[Infovis] ACM TiiS special issue and XDATA submission deadline

Remco Chang remco at cs.tufts.edu
Fri May 18 16:49:06 CEST 2012


Apologies for cross-listing

Due to an unanticipated conflict between the submission deadlines for DARPA
XDATA and the ACM TiiS special issue on Interactive Computational Visual
Analytics, members of the community has brought to our attention the
difficulty in submitting to the TiiS special issue on the previously
announced date of May 31.  If you are in such a situation and would like
for more time, please send me an email (remco at cs.tufts.edu) to request for
an extension for up to two weeks.  When you do so, please include a
preliminary abstract of your planned submission.

Thank you for your interest and we look forward to your submissions!

Sincerely,
Remco


Call for Papers

Subject: ACM TiiS special issue on Interactive Computational Visual
Analytics

Special Issue of the ACM Transactions on Interactive Intelligent Systems on
INTERACTIVE COMPUTATIONAL VISUAL ANALYTICS

Main submission deadline: May 31st, 2012

http://tiis.acm.org/special-issues.html

AIMS AND SCOPE

Visual analytics is defined as "the science of analytical reasoning
facilitated by visual interactive interfaces." Since its inception in 2006,
the field has grown to encompass a wide array of topics relating to the
theory, design, and development of interactive visual interfaces for the
purposes of data exploration, data analysis, sense making, and decision
making.

While the scope of visual analytics is broad, one principle that
has emerged over the years is the need for visual analytics systems
to leverage computational methods in data mining, knowledge discovery, and
machine learning for large-scale data analysis. In these systems, the human
operator works alongside the computational processes in an
integrated fashion - the computer can sift through large amounts of data
and identify the relevant information, while the human interactively
explores the reduced data space to discover trends and patterns and make
informed decisions. The two components operate in coordination, allowing
for a continuous and cooperative analytical loop.

This special issue will publish papers that address how
computational methods can be integrated into interactive visualization
systems from a variety of perspectives. The dimensions listed below
indicate the range of work that is relevant to the special issue. In case
of doubt about the relevance of your topic, please contact the guest
editors.

TOPIC DIMENSIONS

Models, Theory, and Methods for Interactive Computational Visual Analytics
- Mathematical foundations of data transformations
- Data management and knowledge representation
- Integration of multiple or disparate simulation models
- Interaction, analytical discourse, and sensemaking
- Analytic provenance and quantification and storage of interactions
- ...

Real-World Applications Using Interactive Computational Visual Analytics
- Large-scale (real-world scale) data
- High-dimensional data
- Real-time data
- Streaming data
- Geospatial data
- ...

Evaluation of Interactive Computational Visual Analytics
- Empirical and observational studies
- User studies with general implications
- Novel evaluation techniques
- ...

SPECIAL ISSUE ASSOCIATE EDITORS

- Remco Chang, Tufts University
(contact: remco[at]cs[dot]tufts[dot]edu)
- David Ebert, Purdue University
- Daniel Keim, University of Konstanz

IMPORTANT DATES

- By May 31st, 2012: Submission of manuscripts
- By September 13th, 2012: Notification about decisions on initial
submissions
- By December 12th, 2012: Submission of revised manuscripts
- By February 10th, 2013: Notification about decisions on revised
manuscripts
- By March 12th, 2013: Submission of manuscripts with final minor changes
- Starting April, 2013: Publication of the special issue on the
TiiS website, in the ACM Digital Library, and (shortly afterward) as
a printed issue

HOW TO SUBMIT

Please see the instructions for authors on the TiiS website (tiis.acm.org).

ABOUT ACM TiiS

TiiS (pronounced "T double-eye S") is a recently founded ACM journal for
research about intelligent systems that people interact with.
 The journal's procedures and infrastructure have been designed to
combine the traditional quality and depth of ACM journals with the
efficiency and predictability of the best-run conferences.

Remco

--
Remco Chang
Assistant Professor
Department of Computer Science
Tufts University
http://www.cs.tufts.edu/~remco
(office) 617-627-3681
(lab)    617-627-6514


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