Dear reader,
We would like to announce the new special issue of the journal.
Please check at http://www.ijimai.org/issues
Editor's Note:
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Year: 2013, Vol: 2, Number: 3
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The International Journal of Interactive Multimedia and Artificial Intelligence provides an interdisciplinary forum in which scientists and professionals can share their research results and report new advances on Artificial Intelligence and Interactive Multimedia techniques.
The research works presented in this issue are based on various topics of interest, among wich are included: Mobile services, gesture recognition, physics simulation, management decision support, business intelligence, Internet, remote executables, scientific computing, university-industry links, Sony AIBO, Aperios, toolchain, MAS, data fusion, tracks, merge, inference, Homeland Security, european projects, research trends, emerging technologies and desk research.
Almulhim et al. proposes a fuzzy group prioritization method for deriving group priorities/weights from fuzzy pairwise comparison matrices. The proposed method extends the Fuzzy Preferences Programming Method (FPP) by considering the different importance weights of multiple DMs. Detailed numerical examples are used to illustrate the proposed approach.
Klein et al. introduces the Behaviour Assessment Model (BAM), which is designed to gaining insights about how well services enable, enhance and replace human activities. More specifically, the basic columns of the evaluation framework concentrate on service actuation in relation to the current user context, the balance between service usage effort and benefit, and the degree to which community knowledge can be exploited. The evaluation is guided by a process model that specifies individual steps of data capturing, aggregation, and final assessment.
Costa et al. presents SketchyDynamics, a library that intends to facilitate the creation of applications by rapidly providing them a sketch-based interface and physics simulation capabilities. SketchyDynamics was designed to be versatile and customizable but also simple. In fact, a simple application where the user draws objects and they are immediately simulated, colliding with each other and reacting to the specified physical forces, can be created with only 3 lines of code. In order to validate SketchyDynamics design choices, they also present some details of the usability evaluation that was conducted with a proof-of-concept prototype.
Skyrius et al. defines relations between simple and complex informing intended to satisfy different sets of needs and provided by different sets of support tools. The paper attempts to put together decision support and business intelligence technologies, based on common goals of sense-making and use of advanced analytical tools. A model of two interconnected cycles has been developed to relate the activities of decision support and business intelligence. Empirical data from earlier research is used to direct possible further insights into this area.
Ferreira et al. present a study, largely based on academic practice, a simple illustrative example in Geometry is implemented on a distributed system that outsources the computing-intensive tasks to remote servers that may be located in other universities or companies, linked to grids and clusters and so on. The software stack and software developed to support the communication is explained in detail. The architecture developed stresses the interoperability of the software, and a suitable high degree of decoupling between components hosted in various locations. The results of this study motivate further work and serve a practical purpose that may be useful to everyone doing scientific computing.
Castillo et al. presents an agent-based solution for data fusion in Homeland Security. The research is focused on obtaining a Multi-agent system able to inference future enemy‘s actions or behaviors from data received from heterogeneous sensors.presents a revision and an analysis of the Open Data initiative situation in Spain. The analysis looks at origins and concepts, the legal framework, current Initiatives and challenges that must be addressed for the effective reuse of public information industry.
Kertész shows an improvements of the native software development environment (Open-R SDK) provided to program AIBO are presented in the paper. More enhancements are implemented in the core components, some software methodologies are applied to solve a number of restrictions and the achievements are summarized in the contribution.
De La Fuente et al. presents a desk research that analysed available recent studies in the field of Technology Enhanced Learning. This research will be used as a basis to better understand the evolution of the sector, and to focus future research efforts on these sectors and their application to education.
