Papers due July 15!!!
------------------------------
ACM DEV-6, November 30 – December 2, 2015
London, England

Call for Papers

DEV 2015 provides an international forum for research in the design, 
implementation, and evaluation of information and communication technologies 
(ICTs) for social and economic development. In particular, we focus on contexts 
where conventional computing solutions are often inappropriate due to various 
contextual factors - including, but not limited to: cost, language, literacy, 
and the availability of power and bandwidth.

The topic of ICT for development is inherently multidisciplinary, and 
encompasses a broad array of fields within the computer science discipline.  
The ACM DEV conference is an opportunity for researchers across these diverse 
fields of computer science to come together to work on the common problem of 
improving access to and availability of information and communication 
technology solutions.  In an effort to encourage participation of researchers 
across the relevant domains, this year the DEV conference introduces 
submissions “tracks”.  The focus of the conference is research at the interface 
of computer science and development related to (but not limited to) the 
following three non-exclusive focus areas:

·         Systems

·         HCI and Applications

·         Data Science

We are committed to accepting papers of the very highest quality on the 
interface between computer science and development. Authors can designate a 
paper for one or two of these focus areas. Each area has dedicated Program 
Committee (PC) members to allow appropriate review of papers. Papers will be 
automatically referred to another track or reviewed by PC members from 
different tracks where appropriate. The conference itself will have sessions 
grouped by topic rather than by area. Example topics within focus areas include:

 
Systems Track

Low-cost connectivity and computing devices
Network solutions for poorly connected regions, including white space spectrum
Power-efficient systems
Mobile systems and applications
Special-purpose systems, e.g., sensors, wireless, IVR
Systems challenges and opportunities in development, e.g., security, 
sustainability, resilience
Cellular phone systems and applications
Novel tools and applications for development
Measurements of existing technology in developing regions (e.g. network 
deployments)
 

HCI Track

User interfaces for low-literacy populations
Multi-lingual computing
User interfaces for low-cost devices
Participatory methods and user-centered design
Accessibility to disabled populations in developing regions
Design and evaluation of applications in health, microfinance, education, 
agriculture, entertainment, social media
Adapting content and applications to local languages and education levels
Understanding social relationships and information flows in disadvantaged 
societies
 

Data Science Track

Computational sustainability
Computational social science
Econometric models and developmental economics
Data science for social good
Machine learning techniques for large-scale data analysis in development 
contexts
Speech interfaces and translation for low-resource languages
Computer vision challenges and opportunities in development
Understanding social networks and digital media in developing regions
 
General Track

We welcome papers outside of the above topics that address the DEV focus on 
computing innovations supporting social and economic development.  

Papers should describe original and previously unpublished research. Three 
metrics will be applied to judge the submissions: (a) Relevance of the problem 
for development; (b) Novelty of the ideas; (c) Evaluation of the solution, 
making a case for development-focused impact. All DEV paper submissions should 
either provide or directly motivate a novel technical solution that has direct 
implications for development. 

Full papers must not exceed 9 pages and all submissions must be in ACM format 
<http://www.acm.org/sigs/publications/proceedings-templates>, submitted as a 
PDF. Submissions should be fully anonymized. In particular, the names or 
affiliations of authors should not be included so as to allow for blind review. 
 Papers should be submitted via the submission site 
<http://papers.acmdev.org/>.  As part of the submission process, please 
indicate one or more tracks for which your submission is best suited.
 
New: Short Papers on Practical Experiences

This year ACM DEV introduces a “short paper” submissions track to target 
practical field and/or deployment experience, as well as updates or follow-ups 
to previously published work, and interesting negative results.  Short papers 
should be 2 pages in length, and should convey work or conclusions that are a 
direct result of field experience.  Papers accepted into the short paper track 
will be presented in the conference, but will not appear in the conference 
proceedings.  It is hoped that these papers will foster sharing of best 
practices and/or lessons learned as well as serve as interesting points for 
discussion during the conference.  We particularly encourage submissions from 
practitioners, NGOs, and others with field experience.  Note that these short 
papers are not posters, but are presentations.

 
Important Dates:

Submission Deadline: July 15, 2015 - 11:59pm (PST)
Acceptance Notification: September 15, 2015
Conference: November 30 – December 2, 2015 (London, UK)


http://acmdev.org/ <http://acmdev.org/>
______________________

Elizabeth M. Belding
Professor 
Dept. of Computer Science
UC Santa Barbara

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