Welcome to the 24th ACM International Conference on User Modeling, Adaptation, and Personalization (UMAP 2016) in Halifax, Canada, July 13-16, 2016. UMAP is the premier international conference for researchers and practitioners working on systems that adapt to individual users or to groups of users. UMAP is the successor of the biennial User Modeling (UM) and Adaptive Hypermedia and Adaptive Web-based Systems (AH) conferences that were merged in 2009. It has traditionally been organized under the auspices of User Modeling Inc. This year (2016) UMAP became an ACM conference, sponsored by ACM SIG CHI and SIG WEB.
The conference spans a wide scope of topics related to user modeling, adaptation, and personalization. UMAP 2016 is focused on bringing together cutting-edge research from user interaction and modeling, adaptive technologies, and delivery platforms. It includes high-quality peer-reviewed papers featuring substantive new research in one of five research areas, each chaired by leaders in the field:
User Modeling for Recommender Systems (chairs: Alexander Felfernig & Pasquale Lops)
Adaptive & Personalized Educational Systems (chairs: Antonija Mitrovic & Kalina Yacef)
Personalization in the Social Web & Crowdsourcing Era (chairs: Alessandro Bozzon & Harith Alani)
Adaptive, Intelligent, & Multimodal User Interfaces (chairs: Julien Epps & Hatice Gunes)
Architectures, Techniques, & Methodologies for UMAP (chairs: Stephan Weibelzahl & Mihaela Cocea)
This year we received 123 submissions. In keeping with UMAPs rigorous standards, each paper was carefully reviewed by members of the Program Committee (PC) while the Area Chairs (ACs) coordinated the reviews and provided recommendations to the Program Chairs. The international Program Committee (PC) consisted of 132 members who were assisted by 49 subreviewers. These were leading researchers as well as highly promising young researchers.
Papers were assigned to at least 4 members of the PC and to 1 AC member based on their expertise, interests, and other factors. Each paper received at least 3 reviews, and 95% received 4 reviews. After the initial reviews were submitted, the designated AC facilitated discussion amongst reviewers in order to resolve differences and correct misunderstandings. The AC then provided a summative meta-review and a recommendation to the Program Chairs. The final decisions were based on these recommendations, the meta-reviews, and reviewer scores.
We accepted 21 long papers (23.9% acceptance rate) and 13 short papers (27.6% acceptance rate) for oral presentation and an additional 17 extended abstracts for poster presentation and inclusion in the proceedings. The program also features posters, demos, and late breaking results, which collectively showcase the wide spectrum of novel ideas and latest results in user modeling, adaptation and personalization.
We also invited three distinguished keynote speakers, each illustrating significant issues and prospective directions for the field.
Hossein Derakhshan (shared keynote speaker with Hypertext 2016) is an Iranian-Canadian blogger who was imprisoned in Tehran from November 2008 to November 2014. He has been called the "father of Persian blogging" and has helped promote podcasting in Iran. His talk, "Killing the Hyperlink, Killing the Web: the Shift from Library-Internet to Television-Internet," reflects his views on the Internet today.
Lada Adamic leads the Product Science group within Facebook's Data Science Team. She is also an adjunct associate professor at the University of Michigan's School of Information and Center for the Study of Complex Systems. Her talk "The Life and Times of Information in Networks" focuses on cascades of information-sharing and resharing within social media.
Sandra Carberry was one of the founders of the User Modeling research area at the first workshop in Maria Laach in 1986. As appropriate for the 30th anniversary, her talk "User Modeling: The Past, The Present and The Future" discusses how the field evolved, insights into where the field is headed, and the hottest topics for exploration.
The conference includes a doctoral consortium that provides an opportunity for doctoral students to explore and develop their research interests under the guidance of distinguished scholars. This track received 18 submissions of which nine were accepted as full papers and eight as posters.
A set of seven workshops and two tutorials round out the program.
(Workshop) IFUP: Workshop on Multi-dimension Information Fusion for Modeling and Personalisation (half-day) organized by Robin Burke (DePaul University, USA), Feida Zhu (Singapore Management University, Singapore), Neil Yorke-Smith (American University of Beirut, Lebanon), and Guibing Guo (Northeastern University, China)
(Workshop) INRA: News Recommendation and Analytics (half-day) organized by Jon Atle Gulla (Norwegian University of Science and Technology Trondheim, Norway), Luc Martens (Minds-UGent-WiCa Ghent, Belgium), Özlem Özgöbek (Norwegian University of Science and Technology Trondheim, Norway), and Nafiseh Shabib (TNS Gallup, Oslo, Norway)
(Workshop) SOAP: Workshop on Surprise, Opposition, and Obstruction in Adaptive and Personalized Systems (half-day) organized by Peter Knees (Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria), Kristina Andersen (Studio for Electro Instrumental Music, Amsterdam, the Netherlands), Alan Said (Recorded Future, Gothenburg, Sweden), and Marko Tkalcic (Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, Italy)
(Workshop) HAAPIE: Human Aspects in Adaptive and Personalised Interactive Environments (half-day) organized by Panagiotis Germanakos (SAP SE, Germany), Marios Belk (Department of Computer Science, University of Cyprus), George Samaras (Department of Computer Science, University of Cyprus), and Vania Dimitrova (University of Leeds, UK)
(Workshop) EvalUMAP: Towards comparative evaluation in the user modelling, adaptation and personalization space (full-day) organized by Owen Conlan (Trinity College Dublin, Ireland), Liadh Kelly (Trinity College Dublin, Ireland), Kevin Koidl (Trinity College Dublin, Ireland), Séamus Lawless (Trinity College Dublin, Ireland), Killian Levacher (Trinity College Dublin, Ireland), and Athanasios Staikopoulos (Trinity College Dublin, Ireland)
(Workshop) FuturePD: The future of personal data: envisioning new personalized services enabled by Quantified Self technologies (half-day) organized by Amon Rapp (University of Torino, Italy), Federica Cena (University of Torino, Italy), Judy Kay (University of Sidney, Australia), Bob Kummerfeld (University of Sydney, Australia), Frank Hopfgartner (University Gardens Glasgow, UK), Jakob Eg Larsen (Technical University of Denmark, Denmark), and Elise van den Hoven (University of Technology Sydney, Australia). (Workshop) PALE: Personalization Approaches in Learning Environments (full-day) organized by Milos Kravcik (RWTH Aachen University, Germany), Olga C. Santos (UNED, Spain), Jesus G. Boticario (UNED, Spain), and Maria Bielikova (FIIT STUBA, Slovakia)
(Tutorial) Semantics-Aware Techniques for Social Media Analysis, User Modeling, and Recommender Systems (half-day) by Pasquale Lops and Cataldo Musto (University of Bari Aldo Moro, Italy)
(Tutorial) Games, Gamification and Personalization (half-day) by Amon Rapp (University of Torino, Italy).
Index Terms
- Proceedings of the 2016 Conference on User Modeling Adaptation and Personalization