The conference will be held on campus on February 2nd, 2024. The event is divided into sessions, there will be a plenary session in the morning where everyone should be present; afterward the different track sessions will happen in parallel. The plenary session contains the pitch of best papers nominated from all the submissions and the relative award ceremony.
On this day we will offer a takeout lunch (lunchbag) for those that registered for it. The lunchbags will be distributed in CR 2G.
Notes on the presentations:
The slots allocated for the presentations at the conference will be 15 minutes per paper. This includes the presentation itself (min. 10 and max. 12 minutes), and 3 minutes for questions. There will be no format for the slides. The students are free to select their preferred format as long as it is clean. All presenters are to approach the track chairs before the beginning of their tracks (or the module coordinator before the plenary) and provide the presentations via USB stick or email in order to expedite the presentation process.
The proceedings will be published on-line with open access policies. The proceedings of the Past editions are still available for your reference.
This is the general conference program, please note that many tracks have implemented different times for their sessions in order to fit all presentations. See below in which track you belong and which session you are supposed to attend.
There will be two main sessions:
The plenary session (8:40-10:00). Everyone should first enter to the plenary session. It starts with a short opening. After that, 3 best paper award winners will give a 2-min pitch followed by 3-min QA. They will still give the full presentation in the parallel track session. This is only to give them the chance to stand on the stage and show themselves. Then we enter to the ceremony, where each supervisor of the winners will give a 1-minute speech to explain why the paper is nominated.
Parallel track sessions (10:15 - 12:30). After the plenary session, the participants should enter to the corresponding track session according to the conference programme. The students will give presentations in order. For each room, the number of presentations varies. At the end of the session, audience will select the best presentation.
Note: The presentation order within the track session is organized by the track chair, mainly depending on the availability of the supervisors. If you have special requests, please contact your track chair.
8:45 Opening
8:50 -9:30 Pitch of Best Papers
Julian van Santen - Using LLM Chatbots to Improve the Learning Experience in Functional Programming Courses
Justification: Leveraging LLMs in education is a hot topic right now, and this is a particularly good treatment of it. The student was very systematic, explored the vast ocean of related work, made a reasonable overview of current trends. He also used state of the art practices to develop a discipline of constructing useful prompts of various kinds, and compared them to one another. The next is to wrap this is some plugin, and we have a sandboxed solution ready for a pilot study. This could potentially have a lot of impact.
Max Jeltes - Analyzing the use of renewable energy in Dutch web hosting through DNS measurement data
Justification: Given increasing awareness on the importance of making the Internet more environmentally sustainable, this paper asks a timely question: "To what extent do web hosting providers located in the Netherlands use renewable energy to make their websites available on the internet, according to the Green Web Foundation?" To address this question, the paper systematically uses data from various sources, e.g., DNS measurements by OpenINTEL, top domains, Green Web Foundation's list of green hosting providers, to first identify the servers hosted in the Netherlands and consequently quantify the ratio of domains that are certified as "green" by Green Web Foundation, the breakdown according to top level domains, and how widely Dutch government websites are hosted on green domains. The paper offers novel insights, focused on the Netherlands, and can have an impact by motivating relevant entities, e.g., EZK, to pay more attention to their choice in hosting providers to become greener.
Oskar Johannes Fromm - The impact of Digital Product Passports on Consumer Behavior in the Electronics Industry
Justification: The paper addresses the novel concept of Digital Product Passports (DPPs) and explores their potential impact on consumer behavior in the electronics industry. Oskar not only delves into the theoretical aspects of how DPPs are intended to influence security perceptions, environmental sustainability awareness, and purchase decisions but also promotes DPPs as tool to help companies getting visibility on their data. DPPs offer transparency about product composition and supply chains. Oskar's study proposes a true experimental design to empirically test these effects in a real-life setting, aiming to bridge theoretical and practical understanding, and contributes to global efforts in achieving supply chain sustainability. His research aims to fill a gap in the existing literature by focusing on consumers as primary stakeholders in the DPP journey. With his research Oskar sheds light on the role of DPPs in fostering a circular economy and how to enhance transparency within supply chains.
