It is our great pleasure to welcome you to Beijing and to the joint conference of the International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces and the workshop on Machine Learning for Multimodal Interaction (ICMI-MLMI 2010)! This is the first conference after the advisory boards of the two conferences were merged together in Boston last year. We hope the new conference will satisfy the newly united community.
The International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces started in Beijing in 1996. This is also the first time the conference comes back to Beijing since 2000. We hope you will enjoy your stay in this ancient and reinvigorating capital city.
We had nearly 100 submissions, 5 demos and 2 workshop and 2 Special session proposals submitted from researchers worldwide to the conference committee. From these submissions, 23 papers were selected for oral, and 18 papers were selected for poster presentation, bringing the total conference acceptance rate to 44.6 % (25% for oral). Most of the demonstration proposals were made good show cases and accepted, bringing the number of academic demonstrations to four. Finally, one proposed special session was selected for inclusion in the program, as a collection of six additional invited papers via a special peer review process. The papers collected here cover a wide range of topics, such as gaze tracking, speech recognition and language, gesture recognition, human centered multimedia, and interface design. They represent some of the latest developments in the research of multimodal interfaces. These papers will be accompanied by 3 invited keynotes, by Richard Ashley, John Haviland and James Landay.
The review process was organized using the CMT submission and review system, which has been widely used in recent years. During the review procedure, the papers were allocated to the Area Chairs (ACs) in areas of their expertise according to the indication of the submitters, and then checked for conflicts. The ACs distributed the papers to the members of program committee and volunteer reviewers for comments. Once reviews were received, the ACs provided meta-reviews for all papers. The scores of the papers were then collected and tabulated. All reviews and papers were then again checked by the Program Chairs.
Proceeding Downloads
Cited By
- Allison F, Newn J, Smith W, Carter M and Gibbs M Frame Analysis of Voice Interaction Gameplay Proceedings of the 2019 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, (1-14)
- Wimmer R, Schmid A and Bockes F On the Latency of USB-Connected Input Devices Proceedings of the 2019 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, (1-12)
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Coüasnon B, Ringger E, Nagy G and Lopresti D (2013). Form similarity via Levenshtein distance between ortho-filtered logarithmic ruling-gap ratios IS&T/SPIE Electronic Imaging, 10.1117/12.2041956, , (902106), Online publication date: 27-Dec-2013.
- Cai Z, Hu H, Luo W, Lin B and Huang H An Algorithm for Automatic Detection of Banners in Surveillance Videos Proceedings of the 2012 International Conference on Control Engineering and Communication Technology, (338-341)
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Cai Z, Luo W, Ren Z and Huang H (2011). Color Recognition of Video Object Based on HSV Model, Applied Mechanics and Materials, 10.4028/www.scientific.net/AMM.143-144.721, 143-144, (721-725)
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Cai Z, Hu H, Xu T, Luo W and He Y (2012). Algorithm of Color Detection for Moving Video Objects Based on Mode Matching, Applied Mechanics and Materials, 10.4028/www.scientific.net/AMM.239-240.1000, 239-240, (1000-1003)