CALL FOR STATE-OF-THE-ART REPORTS
All accepted STARs will be published in Computer Graphics Forum
EuroVis 2016 is the 18th annual scientific gathering on visualization
jointly organized by the Eurographics Working Group on Data Visualization
and the IEEE Visualization and Graphics Technical Committee. EuroVis 2016
will be held in Groningen, The Netherlands from June 6-10, 2016.
For the first time, all accepted EuroVis 2016 STAR reports will be published
in Computer Graphics Forum. State-of-the-Art Reports (STARs) are intended
to provide up-to-date and comprehensive surveys on topics of interest to the
visualization research community. We encourage the submission of STARs on
topics that have not yet been covered in any recent previous STAR or other
survey. We welcome submissions that introduce emerging technologies, as
well as proposals on more traditional visualization topics. We also welcome
contributions from related disciplines and application areas demonstrating
contributions to, or benefits from, the area of visualization including, but
not limited to, visual computing, computer graphics, human-computer
interaction, virtual reality, image processing, computer vision, psychology,
geography, chemistry, computational fluid dynamics, data analysis,
computational sciences, medicine, biology, economy, politology, etc.
As part of the acceptance process into Computer Graphics Forum, STARs will
undergo a multi-stage process. First, authors are being asked to submit an
initial sketch. A STAR sketch briefly describes the planned STAR by
outlining the topic, discussing its relevance for the visualization
community, providing the planned structure and outline of the STAR together
with all key references, and short biographies of the authors. The length of
a STAR sketch is limited to three pages whereby the last page may only
contain references. The format of the sketch can be found at
http://www.cs.rug.nl/jbi/eurovis2016/ForSubmitters/SubmissionGuidelines.
STAR sketches will be reviewed by the STAR program co-chairs for suitability
and relevance, and the authors of accepted sketches will be invited to
submit a full STAR. Full STAR submissions will then undergo a single blind,
double cycle review, similar to the one for regular papers, where three
external experts on the respective topic will evaluate the STAR. Full
submissions are 25 pages maximum.
Electronic submission of the STAR sketch and full proposal is mandatory and
will be conducted using <https://precisionconference.com/~vgtc/>
https://precisionconference.com/~vgtc/ according to the guidelines defined
at
<http://www.cs.rug.nl/jbi/eurovis2016/ForSubmitters/SubmissionGuidelines>
http://www.cs.rug.nl/jbi/eurovis2016/ForSubmitters/SubmissionGuidelines
We plan to schedule each STAR as a 50-100 minute presentation as in
Eurographics conferences (subject to the schedule management of the EuroVis
2016 program). In any circumstance, a STAR presentation will always be given
a longer time slot than that for a full paper.
For any questions concerning STAR submissions please contact the STARs
co-chairs: eurovis2016_star(a)list.rug.nl
Important Dates
Submission of STAR sketch (up to 3 pages): December 11, 2015
Invitation for full STAR submission: December 23, 2015
Submission of full STAR: February 14, 2016
Review notification: March 18, 2016
Second round submission: April 18, 2016
Second review notification: May 1, 2016
Camera ready deadline: May 15, 2016
General Chair
Jos Roerdink, Univeristy of Gronigen, The Netherlands
STAR Chairs
Anna Vilanova (A.Vilanova(a)tudelft.nl), Delft University of Technology, The
Netherlands
Ross Maciejewski (rmacieje(a)asu.edu), Arizona State University, USA
Timo Ropinski (timo.ropinski(a)uni-ulm.de), Ulm University, Germany
******** EUROVIS 2016 ********
EG/VGTC Conference on Visualization
June 6-10, 2016
Groningen, The Netherlands
<http://www.cs.rug.nl/jbi/eurovis2016/>
http://www.cs.rug.nl/jbi/eurovis2016/
EuroVis 2016, hosted by the University of Groningen in the Netherlands, is
the 18th annual visualization gathering organized by the Eurographics
Working Group on Data Visualization and supported by the IEEE Visualization
and Graphics Technical Committee (IEEE VGTC). EuroVis has been a
Eurographics and IEEE co-supported international visualization symposium
held in Europe annually since 1999. EuroVis has been a conference since
2012.
