<html>
<head>
<title>HTML Message</title>
<meta name=generator content=Advanced HTML parser v2>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
</head>
<body>
<table border="0" width="100%" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tr>
<td>
<font face='Lucida Grande' size='4'><b>*** First Call for Papers ***<br></b></font><font face='Lucida Grande'><br></font><font face='Lucida Grande' size='4'>8th International Symposium on End-User Development<br>(IS-EUD 2021): "Democratizing AI Development"<br><br>July 6-8, 2021, Atlantica Miramare Beach Hotel 4*, Limassol, Cyprus<br><br><A HREF="http://cyprusconferences.org/iseud2021/">http://cyprusconferences.org/iseud2021/</A><br></font><font face='Lucida Grande'><br><br>End-user development (EUD) aims at empowering end users to develop and<br>adapt systems at a level of complexity that is adequate to their expertise,<br>practices, and skills. EUD may occur along the entire software lifecycle, with<br>the purpose of making users able to participate in their artifact development,<br>not only at design time, but also during actual use.<br><br>Originally, EUD was conceived as a more general concept than end-user<br>programming; thus, scholars proposed methods, techniques and tools that<br>allow end users to modify or extend software artifacts, such as spreadsheets,<br>web applications, video games, and mobile applications. In the co-called<br>Internet of Things era, end-user development moved on to address the<br>problem of defining and modifying the behavior of smart environments,<br>including smart objects, pervasive displays, smart homes, smart cities, and so<br>on. Therefore, the term "end-user development" acquired a broader meaning<br>covering approaches, frameworks and socio-technical environments that<br>allow end users to express themselves in crafting digital artifacts that<br>encompass both software and hardware technology.<br><br>Recent research and technological trends like Artificial Intelligence (AI), Big<br>Data, Cyber-Security, Robotics, and Industry 4.0, have contributed to renew<br>the vision of end-user development, by providing tools and platforms that<br>allow end users to harness the power of AI to create solutions involving<br>Computer Vision, Image Processing, Conversational User Interfaces, as well as<br>solutions for smart environments. Such developments lower the threshold for<br>creating AI solutions, and expand the programmer base for such solutions,<br>by extending AI application both for professional and discretionary use. <br><br>IS-EUD is a bi-annual event for researchers and practitioners with an<br>interdisciplinary approach to EUD, including: Human-Computer Interaction,<br>Software Engineering, Computer Supported Cooperative Work, Human-Work<br>Interaction Design, and related areas.<br><br><br></font><font face='Lucida Grande' size='4'><u>IS-EUD 2021 Theme: Democratizing AI Development<br></u></font><font face='Lucida Grande'><br>The 2021 edition of IS-EUD focuses on EUD for AI-based systems, where<br>end users are called on to become end-user developers of intelligent agents,<br>digital twins, collaborative and social robots. This edition would like to<br>discuss the adoption of EUD in new fields, the proposal of novel EUD<br>paradigms, and the impact of AI-based EUD in terms of user acceptability<br>and appropriation. One of the most interesting topics in human-AI interaction<br>is explainability of AI-based systems: research submissions presenting end-<br>user oriented solutions to this problem will be particularly welcome.<br>Theoretical and empirical work analyzing pros and cons of this new EUD<br>wave, identifying requirements for end-user development of AI and<br>acceptance of related solutions is invited. Software infrastructures and eco-<br>systems supporting the reuse of solutions and the emergence of meta-<br>design practices are of particular interest to this community, linking the<br>challenges relating AI to topics central to the IS-EUD community.<br><br><br></font><font face='Lucida Grande' size='4'><u>Conference Topics<br></u></font><font face='Lucida Grande'><br>The conference welcomes contributions that:<br> describe new, simple and efficient environments for end-user development<br> describe new processes, methods and techniques for empowering users to<br>create, modify and tailor digital artifacts<br> present case studies and design implications on challenges and practices of<br>end-user development <br> develop theoretical concepts and foundations for the field of end-user<br>development<br> <br>Specific topics include (but are not limited to) the following ones:<br> User-oriented orchestration of AI-based devices<br> Conversational interfaces for end-user development<br> End-user development for big data visualization and exploration<br> End-user development for collaborative robotics<br> End-user development for social robotics<br> End-user development in Industry 4.0<br> End-user development and explainable AI-based systems<br> Cybersecurity and end-user development<br> End-user development in daily life<br> Technologies and infrastructures for end-user development<br> Empirical studies of end-user development<br> Recommender systems to support end-user development<br> Cultures of participation and meta-design approaches<br> Technology acceptance and adoption studies of