Conference Venue
The conference venue is located at the main campus at Luleå University of Technology, LTU, in the Alfa-building. The main conference hall is A117 (LKAB-salen) and the registration will be near A111.
Address:
Luleå University of Technology, Alfa-huset
Universitetsområdet
977 54 Luleå, Sweden
Geolocation: 65.616817, 22.138303
Further Information:
The following files (PDF) contain additional information regarding MUM 2013:
Detailed Program
MUM 2013 runs from Monday, December 2nd to Thursday, December 5th 2013. Two workshops are held on Monday, December 2nd and both papers and notes are being presented in the three following days. The paper presentations have the following lengths:
- Full Papers: 15 minutes presentation + 3 minutes questions
- Notes: 10 minutes presentation + 2 minutes questions
The following symbols are used throughout the program:
Full Paper
Full Paper
(nominated)
Note
Note
(nominated)
Monday, December 2nd
09:00 – 18:00 | Registration Room: A 111 |
10:00 – 17:00 | Workshop 1: End-User Composition of Mobile Apps with SATIN Room: A 108 In the workshop, the participants are invited to integrate digital services or Open Data in a crowd-based service innovation tool-kit - SATIN. The SATIN tool-kit is developed with the aim of enabling end-users of the tool-kit to design and develop their own services. The tool-kit utilizes a visual programming drag-and-drop graphical interface where the end-user selects from a number (currently around 100) of service components to build web applications. The web apps can be viewed and fine-tuned in the web browser (Chrome, Firefox and Safari supported) before being stored and made available through a web-link for use in the phone. The service components are built in JavaScript and XML. A proprietary mechanism is employed in order to achieve component-based programming. In the workshop, participants will have the opportunity to:
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13:00 – 17:00 | Workshop 2: WebRTC Hands-On Room: A 109 WebRTC is a standards-based approach to enabling real time communications between web browsers through a common set of APIs backed up by leading players including Ericsson, Google, and other companies. WebRTC defines a way for browsers to provide the web developer with the technologies needed to implement services like video chat in a way that is both interoperable with other clients, and does not require the use of a plugin. The WebRTC MUM'13 workshop covers information on standard activities (W3C and IETF), a brief introduction to the APIs, live demos (including examples of HTML5 and WebRTC combined together), and tools (development tools and integration into web servers and media servers). There will also be room for own experiments for participants bringing their own computer to the workshop. |
Tuesday, December 3rd
09:00 – 18:00 | Registration Room: A 111 |
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09:00 – 09:45 | Inauguration Room: A 117 |
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09:45 – 10:45 | Opening Keynote Room: A 117 An introduction to web based real time communication
Serge Lachapelle – Group Product Manager, Google This talk will introduce WebRTC, including why and how the effort was started, some examples of how the platform is being used and how you can start using it. There will of course be an open question period at the end. Serge Lachapelle is a computer engineer from École Polytechnique de Montréal, Canada. In 1998, he co-founded Marratech in Luleå, Sweden: a multi user, real time communications software company. In 2007, Google acquired the software assets of the company along with the engineering staff. Serge joined Google as a Product Manager, participating in the launch of Gmail Video Chat and Google+ Hangouts. In 2010, Serge lead the acquisition of Global IP Solutions (GIPS). This laid the foundation for his current position as WebRTC Product Manager for Google Chrome, a popular web browser for Desktop and Mobile. |
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10:45 – 11:00 | Coffee Break Location: Foyer |
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11:00 – 12:30 | Visualization Techniques (Papers & Notes) Room: A 117 – Chair: Natasa Milic-Frayling – Microsoft Research Cambridge, UK BubblesDial: Exploring Large Display Content Graphs on Small Devices Using mobile devices to enable visual multiplexing on public displays: Three approaches compared Beyond heat maps – Mining common swipe gestures Is Autostereoscopy Useful for Handheld AR? Mobile Photo Sharing through Collaborative Space in Stereoscopic 3D |
