DIMACS Workshop on Algorithmic Issues in Modeling Motion Date: November 18 - 20, 2002 Location: DIMACS Center, Rutgers University, Piscataway NJ, 08854-8018 Organizers: Pankaj K. Agarwal, Duke University, pankaj at cs.duke.edu Leonidas J. Guibas, Stanford University, guibas at cs.stanford.edu Presented under the auspices of the DIMACS Special Focus on Computational Geometry and Applications. Rationale: Motion, like shape, is one of the fundamental modalities to be modeled in order to represent and manipulate the physical world in a computer. As such, motion representations and the algorithms that operate on them are central to all computational disciplines dealing with physical objects: computer graphics, computer vision, robotics, etc. Modeling motion is also crucial for other disciplines dealing with temporally varying data, including mobile networks, temporal data bases, etc. Motion algorithms require computational resources, and frequently sensing and communication resources as well, in order to accomplish their task. Despite the prominent position that motion plays in so many computer disciplines, little has been done to date to provide a clean conceptual framework for representing motion, describing algorithms on moving objects, and analyzing their behavior and performance. Scope and Format: This workshop aims to bring together people from the different research communities interested in algorithmic issues related to moving objects. The workshop will address core algorithmic issues as well as aspects of modeling and analyzing motion. The goal is to debate and discuss the issues in representing, processing, reasoning, analyzing, searching, and visualizing moving objects; to identify key research issues that need to be addressed, and to help establish relationships which can be used to strengthen and foster collaboration across the different areas. Call for Participation: Authors are invited to submit abstracts for talks to be given at the workshop. Please send the organizers an abstract (up to 2 pages) and a draft of a paper (if you have one). (Since there are no formal proceedings for the workshop, submission of material that is to be submitted to (or to appear in) a refereed conference is allowed and encouraged.) Submissions will be due October 15, 2002. Notification of acceptance: October 31, 2002. Invited Speakers: Mark de Berg, Utrecht University David Mount, University of Maryland Dinesh Pai, University of British Columbia Ileana Streinu, Smith College Carlo Tomasi, Duke University Feng Zhao, Xerox Corporation Registration: (Pre-registration date: November 11, 2002) Regular rate Preregister before deadline $120/day After preregistration deadline $140/day Reduced Rate* Preregister before deadline $60/day After preregistration deadline $70/day Postdocs Preregister before deadline $10/day After preregistration deadline $15/day DIMACS Postdocs $0 Non-Local Graduate & Undergraduate students Preregister before deadline $5/day After preregistration deadline $10/day Local Graduate & Undergraduate students $0 (Rutgers & Princeton) DIMACS partner institution employees** $0 DIMACS long-term visitors*** $0 Registration fee to be collected on site, cash, check, VISA/Mastercard accepted. Our funding agencies require that we charge a registration fee for the workshop. Registration fees cover participation in the workshop, all workshop materials, breakfast, lunch, breaks, and any scheduled social events (if applicable). * College/University faculty and employees of non-profit organizations will automatically receive the reduced rate. Other participants may apply for a reduction of fees. They should email their request for the reduced fee to the Workshop Coordinator at workshop at dimacs.rutgers.edu. Include your name, the Institution you work for, your job title and a brief explanation of your situation. All requests for reduced rates must be received before the preregistration deadline. You will promptly be notified as to the decision about it. ** Fees for employees of DIMACS partner institutions are waived. DIMACS partner institutions are: Rutgers University, Princeton University, AT&T Labs - Research, Avaya, Bell Labs, NEC Research Institute and Telcordia Technologies. ***DIMACS long-term visitors who are in residence at DIMACS for two or more weeks inclusive of dates of workshop. Information on participation, registration, accommodations, and travel can be found at: http://dimacs.rutgers.edu/Workshops/Issues/index.html