Apologize for cross- posting
--- Management of Risks and Benefits when Engineering Interactive Digital
Systems ---
IFIP WG 2.7/13.4 workshop at EICS 2021
Traditionally, most UX designers, computer scientists and software
engineers have not had to consider risks to the public from using their
systems. However, the current evolution of digital systems in terms of the
increasing number of users, their growing complexity and the pervasiveness
of Artificial Intelligence techniques allow common HCI designers and
engineers to build systems that create risks for the individual, groups of
people, or even to the entire society.
In this workshop, we aim at collecting the views and the current practice
in the management of the risks and benefits in the engineering of
interactive digital systems. Such a view will draw the way for new
research, methods, and tools to incorporate the risk analysis into the
current engineering and design practices.
## Important Dates
- April 30, 2021 – Paper submission deadline
- May 7, 2021 – Paper notification deadline
- May 14, 2021 – Camera-ready deadline
- Between June 7 and June 11, 2021 – Workshop day
## Topics and Scope
The workshop will focus on the following topics, which are not properly
covered by the current research, methods and tools for engineering digital
systems:
-Exploring the risks in digital system interaction and their implications.
In particular, we would like to identify the risks drivers and to build a
categorization of the risks they produce.
- Factors that impact the risk-benefit analysis and the information
required. In this category, we would like to list the available scientific
theories, the techniques for building a shared knowledge on such factors
(e.g., databases, models and tools).
- Accounting the risks put by the application of Artificial Intelligence
algorithms in digital interactive systems. They include (but not limited
to): transparency, interactive control, controllability and automation,
explainability, biases in algorithms and data, decision support design,
accountability, fairness and digital sobriety.
- Techniques and interfaces for helping and/or nudging people on perceiving
and understanding the risks in interacting with digital systems.
## Target Audience
Different communities and disciplines are involved in developing such a
topic, both in the research and in the development practice. Besides the UI
engineering community, we expect relevant contributions by designers,
safety and privacy experts, sociologists, psychologists, ethicists, etc.
The workshop’s ultimate goal is to set-up a shared view on the risks
related to the interaction, their severity, and their likelihood.
## Goals and Expected Outcome
The workshop will last one day. We will start with a brief introduction of
the elicited topics and a sequence of presentations of the different
position papers in the first half. The second half will contain group
activities for reaching a global consensus among the participants, which
will result in the draft of a joint position paper, authored by all
participants, which will depict the challenges and the opportunities raised
in the discussion and the group’s view on future research in future risk
and benefits management for interactive system engineering. The finalised
version of such paper will be submitted for publication in an HCI journal.
## Submissions
We solicit the submission of a two-page abstract describing the view and
identifying the risks in one or more workshop topics. We also encourage to
propose further applications of risk management in engineering interactive
digital systems. The abstract may include the description of a major
challenge or opportunity set by risk management and/or the analysis of
related work in the literature. The abstracts will serve as the basis for
the discussion during the workshop.
Papers must be submitted through EasyChair and formatted according to LNCS
guidelines (
https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-gu…).
We plan to publish revised papers electronically (e.g CEUR-WS) after the
workshop.
Submit a paper through EasyChair (
https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=mrbeics2021)
## Organizers
José Creissac Campos – University of Minho & HASLab/INESC TEC (Portugal)
T.C. Nicholas Graham – School of Computing, Queen’s University of Canada
(Canada)
Jan Van Den Bergh – Hasselt University – EDM – IBBT (Belgium)
Lucio Davide Spano – Dept. Mathematics and Computer Science, University of
Cagliari (Italy)
--
[image: photo]
Prof. Lucio Davide Spano
Dipartimento di Matematica e Informatica
Università di Cagliari
Via Ospedale 72, 09124, Cagliari, Italy
Tel: +39 070 675 8760 | Skype: davide.spano5
Website <http://people.unica.it/davidespano> | RG
<https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Lucio_Spano> | ORCHID
<https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7106-0463>