Call for Papers - Special Issue of ACM Transactions on Accessible Computing 
(TACCESS) On

Speech and Language Interaction for Daily Assistive Technology 

Guest Editors: François Portet, Frank Rudzicz, Jan Alexandersson, Heidi 
Christensen

Assistive technologies (AT) allow individuals with disabilities to do things 
that would otherwise be difficult or impossible. Many assistive technologies 
involve providing universal access, such as modifications to televisions or 
telephones to make them accessible to those with vision or hearing impairments. 
An important sub-discipline within this community is Augmentative and 
Alternative Communication (AAC), which has its focus on communication 
technologies for those with impairments that interfere with some aspect of 
human communication, including spoken or written modalities. Another important 
sub-discipline is Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) which facilitates independent 
living; these technologies break down the barriers faced by people with 
physical or cognitive impairments and support their relatives and caregivers. 
These technologies are expected to improve quality-of-life of users and promote 
independence, accessibility, learning, and social connectivity. 

Speech and natural language processing (NLP) can be used in AT/AAC in a variety 
of ways including, improving the intelligibility of unintelligible speech, and 
providing communicative assistance for frail individuals or those with severe 
motor impairments. The range of applications and technologies in AAL that can 
rely on speech and NLP technologies is very large, and the number of 
individuals actively working within these research communities is growing, as 
evidenced by the successful INTERSPEECH 2013 satellite workshop on Speech and 
Language Processing for Assistive Technologies (SLPAT). In particular, one of 
the greatest challenges in AAL is to design smart spaces (e.g., at home, work, 
hospital) and intelligent companions that anticipate user needs and enable them 
to interact with and in their daily environment and provide ways to communicate 
with others. This technology can benefit each of visually-, physically-, 
speech- or cognitively- impaired persons. 

Topics of interest for submission to this special issue include (but are not 
limited to):

•  Speech, natural language and multimodal interfaces designed for people with 
physical or cognitive impairments 

•  Applications of speech and NLP technology (automatic speech recognition, 
synthesis, dialogue, natural language generation) for AT applications 

•  Novel modeling and machine learning approaches for AT applications 

•  Long-term adaptation of speech/NLP based AT system to user's change 

•  User studies, overview of speech/NLP technology for AT: understanding the 
user's needs and future speech and language based technologies. 

•  Understanding, modeling and recognition of aged or disordered speech 

•  Speech analysis and diagnosis: automatic recognition and detection of speech 
pathologies and speech capability loss 

•  Speech-based distress recognition 

•  Automated processing of symbol languages, sign language and nonverbal 
communication including translation systems. 

•  Text and audio processing for improved comprehension and intelligibility, 
e.g., sentence simplification or text-to-speech 

•  Evaluation methodology of systems and components in the lab and in the wild. 

•  Resources; corpora and annotation schemes 

•  Other topics in AAC, AAL, and AT 

 

Submission process

Contributions must not have been previously published or be under consideration 
for publication elsewhere, although substantial extensions of conference or 
workshop papers will be considered. as long as they adhere to ACM's minimum 
standards regarding prior publication 
(http://www.acm.org/pubs/sim_submissions.html). Studies involving 
experimentations with real target users will be appreciated. All submissions 
have to be prepared according to the Guide for Authors as published in the 
Journal website at http://www.rit.edu/gccis/taccess/.  

Submissions should follow the journal's suggested writing format ( 
<http://www.gccis.rit.edu/taccess/authors.html> 
http://www.gccis.rit.edu/taccess/authors.html) and should be submitted through 
Manuscript Central  <http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/taccess> 
http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/taccess , indicating that the paper is intended 
for the Special Issue. All papers will be subject to the peer review process 
and final decisions regarding publication will be based on this review.

Important dates:

◦   Full paper submission: 31st March 2014

◦   Response to authors: 30th June 2014

◦   Revised submission deadline: 31st August 2014

◦   Notification of acceptance: 31st October 2014

◦   Final manuscripts due: 30th November 2014

 

 

 

 

Frank Rudzicz, PhD.

   Scientist, Toronto Rehabilitation Institute; 

   Assistant professor, Department of Computer Science,

         University of Toronto; 

   Founder and Chief Science Officer, Thotra Incorporated

>>  <http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~frank> http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~frank 
>> (personal)

>>  <http://spoclab.ca/> http://spoclab.ca  (lab)

 

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