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12:30 – 13:30 | Lunch Break Location: AMICA (Centrumresturangen) |
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13:30 – 15:00 | Public Displays and Collaboration (Papers & Notes) Room: A 117 – Chair: Sebastian Boring – University of Copenhagen, Denmark Evaluation of a programming toolkit for interactive public display applications Evaluating the Experiential User Experience of Public Display Applications in the Wild MobiZone: Personalized Interaction with Multiple Items on Interactive Surfaces Designing for Presence in Social Television Interaction A Cross-Device Drag-and-Drop Technique |
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15:00 – 15:15 | Coffee Break Location: Foyer |
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15:15 – 16:30 | Supporting Architectures and Methods (Papers & Notes) Room: A 117 – Chair: Markus Löchtefeld – DFKI, Saarbrücken, Germany Blur-resistant joint 1D and 2D barcode localization for smartphones Towards an Information Architecture for Flexible Reuse of Digital Media NooSphere: An Activity-Centric Infrastructure for Distributed Interaction |
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16:30 – 17:30 | Poster & Demo Session Location: Foyer |
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16:30 – 17:30 | Tutorial 1 Room: A 117 User Experience Heuristics
Leena Arhippainen – CIE, University of Oulu, Finland This tutorial presents ten user experience heuristics for service and product designers and developers. The aim of the heuristics is to help designers to take user experience aspects into account when making design solutions. The heuristics are created based on the empirical user experience studies of mobile services. However, heuristics are general and can be used in any kind of service or product design and evaluation context (e.g. mobile services, web sites, applications). Using these heuristics, developers can find out negative and positive user experience issues that can be taken into account in further design iterations. Leena Arhippainen is a user experience researcher at Center for Internet Excellence. In the SILC project, she investigates user experiences of virtual and physical learning environments. In the previous Chiru project, her research topics related to 3D UI user experiences. In the ADAMOS project, she led UX studies and co-operated closely with sociologists from the University of Grenoble (UPMF), France. Arhippainen received her Master's degree in Information Processing Science at University of Oulu in 2002 and Ph.D. degree in 2009. Her doctoral thesis focused on UX research methods in mobile device contexts. She created ten user experience heuristics during her doctoral studies and they have been used in Interaction Design course and UX studies. |
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18:00 – 20:00 | Welcome Reception Location: Bishop Arms Buses leave LTU at 17:30 |
Wednesday, December 4th
08:00 – 17:00 | Registration Room: A 111 |
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09:00 – 10:15 | UbiChallange Room: A 117 – Chair: Timo Ojala – University of Oulu, Finland 2nd International UBI Challenge HotCity: Enhancing Ubiquitous Maps with Social Context Heatmaps Martians from Outer Space: Experimenting with Location-aware Cooperative Multiplayer Gaming on Public Displays |
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10:15 – 10:30 | Coffee Break Location: Foyer |
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10:30 – 12:00 | New Interaction Methods (Papers & Notes) Room: A 117 – Chair: Patrick Olivier – Newcastle University, UK AR Typing Interface for Mobile Devices Adding Context to Multi-touch Region Selections Finger in Air: Touch-less Interaction on Smartphone Evaluation of Hybrid Front and Back Interaction on Mobile Devices |
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12:00 – 13:00 | Lunch Break Location: AMICA (Centrumresturangen) |
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13:00 – 14:00 | Keynote Room: A 117 Transformation and disruption in the Networked Society
