CALL FOR PAPERS SBIM 2008 Fifth Eurographics workshop on Sketch-Based Interfaces and Modeling June 11-13, Annecy, France http://www.eg.org/sbm co-located with NPAR 2008 and the Annecy Animation Film Festival Important Dates March 15, 2008 Paper Deadline April 20, 2008 Notification of Decisions May 2, 2008 Final Papers Due June 11-13, 2008 Conference Dates Call for Papers Although computers are indispensable tools, pencil and paper still reign in the early stages of design in domains such as engineering, architectural design and in the entertainment industry, from 3D animation to video games. Enabled by advances in pen-based computer hardware, digital sketch-based interfaces are emerging as a way to combine the quick and intuitive feel of paper with the advantages of digital technology. However, fully realizing the potential of these sketch-based systems requires effective user interface design and underlying algorithms to analyse the input. Interpreting the users\' sketches as advanced 2D or 3D models is a fascinating research area that builds on human perception, shape recognition and geometric modeling techniques. In addition to sketching from scratch, many tasks related to modeling, editing and control can be made more efficient through systems that allow the user to annotate existing data, from text and diagrams to images, videos or 3D shapes. The workshop will explore models, algorithms and technologies needed to enable effective sketch-based interfaces. It will investigate novel methods for classification and recognition of hand-drawn shapes, and the ways of using these techniques for creating or editing digital models, from text and 2D diagrams to 3D shapes. Likewise, the workshop will explore the application of sketch-based interfaces to domains as diverse as 3D computer graphics and animation, CAD, diagram editing, note taking, etc. Finally, the workshop will welcome empirical user studies aimed at clarifying the nature of sketch-based interfaces and comparing them to other interaction techniques. Created in 2004, SBIM provides a unique venue for researchers and students interested in sketch-based techniques to interact with one another, share lessons learned, show new results and discuss open issues. This year, the workshop will be held in Annecy, France, a friendly little town surrounded by the beautiful French Alps. It will take place during the famous Annecy Animation Film Festival and be held back to back with NPAR\'2008 (the premier conference for techniques in expressive rendering and animation), encouraging participation in both events. The two-days workshop will include paper presentations (single track), coffee breaks, a social event and invited talks. All are welcome to attend the workshop; submission of a paper is not required for attendance. The proceedings will be published in the EG Workshop series and made available online through the Eurographics Digital Library. Authors are invited to submit original papers on topics in pen-based 2D and 3D modeling, sketch recognition, and pen-based interface design, including, but not limited to: * Multimodal interfaces for sketching * Novel sketch input devices * Novel pen-based interaction techniques * Low level ink processing and pen stroke segmentation * Sketch parsing, classification and recognition * Sketch-based interfaces for CAD systems * Sketch-based modeling and editing of 3D shapes * Sketch-based control of animations * Sketch-based interfaces for other applications (surface editing, diagram creation, mathematical annotations, games, etc.) * Rendering techniques for sketch-based systems (NPR) * Sketches for Medical and Volume data editing * Sketch-based retrieval of multimedia information * Usability studies of sketch-based systems * Studies of the impact of sketching on creativity and design The workshop is small and provides plenty of time for interaction, so authors of workshop papers are strongly encouraged to provide demos. Submission Information Authors are requested to submit original research papers, no longer than 8 pages, with the main body set in Eurographics Conference Paper Format. All submissions are electronic. You can get more information and download a set of LaTeX style files (starting early 2008) from the workshop web site: http://www.eg.org/sbm Please contact the program chairs (alvarado@cs.hmc.edu or marie-paule.cani@inrialpes.fr) with any submission questions. Conference Organization Chairs: General chair: Karan Singh Paper co-chairs: Christine Alvarado & Marie-Paule Cani EG SBIM working group chair: Joaquim Jorge Program Committee: Marc Alexa, Technical University of Berlin, Germany Ken Anjyo, OLM Digital, Japan Loic Barthes, University of Toulouse, France Alexandra Bartolo, University of Malta Ronen Barzel, ACM siggraph, USA Bill Baxter, OLM Digital, Japan Daniel Cohen-Or, Tel Aviv University, Israel Mario Costa Sousa, University of Calgary, Canada Randall Davis, MIT, USA Oliver Deussen, Konstanz University, Germany Julie Dorsey, Yale University, USA Ellen Yi-Luen Do, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Adam Finkelstein, Princeton University, USA Andrew Forsberg, Brown University, USA Ken Forbus, Northwestern University, USA Xavier Granier, University of Bordeaux, France Cindy Grimm, Washington University in St Louis, USA Mark Gross, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Tracy Hammond, Texas A&M University, USA Takeo Igarashi, University of Tokyo, Japan Joaquim Jorge, Instituto Superior Tecnico, Portugal Prem Kalra, IIT-Delhi, India Burak Kara, Carnegie Mellon University, USA James Landay, University of Washington, USA Edward Lank, Univeristy of Waterloo, Canada Joseph LaViola Jr., University of Central Florida, USA Jean-Claude Leon, INP Grenoble, France M. Gopi, University of California, Irvine, USA Beryl Plimmer, University of Auckland, New Zealand Shengfeng Qin, Brunel University, UK Karthik Ramani, Purdue University, USA Eric Saund, PARC, USA Metin Sezgin, University of Cambridge, UK Michael Shilman, Microsoft Research, USA Tom Stahovich, University of California, Riverside, USA Michiel van de Panne, University of British Columbia, Canada Xin Wang, Microsoft Research, USA Liu Wenyin, City University of Hong Kong Brian Wyvill, University of Victoria, Canada Bob Zeleznik, Brown University, USA Sun Zhengxing, Nanjing University, China