Authors are invited to submit original work presenting fundamental research,
practice and experience, or novel applications in all areas of visualization
and related topics.
EuroVis full papers are published as a special issue of Computer Graphics
Forum (CGF), the International Journal of the Eurographics Association,
using a two-stage review process. Also, State-of-the-Art Reports (STARs)
will undergo a two-stage review process and for the first time all accepted
STARs will be published in Computer Graphics Forum. EuroVis Short Papers
will be electronically archived in the Eurographics Digital Library and are
fully citable publications.
** Important dates
( <http://www.cs.rug.nl/jbi/eurovis2016/ForSubmitters/ImportantDates>
http://www.cs.rug.nl/jbi/eurovis2016/ForSubmitters/ImportantDates):
Full Paper Abstracts: Friday 4 December 2015
Full Papers: Friday 11 December 2015
STAR sketch: Friday 11 December 2015
STAR invitation to submit: Wednesday 23 December 2015
Full STARs: Sunday 14 February 2016
Short Papers: Friday 19 February 2016
Posters: Friday 8 April 2016
Please note that an abstract submission is required one week before the full
papers deadline to assist the papers chairs in allocating reviewers and
ensure that the review process runs to time. Also, for STARs a short sketch
is required that will be reviewed for suitability and relevance by the STAR
chairs.
** Committees ( <http://www.cs.rug.nl/jbi/eurovis2016/Organization>
http://www.cs.rug.nl/jbi/eurovis2016/Organization):
General Chair
Jos Roerdink, University of Groningen, the Netherlands
Papers Chairs
Kwan-Liu Ma, University of California at Davis, USA Giuseppe Santucci,
University of Rome "La Sapienza", Italy Jarke van Wijk, Eindhoven University
of Technology, the Netherlands
STARs Chairs
Ross Maciejewski, Arizona State University, USA Timo Ropinski, Ulm
University, Germany Anna Vilanova, TU Delft, the Netherlands
Short Papers Chairs
Enrico Bertini, New York University, USA Niklas Elmqvist, University of
Maryland, USA
Thomas Wischgoll, Wright University, USA
Posters Chairs
Tobias Isenberg, INRIA, France
Filip Sadlo, University of Heidelberg, Germany
The Eurographics Best PhD Thesis Award aims to recognize good thesis work in
Europe, to incentivize young researchers, and to offer them the opportunity
to publish the state of the art section of their thesis as a STAR in the
Computer Graphics Forum Journal. Eurographics annually grants three PhD
thesis awards. They are jointly sponsored by Eurographics and the Computer
Graphics Forum Journal. The PhD Thesis Awards Committee consists of five
members.
The current Call will close on November 30th, 2015. Candidates will be PhD
Theses defended and mainly conducted in Europe or in countries having a
Eurographics Chapter or in EG Organizational Member Institutions (
<https://www.eg.org/index.php/about-eg/local-chapters>
https://www.eg.org/index.php/about-eg/local-chapters ). Theses defended and
awarded the degree from May 1st, 2014, up October 31st, 2015, are eligible
in this edition. The required documentation includes:
1. The Thesis in English, or a link to the corresponding entry in the EG
Digital Library.
2. Names and contact details of four possible reviewers, of which at least
one is not the Thesis supervisor or one of the examiners or a co-author in a
publication resulting from the thesis. The connection of each possible
reviewer to the Thesis (Supervisor, Examiner, Co-author, None) should be
stated. The Awards Committee reserves the right to solicit reviews also from
persons not on this list.
3. The submission must include a link to the Thesis pdf in the Eurographics
Digital Library, Graphics Dissertation Online. Nominations must refer to
Thesis documents being publicly available at Graphics Dissertation Online.
Forms and procedures for submission of the thesis for archiving in the
Eurographics Digital Library are available at:
<http://diglib.eg.org/handle/10.2312/8107>
http://diglib.eg.org/handle/10.2312/8107
4. Full CV of the candidate with explicit mention of which publications
resulted from the thesis.
