HUMAN BEHAVIOR-COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCE MODELING CONFERENCE 2009
June 23-24, 2009
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Oak Ridge, Tennessee
Computational Social Sciences has become an increasingly active area of research due to the critical knowledge gap in understanding different socio-cultural populations. HB-CMI 2009 is the inaugural conference for ORNL’s Human Behavior IOC, with the objective to foster greater exchange between HSCB researchers and practitioners.
Conference Theme:Fostering knowledge and data sharing to increase the understanding of the context and root cause of human behaviors and to aid in forecasting of plausible future states.
Synopsis:
The Human Behavior-Computational Modeling and Interoperability (HB-CMI 2009) conference is a unique opportunity for research scientists to present their work to an interdisciplinary community at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, one of the nation’s leading national laboratories. HB-CMI includes basic and applied research on computational models and computational-based theories of human behavior and human systems interoperability and integration solutions. Human, Social, Cultural and Behavioral (HSCB) scientists, engineers, application users and technical communities are invited to meet and share new research, technologies, and applications with the academic, military and government community.
Areas of interest include, but are not limited to, the following (in no particular order):
- Human Behavior Models
- Computational Socio-Cultural and Cognitive/Affective Modeling
- Social Networks
- Agent-based models (ABM) and Multi-Agent Systems (MAS)
- Massive Multiplayer, Interactive, Realistic, 3D Engagement Games
- Immersive Models
- Human Systems Interoperability
- Modeling Architecture, Knowledge Representation Systems and Integration
- Behavioral Training and Performance Assessment
- Human System Integration
- Open Topics for Relevant Papers




