Pervasive Image Capture and Sharing:
New Social Practices and Implications for Technology
Tokyo, Japan - September 11, 2005
Organizers
Mirjana Spasojevic, Hewlett-Packard Labs
Mizuko Ito, Annenberg Center for Communication, University of Southern
California
Nancy Van House, University of California, Berkeley, School of
Information Management and Systems
Ilpo Koskinen, School of Design, Industrial Design, University of Art and
Design Helsinki
Fumitoshi Kato, Keio University, Faculty of Environmental Information
Daisuke Okabe, Keio University, Shonan Fujisawa Campus
Note:
submission date extended to Friday, June 24!
Theme
The time-honored practice of image capture, sharing, and
archiving has gotten a new twist with the advent of digital imaging technology.
The portable digital camera captures images at zero marginal cost with the
ability to instantly view and delete images. The result is more prolific photo
capturing in a variety of formal and informal settings. Digital images enable
photo sharing via an expanded repertoire of mechanisms and modalities, including
exchange of physical prints, sharing of digital copies via email, posting images
on web pages and blogs, or simply showing images on the imaging devices during
face-to-face encounters.
More recently, camera phones have expanded both image capture and sharing even
further. New ways of sharing now include MMS (multimedia messaging) between
phones, sending images via email from the phone, posting images to blogs and
webpages directly from the phone, transferring images via IR or Bluetooth
between phones, and showing others images on a handheld screen. These new
functions, embedded in a device that is always close at hand, has led to the
emergence of pervasive image capture and sharing.
These ubiquitous devices enhance many social activities. They make it possible
to share experiences with remote people during a particular event or soon
thereafter, or to accomplish a task through the use of images. As a result, we
see emergence of new social practices, where image capture and sharing is much
more fluid and spontaneous and frequently focused on new kinds of photographic
subjects. These rich imaging interactions are getting interwoven into the
regular communicational context, thus becoming a part of everyday life.
Goals
In this workshop we aim to bring together a
multi-disciplinary group of researches and practitioners for a free exchange and
discussion around the emerging phenomena of pervasive image capture and sharing.
Our goal is to examine up-to-date technology developments and current social
practices, and to understand implications for further research, including design
and development of new devices, applications and services. In recognition of the
differences in camera phone and other mobile device technology and practices in
different regions and among different cultures, our organizing committee
represents a range of perspectives; we will strive to attract an equally diverse
set of participants.
Topics
In this workshop we will address the following broad
questions:
- What happens when image capture and sharing becomes an
integral part of everyday life?
- What social practices exist today and what new
practices are likely to develop?
- What are the implications for technology?
- What are the possible implications for social
relationships and for practical activity?
Possible topics to be discussed among the workshop
participants include (but are not limited to):
- How and why do people capture and share images and what
do they value? Are new purposes for image capture and sharing emerging with
cameraphone use?
- What are the current social barriers in image capture
sharing? What are the technical obstacles? How do cameraphones overcome these
barriers? Violate boundaries and norms? How is image capture and sharing being
regulated?
- What context factors affect image sharing? What are the
implications for design?
- Which are the preferred mechanisms for image sharing?
What factors influence users’ choices of mechanisms?
- What’s the relationship between different modalities of
image sharing – e.g., desktop versus cameraphone?
- What is the state of the current UI for image capture
and sharing?
- How does pervasive image capture and sharing articulate
with desktop photo archiving and sharing applications and services?
- How does pervasive image capture and sharing relate to
new models of social interaction and communication? What are the privacy
implications of these new practices?
- How are camera phones being adopted and used
differently based on national context and factors such as age and gender? What
are the current differences across cultures in the use of cameraphones and in
image sharing? What factors influence these differences? What cautions are
necessary when we consider what we can learn about possible adoption in
countries like the U.S. that lag behind countries like Japan?
- What are the current issues for research and design for
camera phones and other mobile imaging devices?
- What are the current issues for social research on the
uses and implications of camera phones and other mobile imaging devices?
Participation & Process
The number of participants will be limited to 25 people. Prospective authors are invited to submit their
position paper describing their interest and experience in this field (2-3
pages), in PDF format, electronically to Mirjana Spasojevic at
mirjana@hpl.hp.com no later than
June 24, 2005. Authors may submit the papers in standard
ACM SIG Proceedings format.
Proceedings
The workshop proceedings will be distributed to the
workshop participants, and are also available online in PDF format.
Important Dates
June 24, 2005:
Deadline for submissions of workshop papers
July 15, 2005: Notification of acceptance for workshop papers
August 15, 2005: Deadline for preparing camera-ready copies
September 11, 2005: Pervasive Image Capture and Sharing 2005 workshop at
Ubicomp 2005
last modified June 20, 2005
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