ACM SIGGRAPH Sunday Workshop: Grand Challenges in Chronic Healthcare

ACM SIGGRAPH Workshop:  Grand Challenges in Chronic Healthcare

Organizer: Evan Hirsch The SIGGRAPH community has long done work in the area of medicine and healthcare, with seminal work as far back as Sungroff & Greenberg [SIGGRAPH 78] and Drebin, Carpenter & Hanrahan [SIGGRAPH 88].   Across most of the globe, chronic conditions are starting to consume a disproportionate share of available healthcare resources. While this trend is problematic, it also creates many new challenges and opportunities in monitoring, data mining, simulation, visualization, interactivity and the use of autonomous characters that are relevant to the interests and skills of the SIGGRAPH community. The purpose of this workshop is to raise awareness, highlight challenges, and focus on research and partnership opportunities in the area of healthcare for chronic conditions.  A July 2017 Rand Report estimates that 90% of US Healthcare costs are spent on chronic conditions. Historically, much of the innovation and systemic improvements in healthcare have come from within the “traditional” sources: medical academia, pharmaceutical and device manufacturer R&D facilities, and care provider organizations.  While those fields have yielded many great results, recent trends have also shown that multi-disciplinary teams that combine medical expertise with the rich expertise from outside industries such as design, data-science, simulation, robotics, scientific visualization, machine vision, and many others can yield great impact for broad populations of people across the world.  Put another way, this area is ripe for contribution from members of the SIGGRAPH community.  Additionally, there are tremendous funding opportunities for the SIGGRAPH community to work toward making healthcare more efficient and effective, including NSF programs such as Smart Health and Cyber Physical Systems, as well as substantial commercial investment. With this inaugural workshop, held in conjunction with ACM SIGGRAPH 2018, in Vancouver, BC, Canada on August 12, 2018, we will bring together researchers and practitioners in a variety of areas in healthcare to understand the research challenges relevant to the SIGGRAPH community. We will discuss both the research and advanced development issues around these challenges in healthcare over the day-long program. The format of this workshop will include invited healthcare experts to set the stage for this conversation. Each speaker deliver a 45 minute interactive talk on some of the larger challenges they see in healthcare from their perspective, followed by an interactive discussion with the group.   We will have industry leaders deliver talks on the following segments of the healthcare (tentative agenda):
  • Healthcare Informatics; Interfacing with patient data
  • Challenges in Chronic Care
    • Cardiac care
    • Diabetes
  • Mental Health, games, AR and VR
  • Monitoring systems in healthcare