The documentation of candidate nominations must be sent by e-mail to the PhD
Thesis Awards chair, Paolo Cignoni ( <mailto:paolo.cignoni@isti.cnr.it>
paolo.cignoni(a)isti.cnr.it), not later than November 30th, 2015. Submissions
can be sent by the candidate, the supervisor or any other researcher. All
submitted material should be in English. Every Thesis can be submitted only
once.
The PhD Thesis Awards Committee consists of five members. Committee
membership will be for five years terms, which will be staggered to ensure
continuity. The committee can decide, as an extraordinary measure, to
increase the number of awards in some years. The Committee will consider the
quality of the work, the review reports, the quality and impact of the
publications derived from the thesis, the coherence of the state of the art
section in the thesis and any other relevant aspect of the work.
Awarded researchers will be announced and receive a certificate at the
opening session of the Annual Eurographics Conference (where they will
profit from a free registration). They will also receive a three-years free
Eurographics membership, and will be invited to prepare a State-of-the-Art
paper within two months after the Conference. Submitted papers will follow a
fast track review cycle for publication in the STAR section of the Computer
Graphics Forum Journal.
Dear colleagues,
The Center for Geometry and Computational Design, TU Wien, invites
applications for
10 PhD positions
in the
Doctoral College 'Computational Design'.
Several of these positions have strong components of computer graphics.
Application deadline is November 15, 2015.
The Doctoral College starts in January 2016.
For further details see the announcement below and the following link:
<http://gcd.tuwien.ac.at> http://gcd.tuwien.ac.at
I would appreciate if you could forward this announcement to qualified
candidates.
Best regards,
Michael Wimmer
--
-- Dr. Michael
Wimmer--------------------------------------------------------
Institut fuer Computergraphik und Algorithmen tel: +43 (1) 58801
18687
Technische Universitaet Wien fax: +43 (1) 58801
18698
Favoritenstr. 9-11/5/E186
http://www.cg.tuwien.ac.at
A-1040 Wien, Oesterreich
mailto:wimmer@cg.tuwien.ac.at
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
--------------------------------------------------
The Doctoral College Computational Design (DC:{CD}) at TU Wien, embedded
in the Center for Geometry and Computational Design, is the first PhD
program in Austria that is situated at the interface of several areas of
excellence in research: Computer Graphics and Algorithms, Software
Technology and Interactive Systems, Computer Aided Automation, Discrete
Mathematics and Geometry, Architectural Sciences, Art and Design,
History of Art, Building Archaeology and Restoration, Interdisciplinary
Construction Process Management and Mechanics of Materials and Structures.
The prerequisite for becoming a PhD student in the DC is a completed
master degree or equivalent (e.g., Dipl.-Ing., Dipl.-Inf.), preferably
with distinction, in the following fields:
. Architecture
. Civil engineering/structural engineering
. Computer science/informatics
. Mathematics
. Mechanical or industrial engineering
. Physics
For more details on PhD topics and how to apply see:
http://gcd.tuwien.ac.at
Dear friends and colleagues,
We are very excited to announce that the computer graphics group
at the University of Montreal (LIGUM) has secured an opening for
a tenure-track position in computer graphics at the rank of
Assistant Professor. As such, we are looking for a highly
motivated, strong candidate with a proven track record to
strengthen and complement our lab. We will seriously consider all
candidates with any experience in computer graphics (defined
broadly).
If you are, or know of, strong candidates, please do not hesitate
to forward them our official announcement (see below). Any PhD
student applicants will be expected to have graduated by June
1st, 2016. If there are any questions, please do not hesitate to
contact us: Derek Nowrouzezahrai (derek(a)iro.umontreal.ca) or
Pierre Poulin (poulin(a)iro.umontreal.ca). We can also provide
additional information that is not in the official posting, such
as details on UdeMontreal's generous consulting and sabbatical
policies, UdeMontreal's unique recurring funding package, our
student population, as well as information about the city of
Montreal (e.g., cost of living, social climate, etc.).
Note that the deadline for the submitting the application
materials is fast approaching (November 9th, 2015), however we
will continue to accept reference letters until a later date
(November 30th, 2015).
