) where he acted as local arrangements chair. A USAF
Laboratory Graduate Fellow, Thad has received degrees in Computer
Science, Brain and Cognitive Science, and Media Arts and Sciences and
has worked in the Speech Systems Group at Bolt, Beranek, and Newman
(BBN). His present research includes user modeling, augmented memory,
augmented reality, intellectual collectives, and alternative power
wearable computers.  Thad is in his fifth year of incorporating
wearable computing with his everyday life.  More information can be
found at http://www.media.mit.edu/~starner

-- 
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Mark Billinghurst 		| Human Interface Technology Laboratory
grof@hitl.washington.edu	| University of Washington, Box 352-142
fax: +1-206-543-5380		| Seattle, WA 98195