Erik Kruse – Strategic Marketing Manager & Networked Society Evangelist, Ericsson Technology is one of the biggest forces for change, social and economic. The Internet has already changed the world, in a remarkably short time. Its impact has been more pervasive than that of electricity. The digital revolution is often termed the 3rd Industrial Revolution, following the first driven by steam and the second wave by the electricity: these two revolutions created huge changes in economics and society. The big difference in this 3rd revolution is that the two earlier was about changes by new power sources, the ICT revolution is driven by a transformation in what is being processed rather than creating efficiency improvements in how products are manufactured. It redefines what critical business assets are, it makes new economic models to emerge, it redefines business. This revolution has so far bred a vast number of new businesses that didn’t – and couldn’t – exist only a decade ago. Today’s innovative startup companies, the micro-multinationals; small companies that operate globally is changing how we organize information, how we interact, how we learn, how we do business, even how we think. Now we see how more or less all industrial system is getting “attacked” by new innovative companies based on the technological development as well as the changes in end users expectations and behavior. Erik Kruse holds the titles of Strategic Marketing Manager and Networked Society Evangelist at Ericsson Networked Society Lab. He is an expert in consumer demands, industry and societal dynamics, and forecasting ICT evolutionary trends. He spends his time working with Ericsson’s strategic marketing, focusing on future opportunities, business models, future consumer behavior, transformation of networked industries, and future societal needs. Prior to joining Ericsson, he worked as a Manager of Future Consumer Research at Electrolux. Erik is researches future trends in technology and society. He has co-authored The Networked Home, Innovation Radar—Future Media and Content Delivery, and is the author of A Journey to the Third Place, based on research among early adopters of information technology. He has received a Special Marketing award 2010 for the 2020 shaping ideas project and has extensive media exposure through his articles, interviews in magazines and newspapers as well as TV. Erik has completed PhD- courses in Business administration at Stockholm School of economics and Stockholm School of Business and a B.A., Business Administration and Social Sciences at University of Uppsala. |
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14:00 – 14:15 | Coffee Break Location: Foyer |
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14:15 – 15:45 | Inferring the Mobile User’s Context (Papers) Room: A 117 – Chair: Sebastian Boring – University of Copenhagen, Denmark Towards Scalable Activity Recognition: Adapting Zero-Effort Crowdsourced Acoustic Models Enabling Low-Cost Particulate Matter Measurement for Participatory Sensing Scenarios Using Time Use with Mobile Sensor Data: A Road to Practical Mobile Activity Recognition? Human Activity Recognition Using Social Media Data Inferring Mood in Ubiquitous Conversational Video |
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15:45 – 16:00 | Coffee Break Location: Foyer |
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16:00 – 16:30 | Town Hall Meeting Room: A 117 |
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18:00 – 23:00 | Gala Dinner Location: Ebbenjarka Buses leave from LTU and Elite Hotel:
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Thursday, December 5th
09:00 – 10:00 | Keynote Room: A 117 Digital Civics: A Local Agenda for Mobile and Ubiquitous Media Research
Patrick Olivier – Professor, Newcastle University In much of the developed world there is a consensus across the political spectrum that the scale of national and local government service provision is “too large for the small problems”. Digital civics explores the role that digital technologies has to play in responding to this challenge: in the decentralization and democratization of government in more participative ways; in making service provision more sensitive to local contexts and needs; in creating opportunities for citizen participation in service design and delivery; and in allowing people to have more say about what is important in their lives. In this talk I will propose a research agenda for mobile and ubiquitous media researchers to “do” digital civics research in the context of their local communities and local service design and delivery. Using examples from current research, both at Culture Lab and around the world, I will outline the need for new design methods and technologies, but also explain how by undertaking digital civics research we can bridge existing divides both with academics in fields such as public health, politics, planning and education, and with the very