end-user development technologies<br> Evaluation of end-user development technologies<br> Supporting creative work through end-user development<br><br><br></font><font face='Lucida Grande' size='4'><u>Submissions<br></u></font><font face='Lucida Grande'><br>We invite two types of paper submissions:<br>1. <b>Regular papers</b>, up to 16 pages, describing original unpublished research<br>making a substantial contribution to the research field<br>2. <b>Short papers</b>, up to 8 pages, describing original unpublished research,<br>making a small but solid contribution to the field<br><br>All submissions will be reviewed by the Program Committee. The review<br>process for this category is double-blind, thus submissions must be<br>anonymized. Accepted papers (both regular and short) will appear in the<br>archival proceedings of IS-EUD 2021, published by Springer in the Lecture<br>Notes on Computer Science (LNCS) series, and will be presented in plenary<br>sessions of the conference.<br><br><b>Workshop proposals</b> are invited (max 6 pages) aligned to the themes of the<br>conference. Workshops provide an informal setting where participants have<br>the opportunity to discuss specific topics in an atmosphere that fosters the<br>active exchange of ideas. Workshops can be half day or one-day long and<br>will be held on July 6, 2021. Accepted workshop proposals will be included<br>in the IS-EUD 2021 adjunct proceedings, which will be submitted to<br>CEUR-WS.org for online publication.<br><br>Submissions of regular papers, short papers and workshop proposals should<br>indicate in the title page "Regular", "Short" or "Workshop" respectively.<br><br><b>Demonstration</b> and <b>Work in Progress</b> papers are also welcomed.<br><br>A <b>Demonstration</b> paper (max 6 pages) should be structured according to the<br>following:<br> Abstract (150 words maximum)<br> Topics to be covered and their relevance to the EUD community<br> Detailed description of the planned demonstration activity<br> Diagrams or screenshots (if relevant)<br> Supporting documentation (e.g., project website)<br> References<br><br><b>Work in Progress</b> submissions (max 6 pages) are intended for presenting<br>preliminary results or tentative findings and position papers. The authors of<br>accepted contributions will have the opportunity to give an oral presentation<br>during parallel sessions.<br><br>Finally, the IS-EUD <b>Doctoral Consortium</b> is intended to bring together PhD<br>students working on theory and application of EUD. We particularly encourage<br>students that are about half-way through their doctoral research to submit<br>doctoral consortium contributions (max 6 pages) describing the topic of their<br>PhD, their approach and a summary of their progress.<br><br><b>Demonstration</b>, <b>Work in Progress</b> and <b>Doctoral Consortium</b> submissions<br>should indicate in the title page Demo, WiP or DC respectively. Accepted<br>submissions will be included in IS-EUD 2021 adjunct proceedings, which will<br>be submitted to CEUR-WS.org for online publication.<br><br>Submissions of all types should be carefully formatted according to the<br>Springer LNCS format:<br><A HREF="https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-guidelines">https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-guidelines</A><br>and should be submitted through the Easy Chair system at:<br><A HREF="https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=iseud2021">https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=iseud2021</A><br><br><br></font><font face='Lucida Grande' size='4'><u>Important Dates<br></u></font><font face='Lucida Grande'><br> Regular and Short papers submission: March 8, 2021 <br> Notification: March 30, 2021 <br> Camera-ready: April 30, 2021 <br><br> Workshop proposal submission: March 8, 2021 <br> Notification: March 15, 2021<br> Camera-ready: April 30, 2021 <br><br> Demonstration and Work in Progress submission: April 7, 2021 <br> Notification: April 21, 2021<br> Camera-ready: April 30, 2021 <br><br> Doctoral Consortium submission: April 7, 2021<br> Notification: April 30, 2021<br> Camera-ready: May 15, 2021<br><br><br></font><font face='Lucida Grande' size='4'><u>Organizers<br></u></font><font face='Lucida Grande'><br><u>General Chairs<br></u> Panos Markopoulos (Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands)<br> George A. Papadopoulos (University of Cyprus, Cyprus)<br><br><u>Program Chairs<br></u> Daniela Fogli (University of Brescia, Italy)<br> Daniel Tetteroo (Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands)<br><br><u>Short papers Chairs<br></u> Barbara Rita Barricelli (University of Brescia, Italy)<br> Simone Borsci (University of Twente, The Netherlands)<br><br><u>Work in Progress Chairs<br></u> Jelle Van Dijk (University of Twente, The Netherlands) <br> Carmen Santoro (ISTI-CNR, Italy)<br><br><u>Demonstration Chair<br></u> Stefano Valtolina (University of Milan, Italy)<br><br><u>Workshop Chairs<br></u> Styliani Kleanthous (Open University of Cyprus, Cyprus)<br> Simone Stumpf (City University London, UK)<br><br><u>Doctoral Consortium Chairs<br></u> Monica Maceli (Pratt Institute, USA)<br> Antonio Piccinno (University of Bari, Italy)<br><br></font><font face='Lucida Grande' size='4'><b><u><br></u></b></font>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
</body>
</html>