Speakers

Dr. Jose Barral Dr. Barral is the Chair of the Department of Foundational Science at the Kaiser Permanente School of Medicine. In this role, Dr. Barral provides overall leadership for faculty members in this department and oversees education of medical students in the basic biomedical sciences. He collaborates with the Departments of Health Systems Science and Clinical Science on the development of educational activities that incorporate concepts and skills from each of these three major disciplines into the curriculum. Dr. Barral serves as an integral member of the Founding Dean’s leadership team to develop the strategic and tactical plan for implementation of the School. At the University of Texas Medical Branch Dr. Barral served as tenured Professor and Vice Chair for Operations in the Department of Neuroscience, Cell Biology & Anatomy in the School of Medicine, Senior Associate Dean for Academic Affairs in the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, and Director of the MD-PhD Combined Degree Program. Dr. Barral’s commitment to education and research has been recognized by numerous awards and appointments, including the University of Texas Regents’ Outstanding Teaching Award, induction into the University of Texas Kenneth I. Shine, M.D., Academy of Health Science Education, and selection as a Pew Scholar in the Biomedical Sciences. Dr. Barral obtained his medical degree from the Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey in México and his PhD in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology from Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. Subsequently, he performed his post-doctoral studies on in vivo protein folding and molecular chaperones at the Max Planck Institute for Biochemistry in Germany. Dr. Barral’s work has been published in prestigious journals, including Nature, Science and Cell. Sam Glassenberg Sam has spent his career leading teams and companies across the video game industry. He began his career at LucasArts, and subsequently moved on to Microsoft, where he managed the DirectX graphics team – responsible for designing and standardizing GPU capabilities across the industry. Sam joined video game startup FTX Games as CEO in 2008. Under his leadership, the company became a premier publisher of mobile games based on Hollywood movies and TV shows including Mission:Impossible, Rocky, and The Hunger Games.  FTX games was successfully acquired by Playtech (PTEC) in 2016. As CEO and founder of Level Ex, Sam and his team of veteran game designers and developers unleash the latest rendering techniques and game mechanics from the video game industry into the field of medicine. Level Ex’s mobile games have rallied hundreds of thousands of healthcare professionals across multiple medical specialties. Sam’s name is featured on several technology patents, popular video game titles, and he has been the recipient of numerous industry awards. He currently sits on major industry advisory boards, including Intel and Khronos. Sam holds an M.S. in Computer Science, Graphics from Stanford University, and a B.S. in Computer Engineering from the University of Illinois. Christopher Khoury Christopher Khoury is vice president of the environmental intelligence unit at the American Medical Association (AMA). The unit focuses on assessing and interacting with emerging elements across health care, business and policy sectors. He also leads collaborations, strategic partnerships and core innovation initiatives at the AMA. He has worked in the healthcare sector for 17 years. Prior to joining AMA, he was senior manager at PwC’s Health Research Institute (HRI), where he developed thought leadership and provided strategic guidance to clients on biopharmaceuticals, life sciences, health reform, and consumer issues. He began his career in medical device R&D and product development, and subsequently in health data analytics at an academic medical center. Christopher is the author of several publications and a frequent presenter on business issues across healthcare. He also holds patents covering biotechnology subjects. He earned an M.B.A. from The Ohio State University Fisher College of Business magna cum laude. Christopher received his B.S. from the University of Illinois and holds an M.S. in biomedical engineering from the University of Wisconsin. Abner Mason Abner Mason is the Founder and CEO of ConsejoSano, the only patient engagement and care navigation solution designed to help clients activate their multicultural patient populations to better engage with the healthcare system. ConsejoSano’s clients are typically health plans and provider groups serving Medicaid and Medicare Advantage members and patient populations. ConsejoSano utilizes multilingual, multi-channel engagement (2-way SMS, voice, etc.) along with culturally relevant messaging to increase engagement, lower costs and improve health outcomes related to care for multicultural populations that face cultural, language, and social challenges in accessing care. Through healthcare navigators that provide in-language support, ConsejoSano builds trust with at-risk patients and steers them to more effective self-care and utilization of their healthcare benefits. Abner is Founder and President of Healthtech for Medicaid (HT4M), a non-profit seeking to increase innovation in Medicaid, and he is a member of the Founder’s Council for United States of Care, a non-profit launched and headed by former CMS Administrator Andy Slavitt focused on ensuring access to quality, affordable healthcare for all Americans. Abner previously served as Founder and CEO of the Workplace Wellness Council of Mexico, which provides member companies with access to cutting edge workplace wellness programs and a forum to share best practices. With over 100 clients including 40 multi-nationals, the Mexico Wellness Council is now the leading workplace wellness company in Mexico. From 2002 – 2009, Abner served as Founder and Executive Director of AIDS Responsibility Project, where he led the successful efforts to create CONAES and JaBCHA, the first business councils on HIV/AIDS in Mexico and Jamaica. Abner was appointed by US President George W. Bush to the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS, where he served as Chairman of the International Sub-Committee from 2002 – 2005. Abner also served as Chief Policy Advisor, Chief Secretary, and Undersecretary of Transportation and Construction for Massachusetts Governors Paul Cellucci and Jane Swift from 1997 – 2002. Patrick Wayte Patrick Wayte is Senior Vice President of the AHA’s Center for Health Technology and Innovation. In this role he leads integrated digital health initiatives across the health continuum – with a focus on secondary prevention, healthcare transition, chronic pain relief via CBD, and the use and application of the AHA’s science to digital platforms and technologies. Patrick is also spear-heading new business models in digital health solutions and services with a particular emphasis in remote patient monitoring, tele-health, social connectivity, habit design and reward models, with the intent of achieving scalable and definable health outcomes at health and wellness company Gold Bee. Technology and channel partnerships are a key emphasis for this work and Patrick is lead for building and managing key channel and technology partners that will help the AHA move squarely into the lives of healthcare consumers (patients-caregivers-families), through a variety of different channels and mediums, with a focus on improving health understanding and outcomes – connecting people with their health, providers and with each other. Prior to the American Heart Association and his role in healthcare, Patrick held positions in integrated marketing, strategy and new product development in the telecommunications and automotive industries with a focus on developing new lines of business through acquisition-partnerships-innovation. Patrick lives with his family in Dallas and holds a degree in Economics from the University of California, San Diego and an MBA from Vanderbilt University.

Logistics

A $40 registration fee is required by 9am Pacific Time on Tuesday Aug 7 to attend lunch. Unregistered attendees may participate if space allows, but lunch will not be provided. Applications will be accepted on first come/first served basis until August 7th, 9AM PDTApply to participate!
Meet the ACM SIGGRAPH Candidates

Meet the ACM SIGGRAPH Candidates

The ACM SIGGRAPH election window is now open and will remain open until August 15, 2018.  There are two races being held, one for Treasurer and the other for Director At Large in which the top two candidate will be elected.  Those elected will be starting their terms September 1, 2018. 

Each candidate has created a position paper based on their vision of what they hope to accomplish in their term of office.  The candidates were also asked to do an ACM SIGGRAPH Member profile.  Please read about their positions, position statements and member profile. These documents will be useful for making an informed decision.  Learn about the candidates and cast your vote!

Treasurer Candidates

Director At Large Candidates

Members of ACM SIGGRAPH who are in good standing as of June 1, 2018 have been sent voting information in an email message or letter from Election Services Corporation (ESC). If ACM does not have an email address on file, members will receive voting information via postal mail. Members also have the option of requesting a paper ballot. If you have not received an email from ESC, please contact them at acmsighelp@electionservicescorp.com or toll-free at 1-866-720-4357.