communities in which our universities are situated. Patrick is Professor of Human-Computer Interaction and leads the Digital Interaction group at Culture Lab, Newcastle University’s centre of excellence for interaction design and digital media. He publishes widely in human-computer interaction and ubiquitous computing; leads the Connected Communities activity of the £12m Research Councils UK Digital Economy Hub on Social Inclusion through the Digital Economy; is a co-investigator for the UK the Arts and Humanities Research Council Knowledge Exchange Hub on Digital Public Space (“The Creative Exchange” thecreativeexchange.org); and co-founder of Axivity, the Newcastle University spin-out which manufactures and distributes Culture Lab’s Open Movement open source sensor platform. |
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10:00 – 10:15 | Coffee Break Location: Foyer |
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10:15 – 11:30 | Designs and Explorations (Papers & Notes) Room: A 117 – Chair: Josef Hallberg – LTU, Luleå, Sweden User-Centred Design of a Mobile Self-Management Solution for Parkinson’s Disease Losing Your Creativity – Storytelling Comparison Between Children and Adolescents Moths at Midnight: Design Implications for Supporting Ecology-Focused Citizen Science The Railway Blues: Affective Interaction for Personalised Transport Experiences Early Perceptions of an Augmented Home |
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11:30 – 12:30 | Lunch Break Location: AMICA (Centrumresturangen) |
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12:30 – 13:45 | Applications (Papers & Notes) Room: A 117 – Chair: Karl Andersson – LTU, Luleå, Sweden A Comparative User Study of Faceted Search in Large Data Hierarchies on Mobile Devices Micro-Crowdfunding: Achieving a Sustainable Society through Economic and Social Incentives in Micro-Level Crowdfunding Visual Authentication – A secure single step authentication for user authorization AffectiView: Mobile Video Camera Application using Physiological Data NoseTapping: What else can you do with your nose? |
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13:45 – 14:00 | Coffee Break Location: Foyer |
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14:00 – 15:30 | Location and Navigation (Papers & Notes) Room: A 117 – Chair: Christer Åhlund – LTU, Luleå, Sweden Evaluating Landmark Attraction Model in Collaborative Wayfinding in Virtual Learning Environments I want to view it my way – Interfaces to mobile maps should adapt to the user's orientation skills Semantic Enrichment of Mobile Phone Data Records Cicada Fingerprinting System: From Artificial to Sustainable |
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15:30 – 15:45 | Closing Room: A 117 |
Accepted Posters
SmartPiggy: A Piggy Bank that talks to your Smartphone
AppDetox: Helping Users with Mobile App Addiction
Putting Books Back on the Shelf: Situated Interactions with Digital Book Collections on Smartphones
jActivity: Supporting Mobile Web Developers with HTML5/JavaScript based Human Activity Recognition
Assisting Maintainers in the Semiconductor Factory: Iterative Co-Design of a Mobile Interface and a Situated Display
Tele-Embodied Agent (TEA) for Video Teleconferencing
Co-creating a Digital 3D City with Children
Who’s There? Experience-Driven Design of Urban Interaction Using a Tangible User Interface
Jogging in a Virtual City
Accepted Demos
Eye Drop: An Interaction Concept for Gaze-Supported Point-to-Point Content Transfer
Seek’N’Share: A Platform for Location-Based Collaborative Mobile Learning
Magic Ring: A Self-contained Gesture Input Device on Finger
A Cross Device Drag-And-Drop Technique
Mobile Dictation for Healthcare Professionals
Quicklinks
Detailed Program:
Accepted Posters & Demos:
Important Dates
Aug 21 |
Short and Full Paper Submission Deadline (extended) |
Oct 7 |
Notification of Acceptance for Short and Full Papers |
Oct 18 |
Poster and Demo Paper Submission Deadline (extended) |
Oct 28 |
Deadline for Camera-Ready Version of Short and Full Papers |
Nov 4 |
Notification of Acceptance for Poster and Demo Papers |
Nov 11 |
Early Registration Deadline |
Dec 2–5 |
MUM 2013 Conference in Luleå, Sweden |
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The official hashtag for MUM 2013 is #mum2013 and the official account is for MUM is @MUMconference.
Past Conferences
Ulm, Germany
Beijing, China
Limassol, Cyprus
Cambridge, UK
Umeå, Sweden
Oulu, Finland
Stanford, USA
Christchurch, New Zealand
College Park, USA
MUM 2003
Norrköping, Sweden
Oulu, Finland