9:45-10:00 Award ceremony
10:00 - 10:15 Break
Track 1. Intelligent Interaction
Track chair: Mariët Theune
CR 3E
10:15 - 11:30
Jipp Krabbenborg - A Novel Approach Using Smoothing to Detect Errors in OpenPose Estimated Running Data
Cas ten Have - Change point detection of fatigue using the martingale statistic
Tessa van Belois - Voice Query Clarification for Children
Minke Bohlmeijer - Systematic Literature Review on Interaction Design used for Museum Learning
Lieke Turenhout - Cognitive enhancement through play: Crafting an Engaging Game-Based Intervention for Alzheimer's Disease.
11:30: Poll for best presentation
Track 2. Information Management
Track chair: Marcos Machado
CR 2L
10:15 - 11:15
Julia Blok - Digital Product Passports: Increasing Transparency in the Fashion Industry
Louis Daniël Lizarazo Fuentes - Validating Time Series Models for Forecasting Microbiology Laboratory Test Volumes
Anton Tsankov - Leveraging Information Visualization, Pattern Identification, and Anomaly Detection in Support of Tactical Analysis of Healthcare Contracts
Alexandru Matcov - Explainable AI in Credit Risk Assessment for External Customers
11:15 - 11:30 Break
11:30 - 12:30
Jurre de Ruiter - Developing Effective Autonomous Driving for Sim Racing through Reinforcement Learning in Assetto Corsa
Daniel Safavi Zadeh - Unravelling the Information Asymmetry in Threat Intelligence
Mengmeng Li - Cybersecurity meets AI
Michiel van Huijstee - Enhancing Learning Management Systems: A Novel Approach to Improve Usability through Learning Analytics
12:45: Poll for best presentation
Track 3. Software Technology and Formal Methods
Track chair: Peter Lammich
CR 3B
10:15 - 11:15
Stijn Dijkstra - Finding Smaller Parity Game Solutions by Identifying and Solving Subgames using Oink
Floris Heinen - Improving the creation of AIGs from reactive synthesis
Erik Oosting - A fast instruction language for functional programs
Chris Bleeker - Measuring Code Modernity in Rust
11:15 - 11:30 Break
11:30 - 12:30
Everard de Vree - Forging a differential tester for Haskell compilers using Xsmith
12:30: Poll for best presentation
Tracks 4. Pervasive Computing and Internet of Things & 8. Information Systems Services and Interoperability
Track chair: Yanqiu Huang & Leon de Vries
CR 3D
10:45 - 11:15
Tariq Riahi - Contactless Heartbeat Estimation with FMCW Radar
Koen de Jong - Transforming OntoUML models to the OpenAI Specification
11:15: Poll for best presentation
Track 5. Network Systems and network security
Track chair: Suzan Bayhan
CR 3F
10:15 - 11:15
Jan van Zwol - Splitting the watermark up, a steganographic watermarking algorithm for H.264 with reduced image distortion
Ujjwal Dodeja, BaatCheet - Android chat application coupling End-to-End encryption and Image Steganography using LSB substitution
Manya Narkar - Optimal Passwordless Continuous Authentication Measures for Remote Employees
Faizan Mazhar Qureshi - Image Tampering Detection in Social Media
11:15 - 11:30 Break
Barry ter Heegde - Building a Generalized DNS Resilience Tool using the Internet Yellow Pages
Rik van de Haterd - Enhancing Privacy and Security in IoT Environments through Secure Multiparty Computation
Timothy Runhaar - Secure AI-Enhanced Student Engagement Analysis
12:30 : Poll for best presentation
Track 6. Data Science
Track chair: Nacir Bouali
CR 3G
10:15 - 11:15
Tim van de Wetering - Exploring Layer-specific Quantization in CNN-based Selective Sweep Detection
Job van Dieten - Attention Mechanisms in Natural Language Processing
Oleksii Kyryk - Enhancing Spatial Relationships Detection in text: Analyzing methodologies and managing ambiguity
Saad Khalil - Differentially Private Synthetic Data Generation using Large Language Models
Ruben de Koning - A Comparative Study of Event Detection Algorithms for Energy Disaggregation
11:15 - 11:30 Break
11:30 - 12:30
Darrell Tufto - Predicting Quality Issues in Manufactured Goods by means of Process Mining in Enterprise Resource Planning Systems
Wout Velthuis - Analysing bottlenecks in production processes with the help of process mining
Thomas Bostelaar - Test-Time Adaptation for Skin Lesion Classification
Stijn van het Reve - Detecting Rare Diseases: Autoencoders for Detecting Anomalies in Medical Imaging
12:30: Poll for best presentation
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