Please consider submitting papers to ACM COMPASS 2021
<http://compass.acm.org/> which will be held online between June 28-July 2,
2021 and co hosted by Monash University, Australia and SRTA-City, Egypt.
The paper deadline is April 7, 2021 and the CFP is attached below. ACM
COMPASS 2021 has expanded its scope to support nine separate submission
tracks catering to different focal areas:



   -

   Computing Systems
   -

   Human-Computer Interaction
   -

   AI for Social Impact
   -

   Health
   -

   Education
   -

   Energy, IoT and Smart Cities
   -

   Development, Economics and Social Policy
   -

   Environment, Climate Change and Sustainability
   -

   Deployment Experiences and Practitioner Reports



We have assembled a strong set of area chairs and PC members for each
track, collectively making a set of 100+ PC members across all tracks from
different disciplines. New this year we are also recruiting PC members in
order to continue to diversify our reviewers. See below if you’d like to
join.



We are hoping to attract strong submissions for every track. We would be
very grateful if you could spread the word within your research groups and
to relevant collaborators.



Thanks!

Mercy and Kurtis





ACM COMPASS 2021 CALL FOR PAPERS

Deadline for submission of full papers: April 7th, 2021

The conference will be held online on June 28 - Jul 02, 2021, co hosted by
Monash University, Australia and SRTA-City, Egypt.

Inspired by the broad agenda of the United Nations Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs), ACM COMPASS 2021 aims to publish significant and original
research from a broad array of computer and information sciences, social
sciences, environmental sciences and engineering fields that support the
growth of sustainable societies worldwide, especially including
under-represented and marginalized communities. The ACM COMPASS 2021
conference aims to explicitly promote interdisciplinary research
work—including new methodologies, systems, techniques, applications, and
behavioral, qualitative, and quantitative studies—that addresses key
societal challenges related to sustainability, gender equality, health,
education, poverty, accessibility, conservation, climate change, energy,
infrastructure, and economic growth, among others. We also welcome research
on the ethics of technology, especially from a critical perspective, to
discuss limitations and concerns with technology-led solutions for
sustainable societies.

In the last year, the global pandemic has served to demonstrate how digital
technologies, or lack thereof, can impact on community resilience. In
addition to our primary theme, and with the scope of the conference, this
year we welcome contributions that discuss the challenges societies face in
their use of digital technologies and services to respond to COVID-19.

Interested in participating? New this year we’re recruiting PC members
through an open call. Please fill out this survey
<https://forms.gle/KzAFAwoZxc8S3ZCA6> to indicate your interest and the
TPCs will follow up with you.

Important Dates:

Wednesday 7 April 2021, Submission Deadline - Submit at
https://acmcompass2021.hotcrp.com/

Friday 21 May 2021, Decisions & Reviews

Friday 4 June 2021, Camera Ready Papers

Monday 28 June - Friday 2 July, Virtual Conference

To ensure strong research contributions, the ACM COMPASS 2021 conference
will review papers based on focus tracks corresponding to the research
areas they draw upon. The key focal tracks are:

   -

   Computing Systems
   -

   Human-Computer Interaction
   -

   AI for Social Impact
   -

   Health
   -

   Education
   -

   Energy, IoT and Smart Cities
   -

   Development, Economics and Social Policy
   -

   Environment, Climate Change and Sustainability
   -

   Deployment Experiences and Practitioner Reports


------------------------------



AI for Social Impact
Track chair: Fei Fang (CMU, USA)

https://www.isri.cmu.edu/people/core-faculty/fang-fei.html

[email protected]



Example Paper <https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3209811.3209868>

This track takes paper submissions for new research and development of
AI/ML and data science techniques in the context of sustainable societies.
Topics may include, but are not limited to:

   -

   Methods for large-scale data analysis, participatory sensing and
   crowd-sourced data collection.
   -

   Handling of missing, messy, and biased data, including data cleaning,
   data wrangling, data integration, and domain adaptation methods.
   -

   Analysis of massive, complex data sources, such as networked data,
   satellite data, mobile phone data, time-series, and spatial-temporal data.
   -

   Data privacy, security, and anonymity.
   -

   FATE (fairness, accountability, transparency, and ethics) in AI and ML.

Methods may be applied to relevant areas including but not limited to
agriculture, poverty mapping, disease surveillance, speech interfaces,
computer vision techniques, etc. We encourage (but do not require)
real-world deployment and evaluation of methods in collaboration with
public sector partners such as government or NGOs. Submitted papers are
expected to present an argument for the (either realized or potential)
social impact of the work.