Thesis Fast Forward

Thesis Fast Forward

Make an Impression

To provide more young presenters with a platform for sharing innovative ideas and gaining valuable exposure, SIGGRAPH 2018 is introducing the first ever Thesis Fast Forward program. Doctoral students in the final stage of their Ph.D. studies, or Ph.D. degree holders within a year of graduation, are encouraged to submit to this event. The central element of the submission will be a three-minute video presentation by the candidate, explaining the central theme of their thesis, using no more than two supporting slides. The intent is to make the presentation accessible to a non-expert audience, representative of the typical cross-section of SIGGRAPH attendees.

Based on the video submissions and, as a secondary criterion on the provided abstracts, a jury will select up to 12 candidates who will be asked to perform three-minute oral presentations live at a special session at SIGGRAPH 2018. A panel of experts will provide immediate commentary after each live presentation and select a best performance. The live presentations will be judged solely on the content of the live three-minute presentation.

All selected candidates will be awarded an upgradeable Select Conference registration (upon commitment to participate in the live event). Submissions are open through Thursday, 28 June 2018. Finalists for the live event will be notified on Tuesday, 3 July 2018.

https://s2018.siggraph.org/conference/conference-overview/thesis-fast-forward/

Thesis Fast Forward Committee:

  • Eftychios Sifakis, University of Wisconsin-Madison

  • M. Alex. O. Vasilescu, Associate Director, UCLA Computer Graphics and Vision Lab

Submission Guidelines

The core component of a submission is a presentation video with duration no more than 3 minutes. In this video, the applicants should summarize the key components of their thesis, its merit and potential impact. Up to two presentation slides can be used as an optional backdrop to the presenter, who must be clearly visible in the video. The submission video should be provided via a web link (a link to a video on media sharing website such as YouTube is recommended to avoid encoding issues, but a direct URL to a video file is also acceptable).

The material to be submitted on the EasyChair Website should be a single PDF file, with the following contents:

  • A cover page, listing the applicant's name, affiliation, tentative or final dissertation title, and the actual (in the past) or future anticipated date of PhD degree conferral. This date should be no earlier than 1 September 2017, and no later than 31 August 2019.
    The cover page should also list the link to the video submission itself as mentioned earlier.

  • An optional addendum of up to two pages can be used to include an extended abstract, in the SIGGRAPH publication format, providing additional context or technical details on the applicant's dissertation work. Not including this extra material will not, in any way, disqualify the applicant from selection, as the video submission is fundamentally the basis on which the selection will be made.

Submission Website : https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=siggraphtff18

 

Call for Candidates for the ACM SIGGRAPH Executive Committee

Call for Candidates for the ACM SIGGRAPH Executive Committee and Standing Committees

We are looking for Candidates to run for Director at Large (three positions). For information on these positions please see ACM SIGGRAPH Elections page. All candidates must be Professional members of ACM and ACM SIGGRAPH. If you are interested, please contact Rebecca Strzelec.

The Meet the Candidates Forum at S2018 will be Monday 13 August 12:30-1:30.

ACM SIGGRAPH Taps Tony Baylis to Head New Diversity Committee

ACM SIGGRAPH Taps Tony Baylis to Head New Diversity Committee
by Melanie Farmer

Tony Baylis, a longtime ACM SIGGRAPH member and leadership volunteer, has been appointed the inaugural chair of the organization’s Diversity and Inclusion Committee. Baylis, who is director for the Office of Strategic Diversity and Inclusion programs at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, will carry out the new committee’s goal to create a welcoming and nurturing community for everyone working in computer graphics and interactive techniques independent of gender, ethnic background and abilities.

“Diversity and inclusion is a priority for SIGGRAPH,” says Jessica Hodgins, ACM SIGGRAPH president. “We are thrilled that Tony has agreed to lead this key effort for us. With his direct expertise in this area, he’ll be able to help us move forward with all the myriad aspects of diversity and inclusion.”

Baylis believes it is critical for all organizations to be engaged in the discussion of diversity and inclusion. In this new role, he says “My hope is that we will strive to make sure that not only all are welcome but individuals are being respected, listened to and encouraged to grow in the organization. We truly want to work in the best interest of all.”

In the near term, the committee is considering kicking off a diversity awareness campaign alongside the 2018 conference. The group’s goals will be to build a strategy that the organization and its membership endorses, believes in and lives by—an effort that will be driven by the committee and organization. Baylis intends to recruit five to 10 members to serve on the new group, and the hope is to organize yearlong mentorship programs and produce diversity workshops and panels at the annual conferences.

Baylis is a longtime SIGGRAPH volunteer and contributor. He has served on conference committees, as director and treasurer on the Executive Committee, as well as a member of the Conference Advisory Group. Baylis has worked in science and technology for more than 20 years. At Lawrence Livermore, he is a DOE Minorities in Energy Champion for the department and also serves on a number of conference program committees and advisory boards that promote STEM and diversity in science and technical careers.

Comments, questions and suggestions for the Diversity and Inclusion Committee are welcome at diversity-info@siggraph.org