For more information about the LIGUM, visit our lab website:
www.ligum.umontreal.ca
You can also see our personal websites:
www.iro.umontreal.ca/~derek/ and www.iro.umontreal.ca/~poulin/
Official announcement in English:
http://diro.umontreal.ca/fileadmin/Documents/FAS/EN_informatique/Documents/4
-Repertoire/Affichage_anglais-inforgraphie_vfinale_d%C3%A9p.pdf
Official announcement in French:
http://diro.umontreal.ca/fileadmin/Documents/FAS/EN_informatique/Documents/4
-Repertoire/Affichage_francais_infographie_vfinale_d%C3%A9p.pdf
Dear All,
We are pleased to inform you that we organize a SOFA (half-)day in Lyon,
before the VRIPHYS EuroGraphics Workshop on Virtual Reality Interaction and
Physical Simulation. The event will take place on November 3 afternoon.
<http://vriphys2015.sciencesconf.org/page/sofa_page>
http://vriphys2015.sciencesconf.org/page/sofa_page
SOFA is an open-source framework primarily targeted at real-time simulation,
with an emphasis on medical simulation. It is mostly intended for the
research community to help develop newer models and algorithms.
<http://www.sofa-framework.org/> http://www.sofa-framework.org/
This idea of this meeting is to propose some tutorials for SOFA and to
present recent work based on SOFA. This will also be the opportunity to
increase exchange and communication within the SOFA community.
The inscription for this event is free. However, registration is mandatory,
just sent an email to
<mailto:vriphys2015@liris.cnrs.fr?Subject=%5BVRIPHYS2015%5D%20Registration%2
0SOFA-User%20Day> vriphys2015(a)liris.cnrs.fr
------------------------------------------------
Preliminary program (Nov. 3, 14:00 - 17:00):
. Main principles of SOFA (30min)
. How to create your own scene (XML / Python) (30min)
-- short discussion time --
. Examples of recent applications: (1h)
. Soft-Robot
. Neurosurgical simulator
. Cryosurgery simulator
. Augmented reality
. Solvers in Compliant
. Interactive tools for scene creation - Live Coding (30min)
-- short break --
. Future: a SOFA consortium (15min+discussion)
EUROGRAPHICS 2016 - 2nd Call for Tutorials
(Submissions deadline: October 23th, 2015)
The Eurographics 2016 Tutorials Committee invites you to propose tutorials
teaching the technical background of a given subject, or demonstrating its
potential creative applications. Tutorials are intended to show what can be
done, but even more importantly, how this is done and what kind of tools can
be used to do it. In a proposal for a tutorial you should consider that
tutorial attendees come from diverse backgrounds, ranging from research and
development to education and application.
We are soliciting half-day and full-day tutorial proposals at the beginning,
intermediate, or advanced level in all areas pertinent to Computer Graphics.
Half-day tutorials are about three hours, plus a coffee break in the middle.
Full-day tutorials are twice that long, plus two coffee breaks and a longer
lunch break. Tutorial proposals are about 4-5 pages in length, clearly
indicating the audience that is addressed as well as the syllabus of
instruction. They will be reviewed by the tutorial chairs, supported by
external reviewers. The final selection will be based on quality of the
submission, qualification of the presenters, relevance to the conference
topics, and balance of topics.
Each accepted half day tutorial will be granted a free conference
registration for one speaker, while each full-day tutorial will be granted a
maximum of two free conference registrations.
For any question concerning tutorial submissions please contact the papers
program co-chairs:
chairs-eg2016tutorials(a)eg.org
SUBMISSION DETAILS
Tutorial proposals (in PDF) should be submitted via email to the tutorial
co-chairs (chairs-eg2016tutorials(a)eg.org). The full proposal (4-5 pages)
should be submitted by Friday, October 23th, 2015, 23:59 UTC/GMT. The
acceptance notification date is Friday, December 4th, 2015.
The full proposal should contain the following information:
Presenter(s) details:
Name(s)
Institution(s)
email address(es)
URL(s)
Tutorial details:
Title of Tutorial
Keywords
Half or full day tutorial (either 2×90 minutes or 4×90
minutes)
A detailed outline of the tutorial.
A statement on the necessary background and potential target
audience for the tutorial.
A brief resume of the presenter(s) indicating their
background in the area the tutorial addresses.