Human-Computer Interaction Track
Track chair: Ishtiaque Ahmed (Univ of Toronto, Canada)

https://www.ishtiaque.net/

[email protected]



Example Paper <https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3209811.3209876>

This track takes paper submissions on new research related to, but not
limited to:

   -

   User interfaces for underserved populations
   -

   Human-centered AI
   -

   Information and computer ethics
   -

   Information system and technology design methodologies
   -

   Social relationships and information flows within and across communities
   -

   Gender and intersectionality
   -

   Other topics related to interactions between technology and society





Computing Systems Track
Track chair:  Kurtis Heimerl (Univ of Washington, USA) (PC Co-Chair)

https://kurti.sh/

[email protected]



Example Paper <https://kurti.sh/pubs/vbts_dev4.pdf>

This track takes paper submissions on the design, implementation, and
deployment of all forms of networked and software systems for sustainable
societies. Topics of interest may include (but not limited to):

   -

   Connectivity solutions and measurements
   -

   Mobile systems and applications
   -

   Spectrum management
   -

   Content distribution
   -

   Low-cost computing devices
   -

   Security and privacy issues

We especially encourage contributions on critical perspectives about
technology that may impose limitations on technology-led solutions for
sustainable societies.

Global Health
Track chair: Sunandan Chakraborty (Indiana Univ, USA)

https://soic.iupui.edu/people/sunandan-chakraborty/

[email protected]

Example Paper <https://doi.org/10.1145/3378393.3402241>

This track takes papers on all aspects pertaining to the use of computing
solutions to address challenges in global health. Topics may include (but
not limited to):

   -

   AI/ML techniques for global health
   -

   EHR analysis
   -

   Health policy interventions
   -

   Randomized control trials
   -

   Bioinformatics and genomics for global health
   -

   Mobile health and wearables

Papers may be about novel models/methods, applications or policies in the
area of global health.

Education
Track chair: Ahmed Kharrufa (Newcastle University, UK)

https://www.ncl.ac.uk/computing/staff/profile/ahmedkharrufa.html
[email protected]

Example Paper
<https://dl.acm.org/doi/abs/10.1145/3209811.3209881?casa_token=7KPDKyviq7UAAAAA:CmOGIjtbwL3-5lVsNTf9MTxtK1t6pF7J-q9iBZkVk_0DDGf8L1sHqW99LRRBXJBamBfabgPhL7ovwZw>

This track takes paper submissions related the design, development,
deployment and evaluation of innovative technologies in educational
settings in topics including, but not limited to

   -

   Community engagement in formal and informal education
   -

   Equality, diversity and inclusion in education
   -

   Supporting rural and disadvantaged communities
   -

   Sustainable educational technologies and interventions
   -

   Emerging technologies in education
   -

   Developing collaborative, critical, analytical and creative skills

Educational settings include formal and informal settings for all age
groups, physical or online, and from individual to learning at scale.

Energy, IoT, and Smart Cities
Track chair:  Rijurekha Sen (IIT Delhi, India)

https://www.cse.iitd.ac.in/~rijurekha/

[email protected]



Example Paper
<https://acmcompass.org/publications/2020/6/6/o4rdi0mdsvaoz4xu5ua0q6u6dkyhss>

This track takes paper submissions on topics related to the application of
computing and communication technologies, including but not limited to:

   -

   IoTs and other systems for improving infrastructure (buildings, energy
   systems, roads, water and sanitation systems, etc.), agriculture, community
   engagement and governance
   -

   Computing technologies applied in energy and electricity networks
   -

   Systems for measurement, monitoring, and/or management of urban
   environments
   -

   Deployment of sensing and communications technologies, case studies, and
   lessons learned
   -

   Security and privacy in energy, IoT, and smart cities applications

Development, Economics, and Social Policy

Daniel Björkegren (Brown University, USA)

https://www.brown.edu/academics/population-studies/people/person/daniel-bj%C3%B6rkegren

[email protected]



Example Paper <https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3209811.3209866>

This track takes paper submissions from economics, social sciences, and
policy that pertain to sustainability and socio-economic development.
Specific topics include but are not limited to:

   -

   Policy evaluation using randomized control trials or observational data
   -

   Measurement using non-traditional data (administrative, satellite,
   social media, mobile, text, etc.)
   -

   AI/ML for social science or economic policy
   -

   Development economics studies
   -

   Social network analysis
   -

   Applications, effects, and regulation of tech in developing societies

We encourage development, economics and policy papers agnostic of the
domain of application including public health, financial services,
education, agriculture, gender, livelihood, employment, governance systems,
and labour rights, among others.

