1st International Workshop on the Principles and Applications of Spatial Hearing

We are pleased to announce that the 1st International Workshop on the Principles and Applications of Spatial Hearing (IWPASH) will be held this November at Miyagi Zao Royal Hotel near Sendai, Japan. This workshop is the first international workshop that intensively discusses principles and applications of spatial hearing. This is planned as an extension of a series of two Japanese workshops held in 2002 and 2005. The workshop will involve about 20 lectures in a single-track program by invited speakers, and poster and demo presentations by contributors.The IWPASH Technical Program Committee is calling for poster/demo proposals, which should be sent to iwpash@ais.riec.tohoku.ac.jp using the submission form below.The content of your presentation does not need to be absolutely novel, and topics relating to spatial hearing (in a broad sense) are welcome. An on-line submission system will be also available soon athttp://www.riec.tohoku.ac.jp/iwpash. Camera-ready papers of 2-4 pages (single column) for accepted proposals will be due by September 30th 2009.We are looking forward to your participation in IWPASH.Call for demos and posters:Important dates: 

  • Poster and demo proposal deadline: 31st July 2009
  • Notification of acceptance: 20th August 2009
  • Deadline for camera-ready submission: 30th September 2009

 Submission formTitle:Author(s):Affiliation(s):Classification of presentation: poster/demoKeywords (within five):Abstract (50~100 words):Please fill the form and send to iwpash@ais.riec.tohoku.ac.jp.The current candidates for invited speakers: 

  • Virginia Best (University of Sydney)
  • Jonas Braasch (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute)
  • Douglas Brungart (Air Force Research Laboratory)
  • Jorg Buchholz (Technical University of Denmark)
  • Ramani Duraiswami (University of Maryland)
  • Wesley Grantham (Vanderbilt University Medical Center)
  • Dorte Hammershoi (Aalborg University)
  • Kazuhiro Iida (Chiba Institute of Technology)
  • Yukio Iwaya (Tohoku University)
  • Brian F.G. Katz (LIMSI-CNRS)
  • Yang-Hann Kim (KAIST)
  • Tapio Lokki (Helsinki University of Technology)
  • William L. Martens (University of Sydney)
  • Ewan McPherson (University of Western Ontario)
  • Takanori Nishino (Nagoya University)
  • Young Jin Park (KAIST)
  • Ville Pulkki (Helsinki University of Technology)
  • Griffin Romigh (Carnegie Mellon University)
  • Brian Simpson (Air Force Research Laboratory)
  • Hironori Takemoto/Hiroaki Kato (NICT)
  • Tsuyoshi Usagawa (Kumamoto University)
  • Pavel Zahorik (University of Louisville)

 

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