If a (similar) tutorial was previously held, indicate the location (i.e.,
which conference), date, and the number of attendees. Please provide
information highlighting changes, improvements and/or why the tutorial
should be held again in this form.
COURSE NOTES
Sample course notes, although not required in the submission, are highly
encouraged to accompany the tutorial proposals. Notes may include original
text, formatted according to the Eurographics publication guidelines,
reprints of earlier papers (subject to copyright approval), slides and any
other material the authors consider useful. All course notes of accepted
tutorials will be distributed to conference participants online and on
USB-Sticks. The acceptance of tutorial proposals is contingent upon the
final submission of complete course notes.
CALL FOR PARTICIPATION
The 2015 ACM SIGGRAPH Conference on Motion in Games 2015 (MIG)
November 16-18, 2015, Paris, France
<https://mig2015.inria.fr/> https://mig2015.inria.fr/
============================================================
The 8th ACM International Conference on Motion in Games will take place in Paris, France from November 16-18, 2015 and be hosted by Telecom ParisTech. MIG is sponsored by ACM and held in cooperation with Eurographics.
Games have become a very important medium for education, therapy and entertainment. Motion plays a crucial role in computer games. Characters move around, objects are manipulated or move due to physical constraints, entities are animated, and the camera moves through the scene. Even the motion of the player is used as input to games. Motion is currently studied in many different areas of research, including graphics and animation, game technology, robotics, simulation, computer vision, and also physics, psychology, and urban studies. Cross-fertilization between these communities can considerably advance the state-of- the-art in the area. The goal of the Motion in Games conference is to bring together researchers from this variety of fields to present their most recent results, to initiate collaborations, and to contribute to the establishment of the research area. The conference will consist of regular paper sessions, poster presentations, as well as presentations by a selection of established researchers in areas related to games and simulation. The conference program will also include cultural and social events that foster casual and friendly interactions among the participants. MIG provides an intimate forum for researchers and practitioners to present their research results, inspire new ideas, and promote cross-disciplinary collaborations.
We have an exciting program planned for 2015 with four keynote speakers that are at the forefront of research in character animation, games, and artificial intelligence.
(1) Jean-Paul Laumond, Directeur de Recherche, LAAS-CNRS, France
(2) Robert W. Sumner, Associate Director, Disney Research Zurich
(3) Nadia Berthouze, Professor Affective Interaction and Computing, University College London
(4) Alex Champandard, Editor in Chief, Technical Director & Entrepreneur at AiGameDev.com
Motion in Games will hold a “Games meet Academia" panel whose aim is to stimulate an active debate between practitioners and researchers alike, in an effort to bridge the gap between advanced research and development in computer games, and fundamental research in interactive computer animation.
Conference chair
=============
Catherine Pelachaud, CNRS - LTCI, Telecom ParisTech, France
Program Chairs
============
Marc Christie, University of Rennes 1/INRIA Rennes, France
Mubbasir Kapadia, Rutgers University, USA.
Registration
=========
Registration before October 17th, 2015:
ACM/SIGGRAPH Professional Member € 390
Non-member € 440
Student € 270
Registration from October 17th (included), 2015 and on-site price:
ACM/SIGGRAPH Professional Member € 440
Non-member € 490
Student € 290
Register here:
<https://www.regonline.com/Register/Checkin.aspx?EventId=1739442> https://www.regonline.com/Register/Checkin.aspx?EventId=1739442
Program
=======
Nov. 16th - 9:30-10:30 – Keynote Talk #1
Speaker: Jean-Paul Laumond (LAAS CNRS FRANCE)
Title: The Yoyo-Man
Humans are not walking, they are rolling! The objective of the talk is to give sense to this obscure statement. Indeed, the wheel may be a plausible model of bipedal walking. We report on preliminary results developed along three perspectives combining biomechanics, neurophysiology and robotics. From a motion capture data basis of human walkers we first identify the center of mass (CoM) as a geometric center from which the motions of the feet are organized. Then we show how rimless wheels that model most passive walkers are better controlled when equipped with a stabilized mass on top of them. CoM and head play complementary roles that define what we call the Yoyo-Man.
