Journal of Ambient Intelligence and Smart Environments
The Journal of Ambient Intelligence and Smart Environments (JAISE) serves as a forum to discuss the latest developments on Ambient Intelligence (AmI) and Smart Environments (SmE). Given the multi-disciplinary nature of the areas involved, the journal aims to promote participation from several different communities covering topics ranging from enabling technologies such as multi-modal sensing and vision processing, to algorithmic aspects in interpretive and reasoning domains, to application-oriented efforts in human-centered services, as well as contributions from the fields of robotics, networking, HCI, mobile, collaborative and pervasive computing. This diversity stems from the fact that smart environments can be defined with a variety of different characteristics based on the applications they serve, their interaction models with humans, the practical system design aspects, as well as the multi-faceted conceptual and algorithmic considerations that would enable them to operate seamlessly and unobtrusively.
The Journal of Ambient Intelligence and Smart Environments will focus on both the technical and application aspects of these.
The Journal of Ambient Intelligence and Smart Environments (JAISE) serves as a forum to discuss the latest developments on Ambient Intelligence (AmI) and Smart Environments (SmE). Given the multi-disciplinary nature of the areas involved, the journal aims to promote participation from several different communities covering topics ranging from enabling technologies such as multi-modal sensing and vision processing, to algorithmic aspects in interpretive and reasoning domains, to application-oriented efforts in human-centered services, as well as contributions from the fields of robotics, networking, HCI, mobile, collaborative and pervasive computing. This diversity stems from the fact that smart environments can be defined with a variety of different characteristics based on the applications they serve, their interaction models with humans, the practical system design aspects, as well as the multi-faceted conceptual and algorithmic considerations that would enable them to operate seamlessly and unobtrusively. The Journal of Ambient Intelligence and Smart Environments will focus on both the technical and application aspects of these.
The broad areas represented in the journal given the multi-disciplinary nature of the field and applications include:
- Sensors, vision, and networks
- Mobile and pervasive computing
- Human-centered interfaces
- Artificial Intelligence
- Robotics
- Multi-agents
- Societal applications and implications
- Internet of Things
Specific topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Scene and event modeling, representation, and reconstruction
- Applications in health care: assisted living, fall detection, elderly care, patient monitoring, patient rehabilitation, brain-computer interfaces
- Applications in smart homes: home safety, energy efficiency, entertainment, ambience, multimedia
- Applications in smart buildings, smart classrooms, smart cars, in safety, energy efficiency, services
- Modeling environments (homes, hospitals, transportation, roads, offices, classrooms, museums, etc)
- Virtual and immersive reality, augmented reality, multi-modal immersion
- Occupancy-based servicesApplications of combined pervasive / ubiquitous computing with AI
- Automated system setup and environment discovery
- Network middleware and protocols to facilitate SmE
- Innovative sensing devices and innovative uses of existing sensors (e.g. RFID)
- Use of mobile, wireless, visual, and multi-modal sensor networks in intelligent systems
- Virtual smart environments, interfaces with real world, social networks as smart environments
- Sensor data fusion and collaboration in multi-sensor systems and networks
- Mobile/wearable intelligence
- Self-adaptive AmI systems
- Context awareness
- Cognitive and emotional awareness
- Handling preferences of the individual users and user groups
- Mediating conflicting interests
- Behavior modeling
- Intention recognition
- Agent-based approaches to AmI
- Robotics applied to smart environments
- Distributed and collaborative computing and reasoning
- Distributed video surveillance
- Intuitive user interface design, unobtrusiveness, ease of setup, ergonomics
- Human interaction with autonomous systemsNon-restrictive HCI
- Assistive technologies, interfaces for special groups
- Educational interfaces
- Multimodal interfaces
- Human action and gesture interpretation
- Social issues of applications of AmI/SmE
- Legal Issues in AmI
- Intelligent handling of privacy, security and trust
- Technology adoption issues and implications
JAISE welcomes submissions of scientific papers, which will be peer-reviewed. These articles should be prepared following the journal's official format and submitted through the official online submission system. Scientific research papers make up the core of the issues of JAISE.
JAISE also considers less technical and shorter articles for inclusion, which can be useful for the scientific community:
(a) Short articles reporting on PhD theses recently defended in the technical areas relevant to the journal. Articles in this category are typically expected to be one page long and will contain information like the abstract of the thesis, details of the viva (date, place, members of the examination board) and a photo of the event. This article can be written by the student or by one of the supervisors.
(b) Opinion articles and letters which can help our community to reflect, discuss or encourage debate and joint work in certain areas.
Articles in any of these two categories should also be prepared following the journal's official format, but should not be submitted through the official submissions webpage, but sent directly to either of the co-Editors-in-Chief. These types of papers will not be peer-reviewed. The co-Editors-in-Chief will decide on the inclusion of these articles.
Hamid Aghajan | Gent University, Belgium |
Juan Augusto | Middlesex University, UK |
Andrés Munñoz Ortega | Universidad de Murcia, Spain |
Emile Aarts | Technische Universiteit Eindhoven, The Netherlands |
Vic Callaghan | University of Essex, UK |
Diane Cook | Washington State University, USA |
Boris de Ruyter | Philips Research Europe, The Netherlands |
Anind Dey | Carnegie Mellon University, USA |
Toru Ishida | Kyoto University., Japan |
Pieter Jonker | TU Delft University, The Netherlands |
Takeo Kanade | Carnegie Mellon University, USA |
Nicu Sebe | University of Trento, Italy |
Wolfgang Wahlster | DFKI GmbH, Germany |
Somaya Allouch | Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences, The Netherlands |
Andreas Braun | PwC Luxembourg, Luxembourg |
Jeannette Chin | University of East Anglia, UK |
Lukas Esterle | Aarhus University, Denmark |
Francesco Furfari | Italian National Research Council (CNR), Italy |
Matjaz Gams | Jozef Stefan Institute, Slovenia |
Paula Lago | Concordia University, Canada |
Zoltan Nagy | University of Texas at Austin, USA |
Shogo Okada | Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan |
Ana Oliveira Alves | University of Coimbra, Portugal |
Filippo Palumbo | Information Science and Technologies Institute ISTI - CNR, Italy |
Fabio Paternò | Institute for Information Science and Technologies "Alessandro Faedo" - ISTI, Italy |
Davy Preuveneers | K.U. Leuven, Belgium |
Roope Raisamo | University of Tampere, Finland |
Caifeng Shan | Philips Research Europe, The Netherlands |
Norbert Streitz | Smart Future Initiative, Germany |
Egon Van den Broek | Utrecht University, The Netherlands |
Ping Wang | York University, Canada |
Lanyu Xu | Oakland University, USA |