Welcome to WoRIE

Deadline extended to 25th November, 2010

The International Workshop on the Reliability of Intelligent Environments (WoRIE) will be held in Salamanca, 8th of April 2011, within the International Symposium on Ambient Intelligence

Intelligent Environments (IE) is rising as one of the technical fields with the highest potential to make an impact in daily human life during the near future. Developments in this area are achieved by a complex juxtaposition of complex technical fields. Software is related to the architecture of a building, sensors, a network for data transportation, and different levels of users. Many of these elements are error prone, software is notoriously difficult and even companies like NASA, Microsoft, Intel, BMW which can afford powerful teams of experienced development teams have paid with lives, economic losses and reputation missing to detect software bugs within their products. Sensors are often unreliable, networks are sometimes unstable and users can put systems to the test in circumstances that were not initially foreseen. Developing these type of systems is therefore complex and given that some applications will be given the tremendous responsibility to take care of humans. Think for example on how much interest there is on the development of systems to support independent living. These systems are intended to give peace of mind to elderly people and their relatives trusting that the system will be able to do many things for them including safety related issues like detecting whether the occupant of the house has fallen or is unwell in some way. Other examples are unmanned cars and other autonomous systems which are supposed to perform tasks for us which can have disastrous consequences should something go wrong.

Our community should develop appropriate standards and specific methodologies to ensure we do our outmost to deliver safe systems given the current state of the art. Given the specific blend of components in our area of development we cannot just transfer developments in other areas (although of course they should be taken into account to inform the process). Some isolated proposals started to appear recently [1, 2, 3, 4] but the seriousness of the topic deserves a more thorough and unified approach from our community. This event will aim to bring together developers and researchers to focus on all aspects of the development process that can contribute to make Intelligent Environment systems safer and to provide methodologies that can increase the confidence in these developments. Typical areas to consider will be: testing, validation, verification of correctness, tools for simulation, gathering of user requirements and human-centred design, to mention a few, any area that can directly help to increase users' satisfaction and trust in these systems is of relevance to this event.

Publication: All accepted papers will be published in a special volume of Advances in Intelligent and Soft Computing (Springer), indexed by ISI Proceedings, DBLP and Springerlink, among others.

References

  1. Ambient Intelligence: Concepts and Applications. Juan C. Augusto and Paul McCullagh. Invited Paper by the International Journal on Computer Science and Information Systems, volume 4, Number 1, pp. 1-28, June 2007.
  2. Easing the Smart Home: Semi-automatic Adaptation in Perceptive Environments, Manuel García-Herranz, Pablo A. Haya, Abraham Esquivel, Germán Montoro, Xavier Alamán. Journal of Universal Computer Science, vol. 14, no. 9 (2008), 1529-1544.
  3. The Darmstadt Challenge (the Turing Test Revisited). J.C. Augusto, M. Bohlen, D. Cook, F. Flentge, G. Marreiros, Carlos Ramos, Weijun Qin, and Yue Suo. Proceedings of the International Conference on Agents and Artificial Intelligence (ICAART), Porto, Portugal, 19th-21st of January, 2009.
  4. Increasing Reliability in the Development of Intelligent Environments. Juan Carlos Augusto. Proceedings of 5th International Conference on Intelligent Environments (IE09), pp. 134-141. Barcelona, Spain, 20-21 of July, 2009.