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IJIMAI IS ALREADY INDEXED BY:
Editorial Team
Editor-in-Chief
Dr. Jesús Soto Carrión, Pontifical University of Salamanca, Spain
Dr. Oscar Sanjuán Martínez, Carlos III University, Spain
Dr. Rubén González Crespo, Pontifical University of Salamanca, Spain
Dr. Carlos Enrique Montenegro Marín, Francisco José de Caldas District University, Colombia
Editorial Board Members
Dr. Lei Shu, Osaka University, Japan
Dr. Jinlei Jiang, Dept. of Computer Science & Technology, Tsinghua University, China
Dr. Jörg Thomaschewski, Hochschule Emden/Leer, Emden, Germany
Dr. Luis Joyanes Aguilar, Pontifical University of Salamanca, Spain
Dr. Juan Manuel Cueva Lovelle, University of Oviedo, Spain
Dr. Juan Pavón Mestras, Complutense University of Madrid, Spain
Dr. Manuel Pérez Cota, University of Vigo, Spain
Dr. Alvaro Rocha, LIACC, University of Porto
Dr. Walter Colombo, Hochschule Emden/Leer, Emden, Germany
Dr. Javier Bajo Pérez, Polytechnic University of Madrid, Spain
Dra. B. Cristina Pelayo G. Bustelo, University of Oviedo, Spain
Dr. José Manuel Sáiz Álvarez, Nebrija University, Spain
Dr. Raman Maini, Punjabi University, Patiala, India
Dr. JianQiang Li, NEC Labs China
Dr. Ke Ning, CIMRU, NUIG, Ireland
Dr. Victor Martín García, Pontifical University of Salamanca, Spain
Dr. Alonso Secades Vidal, Pontifical University of Salamanca, Spain
Dr. David L. La Red Martínez, Universidad Nacional del Nordeste, Argentina
Dr. Héctor Fernández, INRIA, Rennes, France
Dr. Yago Saez, Carlos III University of Madrid, Spain
Dr. Andrés G. Castillo Sanz, Pontifical University of Salamanca, Spain
Dr. Pablo Molina, Autonoma University of Madrid, Spain
Dr. Jesús Barrasa, Polytechnic University of Madrid, Spain
Dr. Juan Chulilla, OnLine and Offline CEO, Spain
Dr. José Miguel Castillo, Tecnalia Research & Innovation, Spain
Dr. Sukumar Senthilkumar, University Sains Malaysia, Malaysia
Dra. Sara Rodríguez González, University of Salamanca, Spain
Dr. José Javier Rainer Granados, Bureau Veritas Business School, Spain
Dr. Edward Rolando Nuñez Valdez, Open Software Foundation, Spain
Dr. Jordán Pascual Espada, ElasticBox (Seattle), United States
Dr. Raúl Arrabales Moreno, U-TAD University, Spain
MSc. Giovanny Mauricio Tarazona Bermúdez, Francisco José de Caldas District University, Colombia
Diego Blanco, Complutense University of Madrid, Spain
Diego Sanjuán Martínez, Vector Information Technologies, United Kingdom
Elisa Garcia Gordo, Adif, Spain
Gloria Garcia, Adif, Spain
Ana Soto, Complutense University of Madrid, Spain
Focus and Scope
Topics covered by IJIMAI include but are not limited to:
Artificial Intelligence
- AI and Multimedia techniques for enhanced accesibility systems.
- AI in Games.
- AI for Software Engineering.
- AI for Ubiquitous Computing.
- AI for Web Intelligence Applications.
- AI Parallel Processing Tools (hardware/software).
- AI Tools for CAD and VLSI
- AI Tools for Computer Vision and Speech Understanding.
- AI Tools for Multimedia, Cognitive Informatics.
- AI components for Service Oriented Arquitectures (SOA).
- Neural Networks for AI.
- Fuzzy logic systems.
- Case base reasoning systems.
- Heuristic and AI Planning Strategies and Tools,
- Natural Language Understanding.
Data Mining and Knowledge Management
- Knowledge-Based/Expert Systems.
- Knowledge Management and Processing Tools.
- Knowledge Representation Languages.
- Data Mining and Machine Learning Tools.
Semantic Web, Web Services an Networks
- Semantic Web.
- Semantic Reasoners.
- Semantic web services.
- Upper ontologies.
Interactive Multimedia
- Visual Perception.
- Analysis/Design/Testing.
- Social networks.
- Human Computer Interactions
- User Experience
Specials
- Multimedia and artificial intelligence components for Bioinformatics systems.
- Intelligent Services (Rule based systems). ILOG / JESS / MS Business Rules / Yasu technologies.
- OpenCyc in real applications.
- Reasoning using belief networks (MSBNx, GENIE, BNJ, Weka, etc...).
IJIMAI 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 IJIMAI. IJIMAI also considers less technical and shorter articles for inclusion, which can be useful for the scientific community:
- 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.
- 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 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.
We encourage readers to register now
IJIMAI Team