Environment, Climate Change and Sustainability

Track chairs: Mercy Julia Borbor Cordova (ESPOL, Ecuador) (PC Co-chair)

Example Paper
<https://acmcompass.org/publications/2020/6/7/can-phones-build-relationships-a-case-study-of-a-kenyan-wildlife-conservancys-community-development>

This track takes papers on all aspects of sustainability of the planet
pertaining to environmental sciences, climate change and environmental
policy. We encourage submissions across a broad spectrum of topics in this
space, including but not limited to: Climate change modeling

   -

   Environmental scientific studies
   -

   Impact of climate change on populations
   -

   Sustainable management of natural resources
   -

   Environmental policy studies and economics
   -

   Studies on the limits of the sustainability of technology
   -

   Measuring and evaluating the impact of nature-based strategies


Deployment Experiences and Practitioner Reports
Track chair: Josiah Chavula (UCT, South Africa)

https://josiahchavula.com/
[email protected]

Example Paper1
<https://cs.nyu.edu/~jchen/publications/compass18-potsch.pdf>Example Paper2
<https://dl.acm.org/doi/pdf/10.1145/3209811.3212703>

This track takes long papers on deployment experiences and short papers on
practitioner reports, related to technical infrastructure and services,
such as community wireless networks and cloudlets. Practitioner reports
will discuss approaches used in deployed technology, with the aim to inform
on particular aspects of technology used in practice, or describing broad
project experiences. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

   -

   Details of technical infrastructure and services (e.g community wireless
   networks, cloudlets etc), including social dynamics
   -

   Tools and models to simplify deployment, operation and scalability
   -

   Evaluations of usage, performance and impact of technologies deployed in
   the field (e.g network measurements, QoS, QoE, etc)
   -

   Strategies for sustainability and maximization of impact
   -

   Reflections from long-term deployments
   -

   Problem statements that can lead to new research directions regarding
   expanding access to technology

ACM COMPASS 2021 specifically aims to forge stronger relationships between
practitioners and researchers.
------------------------------

SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS

Full papers will be archival submissions with a length of up to 10 pages,
plus references. Papers should represent polished, significant
contributions. Authors are encouraged to submit a paper of length
proportional to its contribution. Papers should be submitted in the
two-column CHI 2020 proceedings format (templates available for LaTeX
<https://chi2020.acm.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/proceedings.zip>,
Overleaf
<https://www.overleaf.com/latex/templates/chi2020-proceedings/qtdvrwbtqxww>
 or Microsoft Word
<https://chi2020.acm.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/SIGCHI-CHI20-Sample-Paper.docx>).
Submissions must be in the pdf format. All submissions will go through a
double blind review process, therefore no author names or affiliations may
appear on the title page, and papers should avoid revealing their identity
in the text and document metadata. Submissions will be made at
https://acmcompass2021.hotcrp.com/

In addition, COMPASS 2021 will have a Posters track for preliminary
projects or late-breaking results. Posters are intended to allow presenters
to share their latest results or get early feedback on projects. Poster
submissions will be limited to 2 pages plus references.

To accommodate the publishing traditions of different fields, authors of
accepted papers or posters can ask that only a one-page abstract appear in
the archival proceedings, along with a URL pointing to the full paper.
Authors should guarantee the link to the full paper to be reliable for at
least two years. This option is available to accommodate subsequent
publication in journals that would not consider results that have been
published in preliminary form in a conference proceedings.

ACM COMPASS 2021 CONFERENCE ORGANIZERS

General conference chairs
Shaimaa Lazem (SRTA-City, Egypt)

Patrick Olivier (Monash, Australia)

Program committee chairs
Mercy Julia Borbor Cordova, (ESPOL, Ecuador)
Kurtis Heimerl (University of Washington, USA)

Track chairs

AI & Social Impact  - Fei Feng (CMU, USA)

Deployments and Practitioner Reports  - Josiah Chavula (UCT, South Africa)

Development, Economics and Policy - Daniel Bjorkergen (Brown University,
USA)

Energy, IoT and Smart Cities - Rijurekha Sen (IIT Delhi, India)

Environment, Climate Change and Sustainability - Mercy Julia Borbor Cordova
(ESPOL, Ecuador) (PC Co-chair)

Education - Ahmed Kharrufa (Newcastle University, UK)

HCI - Ishtiaque Ahmed (Univ of Toronto, Canada)

Health - Sunandan Chakraborty (Indiana Univ, USA)

Systems - Kurtis Heimerl (Univ of Washington, USA) (PC Co-Chair)

Virtual Conference Logistics Chairs

Dharshini Chandrasekara (Monash, Australia)

Delvin Varghese (Monash, Australia)

Dan Richardson (Monash, Australia)

Steering committee
Richard Anderson (University of Washington)
Nicola Dell (Cornell Tech)
Melissa Densmore (University of Cape Town)
Carla Gomes (Cornell University)
Aaditeshwar Seth (Indian Institute of Technology Delhi)
Lakshmi Subramanian (New York University)
Milind Tambe (Harvard)
Bill Thies (Microsoft Research)
Ellen Zegura (Georgia Tech)


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