Nov. 16th - 11:00-12:30 – Session #1: Character animation and motion-capture
Reduced Marker Layouts for Optical Motion Capture of Hands
Matthias Schröder, Jonathan Maycock and Mario Botsch
Adaptation Procedure for HMM-Based Sensor-Dependent Gesture Recognition
Sohaib Laraba, Joëlle Tilmanne and Thierry Dutoit
Segmenting Motion Capture Data Using a Qualitative Analysis
Durell Bouchard and Norman Badler
Optimal Marker Set for Motion Capture of Facial Dynamical Expressions
Clément Reverdy, Sylvie Gibet and Caroline Larboulette
Deep Signatures for Indexing and Retrieval in Large Motion Databases
Yingying Wang and Michael Neff
Nov. 16th - 14:00-15:00 – Keynote Talk #2
Speaker: Robert W. Sumner (Disney Research Zurich)
Title: Amplifying Creativity in Animation and Games
“Art challenges technology, and technology inspires the art.” These are the words John Lasseter used to describe his experience as an artist working with the technology leaders at Pixar three decades ago to pioneer what we know today as computer-generated animation. At the heart of this statement lies the idea that technology and art, when joined together, hold a unique and promising potential to amplify creativity. This very concept forms the central vision of the Animation and Games group at Disney Research Zurich. In this keynote talk, I will share our experiences as researchers working with Disney artists on technology to amplify creativity, including several tough challenges that art has given us, as well as a few successes in which we could inspire the art. Attendees can expect examples of recent research advances in animation, simulation, stylization, and, in Disney style, a little bit of singing.
Nov. 16th - 15:00-16:30 – Session #2: Character animation
Eye Movement Synthesis with 1/f Pink Noise
Andrew Duchowski, Sophie Joerg, Aubrey Lawson, Takumi Bolte, Lech Swirski and Krzysztof Krejtz
Avatar Reshaping and Automatic Rigging Using a Deformable Model
Andrew Feng, Dan Casas and Ari Shapiro
Motion Control via Muscle Synergies: Application to Throwing
Ana Lucia Cruz Ruiz, Charles Pontonnier, Jonathan Levy and Georges Dumont
A Closed-Form Solution for Human Finger Positioning
Roel Duits, A. Frank van der Stappen and Arjan Egges
Nov. 16th - 17:00-18:30 – Session #3: Crowds
DAVIS: Density-Adaptive Synthetic-Vision Based Steering for Virtual Crowds
Rowan Hughes, Jan Ondrej and John Dingliana
An Analysis of Manoeuvring in Dense Crowds
Sybren A. Stüvel, Arjan Egges, Frank van der Stappen and Thijs de Goeij
Evaluating and Optimizing Level of Service for Crowd Evacuations
Brandon Haworth, Muhammad Usman, Glen Berseth, Mubbasir Kapadia and Petros Faloutsos
ACCLMesh: Curvature-Based Navigation Mesh Generation
Glen Berseth, Mubbasir Kapadia and Petros Faloutsos
Nov. 16th - 18:30- – The “Wine & Cheese” poster session
A Generic Multi-Level Framework for Agent Navigation
Wouter van Toll, Norman Jaklin and Roland Geraerts
Virtual worlds’ influences on our mental balance and physical health: a survey with philosophical approaches
Maria Christoforou and Despina Michael
Autonomous Positioning of Avatars at a Guided Virtual Educational Trip
Fons Kuijk
Statistical Framework for Animation synthesis of Laughter
Yu Ding and Catherine Pelachaud
Gaze Shifts and Navigation in Virtual Environments: Towards a Prediction Model
Alessandro Canossa and Jeremy Badler
A Model to Compute People Disturbance in Crowds
Cliceres Mack Dal Bianco, Adriana Braun, Jovani Brasil and Soraia Raupp Musse
Simulated Postural Sway for the Improvement of Depth Perception in Pre-Generated Virtual Reality Panoramas
Matthew Bett
Recognizing Emotional Expressiveness in Raw 3D Body Motion Data
Haris Zacharatos, Christos Gatzoulis, Anargyros Chatzitofis and Yiorgos Chrysanthou
Study of Nine People in a Hallway
Claudio Pedica, Karl Kristinsson and Hannes Högni Vilhjálmsson
Dynamic Hierarchical Search on the GPU
Francisco Garcia, Norman Badler and Mubbasir Kapadia
Improving crowd behaviour for emergency simulation using game-captured data
Marco Castorina and Eike Falk Anderson
