14th Conference on Intelligent Computer Mathematics
July 26 - 31, 2021
Timisoara, Romania
CICM
MathUI
FVPS
FMM
NatFoM
OpenMath
Doctoral Programme
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Invited Speakers
Programme
Proceedings
PC
Important Dates
Call for Papers
Call for Workshops
13th MathUI Workshop 2021
Mathematical User Interaction
at the Conference on Intelligent Computer Mathematics
Timisoara, Romania (online) between July 26 - 31, 2021 (exact date tba.)
Please join us at MathUI'21!
Scope
MathUI is an international workshop for discussing how users can be best supported when interacting with mathematical content, i.e., doing/learning/searching for/viewing/... mathematics using a digital device.
Use cases range from professional mathematicians trying to prove a new theorem up to non-math-oriented people trying to understand the math formula used to calculate interest rates.
What do we know about interactions between users and math?
Which mathematical services can be offered, and can they be meaningfully combined?
How is mathematics for which purpose best represented?
What specifically math-oriented support or platforms are needed?
How can we exploit best practices concerning mathematics for better math-user interactions?
Topics of Interest
We invite all topics that care for the use of mathematics on digital devices and its user experience, for instance,
user-requirements for math interfaces
novel mathematical interfaces
presentation formats
mobile-devices powered mathematics
cultural differences in practices of mathematical languages
didactically sensible scenarios of use
graphs as mathematical interfaces
spreadsheets as mathematical interfaces
manipulations of mathematical expressions
usability studies of mathematical interfaces
This workshop follows a successful series of workshops held at the Conferences on Intelligent Computer Mathematics; it features presentations of brand new ideas in papers selected by a thorough review process, a wide space for discussions, as well as a software demonstration session.
Submissions
Accepted submissions will be published in the CEUR Workshop Proceedings series (http://ceur-ws.org/).
Submission at easyChair (https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=cicm2021): Select
the author role, select the "new submission" tab, and choose MathUI.
The program committee will review the submissions whose comments and recommendations will be sent back by July 21st, requesting a final version (4 - 12 pages) no later than July 25th.
Programme Committee
Andrea Kohlhase (organizer), Neu-Ulm University of Applied Sciences
Paul Libbrecht, IU International University of Applied Science and Cabrilog SAS
Marco Pollanen, Trent University
Moritz Schubotz, FIZ Karlsruhe - Leibniz Institute for Information Infrastructure
Thanks again to all the presenters at MathUI'21: Here you'll find the abstracts of all presented papers!
We present a new annotation tool, called MioGatto, to efficiently build large corpora for grounding math formulae. While in documents in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, math identifiers can be used in multiple meanings in a single document, corpora with annotated coreference relations between identifiers are crucial for the grounding task. Using MioGatto, annotators can produce a list of math concepts for each document, associate one of the math concepts with each occurrence of math identifiers, and annotate the text span that is the source for grounding. In general, manual annotation of coreference relations is a very tough task, but this tool is specialized for building grounding corpora and can annotate them more efficiently than existing general-purpose annotation tools. The tool can be obtained from https://github.com/wtsnjp/MioGatto.
Sophize is a novel mathematics library and discussion platform with a mission to help our users find and organize mathematical proofs. We have extended the Markdown language to represent the connections between mathematical objects that exist across various sources of knowledge. Using the new language, we demonstrated an interactive interface that helps users explore mathematics content on the web. We also utilized this new language to create a novel communication system built specifically to aid mathematicians in solving problems collaboratively. This contribution sketches the basic ideas and provides links to some demos of the new functionality.
Within the MATh project, we develop explanation strategies to help first
year students adapt to unacquainted workflows in university mathematics. These strategies are designed and implemented as sets of rules which are
closely tied to the common practice in first year courses. In order to make the rules easily accessible to beginners
it is useful to align them with commonly known concepts.
Notably, the common experience with creating, continuing and reusing stories in varying situations turns out to be
a promising starting point. We present a story-based approach for generating and structuring mathematical content
within the MATh language and demonstrate that it entails various mathematical
notions like theorem, set, function, theory and model. Due to this intimate relation between stories as structuring constructs and
associated mathematical objects, the approach differs from other systems.
Traditionally, technical documents have been designed for print delivery in letter, A4,
or similar sizes. Even the change to digital delivery using PDF has not changed the
basic layout strategy and desktop screens can cope well. With the advent of mobile
connected devices, it becomes natural to read technical documents (like everything else)
e.g. on smartphones, which may demand other layout tradeoffs.
The document components most affected by this are diagrams and formulae, which -- unlike
text -- cannot simply be reflowed to a new screen size. In this paper, we discuss an experimental study design that helps the investigation of the effect of
linebreaking in mathematical formulae for reading efficiency using eye-tracking
experiments.
Similarly to simple text, mathematical formulæ are a widely accepted language to represent ideas. Other representation of mathematical knowledge exist, e.g. in numeric or geometric forms. However, unlike text, mathematical objects are only transferrable (that is they can enter a transfer process) in limited and particular conditions, in part because encoding the formulæ is limited to encoding a graphical representation. An unsuccessful transfer leaves users with the task of transferring by redoing, retyping, or recreating the content.
Because automatic conversions may be working in many cases and because interoperable encoding and transfers could exist one day, this paper attempts to present scenarios of transfers of formulæ almost independently of what is doable currently. Inspired by the scenarios, a vision of interoperability could be built.
Extending the UFrameIT Framework, we propose an upgrade to the User Interface features that is directly built on the knowledge-based part, MMT. In the game engine, it suffices to interpret the output and visualize it accordingly, resulting in features that work generically and out of the box for all games built with UFrameIT.
Initially, we were using fixed text descriptions and a static UI that created unnecessary mental load when players were trying to match between the abstract problem description and concrete game situations. To improve this, we introduce dynamic UI synchronization. We relate the progress of the player to the abstract formalized solution and give hints accordingly. These hints are generated via
partial views; given a partial solution to the problem, MMT can check the dependencies and point towards the missing information. In the game, we can use this to highlight not yet assigned as well as even not yet existing facts in the game. This way, the player gets immediate feedback during the solution process.
In this study, we analyze computer-aided inquiry-based mathematics learning. A Moodle plug-in associated with the dynamic geometry software CindyJS which can record finegrained log data of learners' manipulations on the web was used. Our previous study indicates that teacher intervention can make student's inquiry systematic and exhaustive by helping them build a semantic circuit across language, symbolism, and visual images which are relevant to the targeted concept. In this study, we try to validate the impact of this kind of teacher intervention by monitoring the log data of manipulations.
While there are numerous linear algebra teaching tools, they tend to be focused on the basics, and not handle the more advanced aspects. This project aims to fill that gap, focusing specifically on methods like Strassen's fast matrix multiplication.
For inquiries, please contact
Andrea Kohlhase, Andrea.Kohlhase@hnu.de
I hope to see you there!
News
Proceedings available online until 27 July at this link