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Special Sessions

Special sessions are very small and specialized events to be held during the conference as a set of oral and poster presentations that are highly specialized in some particular theme or consisting of the works of some particular international project. The goal of special sessions (minimum 4 papers; maximum 9) is to provide a focused discussion on innovative topics. All accepted papers will be published in a special section of the conference proceedings book, under an ISBN reference, and on digital support. All papers presented at the conference venue will be available at the SCITEPRESS Digital Library. SCITEPRESS is a member of CrossRef and every paper is given a DOI (Digital Object Identifier). The proceedings are submitted for indexation by SCOPUS, Google Scholar, DBLP, Semantic Scholar, EI and Web of Science / Conference Proceedings Citation Index.


Special session proposals are accepted until:

November 27, 2024


If you wish to propose a new Special Session please kindly fill out and submit this Expression of Interest form.

SPECIAL SESSIONS LIST

CSME 20256th International Special Session on Computer Supported Music Education
Chair(s): Luca Andrea Ludovico

EKM 20257th Special Session on Educational Knowledge Management
Chair(s): Lilia Cheniti Belcadhi, Christine Lahoud and Marie-Helene Abel

AIG 2025Special Session on Automatic Item Generation
Chair(s): Gregor Damnik

6th International Special Session on Computer Supported Music Education - CSME 2025

Paper Submission: January 30, 2025
Authors Notification: February 13, 2025
Camera Ready and Registration: February 21, 2025


Chair

Luca Andrea Ludovico
Università degli Studi di Milano
Italy
e-mail
 
Scope

The goal of this special session is to investigate the impact of computer-based approaches on music education. Specifically, contributions should focus on the development and use of hardware devices, software, and, more generally, advanced technologies (e.g., new-generation mobile networks, artificial intelligence, etc.) aiming to support music learning/teaching and to improve player's performance.


7th Special Session on Educational Knowledge Management - EKM 2025

Paper Submission: January 30, 2025
Authors Notification: February 13, 2025
Camera Ready and Registration: February 21, 2025


Co-chairs

Lilia Cheniti Belcadhi
ISITCom, PRINCE Research Lab, Sousse University
Tunisia
e-mail
 
Christine Lahoud
CIAD-Lab, University of Technology of Belfort-Montbéliard
France
e-mail
 
Marie-Helene Abel
HEUDIASYC CNRS UMR, University of Compiègne
France
e-mail
 
Scope

The high volume of information in organizations has led researchers to focus on knowledge management as a form of competitive and success leverage. The interest in KM for the educational domain has been growing in recent years as a strategic planning for its sustainable development. The use of the KM in education can lead for instance to develop strategies to improve teaching effectiveness and student retention, making decisions, analyze the importance of social media and games in learning, generate exam’s questions from text files, or provide student guidance. For this edition, we welcome submissions reporting original research that explores how KM technologies can solve problems related to the management and analysis of educational information in academic or professional learning institutions


Special Session on Automatic Item Generation - AIG 2025

Paper Submission: January 30, 2025
Authors Notification: February 13, 2025
Camera Ready and Registration: February 21, 2025


Chair

Gregor Damnik
Faculty of Computer Science, TU Dresden
Germany
e-mail
 
Scope

Due to the digitalization of a huge amount of learning processes, the interest for digital assessment methods has been growing in recent years. However, creating test items by hand is a time- and resource consuming procedure.
In the special session, we will discuss Automatic Item Generation (AIG), which is a process that significantly differs from the traditional way of item creation. In AIG, experts do not write single items; rather they create a highly structured representation of the subject area, which is called cognitive model. Afterwards, experts create an item model that can be used as a pattern for an item pool. Lastly, software is used to create a bunch of items by combining the cognitive and the item model.



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