The 23rd ACM International Conference on Multimodal Interaction (ICMI 2021) will be held in Montreal, Canada October 18-22, 2021. ICMI is the premier international forum for multidisciplinary research on multimodal human-human and human-computer interaction, interfaces, and system development. The main conference themes in 2021 will be behavioral health and virtual connectivity, but other major topics of central interest include human communication and multimodal language/dialogue processing, human-robot/agent interaction, affective computing and social interaction, cognitive modeling, multimodal representations and fusion-based architectures, machine learning for multimodal interaction and system applications, speech, gesture, haptics, olfaction, gaze and vision, multimodal datasets and platforms, mobile and ubiquitous interfaces, interfaces for virtual/augmented reality, smart environments, and assistive technologies. ACM’s ICMI Conference 2021 is pleased to partner […]
Computing Community Consortium Blog
The goal of the Computing Community Consortium (CCC) is to catalyze the computing research community to debate longer range, more audacious research challenges; to build consensus around research visions; to evolve the most promising visions toward clearly defined initiatives; and to work with the funding organizations to move challenges and visions toward funding initiatives. The purpose of this blog is to provide a more immediate, online mechanism for dissemination of visioning concepts and community discussion/debate about them.
Posts Tagged ‘2021’
Announcing New ICMI 2021 Blue Sky Papers Track
March 9th, 2021 / in Announcements, big science, Blue Sky, call for papers, CCC / by Helen WrightAAAS 2021- Computing, Artificial Intelligence, and Societal Impacts: An Inflection Point
February 16th, 2021 / in AAAS, Announcements, CCC, conference reports, research horizons, Research News, resources, robotics, Security / by Helen WrightSignificant contributions were provided by CCC Senior Program Associate, Khari Douglas. The virtual AAAS 2021 meeting took place February 8th – 11th, 2021 and included a highly topical session titled Computing, Artificial Intelligence, and Societal Impacts: An Inflection Point. The February 10th event included former Computing Research Association (CRA) board member Moshe Vardi (Rice University), Computing Community Consortium (CCC) Executive Council member Suresh Venkatasubramanian (University of Utah), Seny Kamara (Brown University), and Dan Reed (University of Utah) as speakers. This session aimed to show how the computing revolution has democratized access to information and disrupted entire economic sectors, with associated human effects, both positive and negative. Likewise, this computing revolution […]
National Academy of Engineering Announces Newly Elected Members
February 15th, 2021 / in Announcements, awards, policy, Research News / by Helen WrightThe National Academy of Engineering (NAE) has elected 106 new members and 23 foreign members. Several computing researchers are among those elected this year. They include National Science Foundation Assistant Director for Computer and Information Science and Engineering Margaret Martonosi for “contributions to power-aware and power-efficient computer architectures and mobile systems” and Stanford University Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Kunle Olukotun for “contributions to on-chip multiprocessor architectures and advancement to commercial realization.” Martonosi was Computing Community Consortium (CCC)’s 2018 Next Steps in Quantum Computing: Computer Science’s Role visioning workshop organizer as well as a former Computing Research Association (CRA) Board Member and CRA-Widening Participation Co-Chair. Olukotun was CCC’s […]
Nominations Sought for New CCC Council Members
January 28th, 2021 / in Announcements, CCC / by Helen WrightThe Computing Community Consortium (CCC) is charged with catalyzing and empowering the U.S. computing research community to articulate and advance major research directions for the field. Established in 2006 through a cooperative agreement between the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) and the Computing Research Association (CRA), the CCC provides a voice for the national computing research community, facilitating the development of a bold, multi-themed vision for computing research and communicating that vision to a wide range of stakeholders. To fulfill its mission, the CCC needs visionary leaders — people with great ideas, sound judgment, and the willingness to work collaboratively to see things through to completion. The Council is composed of 20 researchers representing the breadth […]
Happy New Year from CISE!
January 26th, 2021 / in Announcements, NSF / by Helen WrightA Message from CISE Leadership Dear Computer and Information Science and Engineering (CISE) Community, Happy New Year! 2020 certainly brought its share of challenges, and our sympathies are with all of you most directly affected by them. Along the way, 2020 also brought many exciting opportunities and successes for the CISE community. AP CS Principles: For example, the College Board recently reported that the workforce—especially among young women, students of color, and first-generation students—setting them on a path to declaring a CS or STEM major in college. Specifically, the report found that AP CSP students are more likely to declare a major in STEM and more than THREE times as likely (an 11.7 percentage point increase) to declare a major in computer science than similar students who attended high school […]
CCC Council Members Chad Jenkins and Holly Yanco are Newly Elected AAAI Fellows!
January 11th, 2021 / in Announcements, CCC, robotics / by Helen WrightContributions to this post were provided by CRA’s Communication Specialist Shar Steed. The Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI) recently elected its 2021 Fellows. The AAAI Fellows program recognizes individuals who have made significant, sustained contributions — usually over at least a ten-year period — to the field of artificial intelligence. Two of the newly elected fellows are Computing Community Consortium (CCC) Council members! Odest Chadwicke Jenkins, University of Michigan Jenkins was recently interviewed by the New York Times about his thoughts on the Artificial Intelligence field’s failure to make systems that are accurate for everyone. He is one of the authors of the Next Wave Artificial Intelligence: […]