A New and Simple Method for Balance Quantification
Venustiano Soancatl
Autonomous gaze animation for socially interactive virtual characters during multiparty interactions
Zerrin Yumak and Arjan Egges
Immersive scale-one movement analysis in the CAVE
Eray Molla, Christian Arevalo and Ronan Boulic
Towards Free Stepping Behavior Characterization
Ronan Boulic, Utku Evci, Eray Molla and Phanindra Pisupati
Nov. 17th - 8:30-9:30 – Keynote Talk #3
Speaker: Nadia Berthouze (University College of London Interaction Centre)
Title: “The body and its actions: how they can be used to manipulate the player’s experience”
Recent years have seen the emergence of game technology that involves and requires its users to be engaged through their body. In addition, studies in psychology have shown that our body expressions affect our emotional state, our cognitive abilities and our attitude towards the environment around us. This has generated an increased interest in understanding and exploiting this modality to automatically recognize, respond to and regulate users’ affective experience. In the first part of my talk, I will report on our studies aimed at understanding how body expressions and body movement can be used to modulate user experience in games and physical activity in real-life situations such as walking and physical rehabilitation. Then, I’ll discuss how emotional states can be automatically detected from body expressions, including muscle activity and touch behaviour. Examples from games and physical rehabilitation will be presented.
Nov. 17th - 9:30-11:00 – Session #4: Planning
Automated Interactive Narrative Synthesis using Dramatic Theory
Carlos Antonio Dominguez, Yuya Ichimura and Mubbasir Kapadia
RT-RRT*: A Real-Time Path Planning Algorithm Based On RRT*
Kourosh Naderi, Joose Rajamäki and Perttu Hämäläinen
Multi-Modal Data-Driven Motion Planning and Synthesis
Mentar Mahmudi and Marcelo Kallmann
Nov. 17th - 11:30-12:30 – Session #5: Simulation
Interactive Arbitrarily Detailed Cutting of Thin Sheets
Pierre-Luc Manteaux, Wei-Lun Sun, François Faure, Marie-Paule Cani and James F. O’Brien
Pattern-Guided Simulations of Immersed Rigid Bodies
Haoran Xie and Kazunori Miyata
Interactive procedural simulation of paper tearing with sound
Thibault Lejemble, Amélie Fondevilla, Nicolas Durin, Thibault Blanc-Beyne, Camille Schreck, Pierre-Luc Manteaux, Paul G. Kry and Marie-Paule Cani
Camera-on-rails: Automated Computation of Constrained Camera Paths
Quentin Galvane, Marc Christie, Christophe Lino and Rémi Ronfard
Nov. 17th - 14:00-16:00 – Session #6: Taking control
The Sea Is Your Mirror
Marc Parenthoën, Fred Murie and Flavien Thery
Crowd Art: Density and Flow Based Crowd Motion Design
Kevin Jordao, Panayiotis Charalambous, Marc Christie, Julien Pettre and Marie-Paule Cani
Real-time gait control for partially immersed bipeds
Samuel Carensac, Nicolas Pronost and Saida Bouakaz
Robust Balance Shift Control with Posture Optimization
Zumra Kavafoglu, Ersan Kavafoglu and Arjan Egges
Carpet Unrolling Descriptors for Character Control On Uneven Terrain
Mark Miller, Daniel Holden, Rami Al-Ashqar, Christophe Dubach, Kenny Mitchell and Taku Komura
Nov. 17th - 16:30-18:30 – Game Panel
Title: Games meet Academia
This “Games meet Academia” panel aims at stimulating an active debate between practitioners and researchers alike, in an effort to bridge the gap between advanced research and development in computer games, and fundamental research in interactive computer animation.
8:30-9:30 – Keynote Talk #4
Speaker: Alex Champandard (AIDevGame.com)
Title: Modern AI and Its Impact on Animation and Movement
In this talk, you'll learn about the fast progress being made in Artificial Intelligence in the games industry, and see how this is impacting challenging problems like animation and movement. What exactly is motion matching and why is it only possible now? How can machine learning help and why are developers ready for new techniques? Alex will explain all this and more in a forward looking presentation.
Nov. 18th - 9:30-10:30 – Session #7: Collisions
Clustering and Collision Detection for Clustered Shape Matching
Ben Jones, April Martin, Josh Levine, Tamar Shinar and Adam Bargteil
Fast Contact Determination for Intersecting Deformable Solids
Oscar Civit-Flores and Antonio Susín
Collision Detection for Articulated Deformable Characters
Nadine Abu Rumman, Marco Schaerf and Dominique Bechmann
Nov. 18th - 11:00-12:30 – Session #8: Realism, aesthetics, visualization and registration
Animation Realism Affects Perceived Character Appeal of a Self-Virtual Face
Elena Kokkinara and Rachel McDonnell
Fin Textures for Real-Time Painterly Aesthetics
Nicolas Imhof, Antoine Milliez, Flurin Jenal, Rene Bauer, Markus Gross and Robert W. Sumner
HeapCraft: Interactive Data Exploration and Visualization Tools for Understanding and Influencing Player Behavior in Minecraft
Stephan Müller, Barbara Solenthaler, Mubbasir Kapadia, Seth Frey, Severin Klingler, Richard Mann, Robert W. Sumner and Markus Gross
Automatic and Adaptable Registration of Live RGBD Video Streams
Afsaneh Rafighi, Sahand Seifi and Oscar Meruvia-Pastor
See you in Paris!
# Apologies for multiple postings
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14th ACM International Conference on Virtual Reality Continuum and Its
Applications in Industry - ACM SIGGRAPH VRCAI 2015
Kobe Port Island Center, Kobe, Japan
October 30th - November 1st, 2015
<http://www.cg.ces.kyutech.ac.jp/conference/vrcai2015/>
http://www.cg.ces.kyutech.ac.jp/conference/vrcai2015/
Call for Participation
VRCAI is an annual ACM SIGGRAPH-sponsored international conference on
virtual reality continuum and its applications. The 14th ACM International
Conference on Virtual Reality Continuum and Its Applications in Industry
(VRCAI 2015) will take place during October 30th to November 1st in Kobe,
co-located with ACM SIGGRAPH Asia 2015.
Early Bird Registration Deadline: October 15, 2015
<http://www.cg.ces.kyutech.ac.jp/conference/vrcai2015/for-attendees/registra
tion/>
http://www.cg.ces.kyutech.ac.jp/conference/vrcai2015/for-attendees/registrat
ion/
Accommodation is available for registered participants.
<http://www.cg.ces.kyutech.ac.jp/conference/vrcai2015/for-attendees/accommod
ation/>
http://www.cg.ces.kyutech.ac.jp/conference/vrcai2015/for-attendees/accommoda
tion/
This year we have accepted eight long papers, eight short papers, thirty-one
posters and demos. We have also invited five SIGGRAPH ASIA
2015 posters as a part of a collaboration with VRCAI and SIGGRAPH ASIA. The
detailed program is available on our website. In particular, we are happy to
announce Hiroo Iwata from University of Tsukuba and Shigeru Kuriyama from
Toyohashi University of Technology as Keynote Speakers.
<http://www.cg.ces.kyutech.ac.jp/conference/vrcai2015/program/>
http://www.cg.ces.kyutech.ac.jp/conference/vrcai2015/program/
Inquiry can be sent to: <mailto:vrcai2015@cg.ces.kyutech.ac.jp>
vrcai2015(a)cg.ces.kyutech.ac.jp
See you soon in Kobe.
Conference Co-Chairs:
Issei Fujishiro, Keio University, Japan
Zhigeng Pan, Hangzhou Normal University, China Nadia Magnenat-Thalmann, NTU,
Singapore & MIRALab, University of Geneva, Switzerland
Program Co-Chairs:
Masaki Oshita, Kyushu Institute of Technology, Japan Xubo Yang, Shanghai
Jiao Tong University, China Hyun Seung Yang, KAIST, Korea
Posters&Demos Chair
Tomohiko Mukai, Tokai University, Japan
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