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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:

October 29, 2025


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

SPECIAL SESSIONS LIST

DEMS 2026Special Session on Design and Evaluation of Monitoring Systems
Chair(s): Eunji Lee

microOrganChip 2026Special Session on Organ on Chip Micro-Devices
Chair(s): Hadar Ben-Yoav and Janina Bahnemann

Special Session on Design and Evaluation of Monitoring Systems - DEMS 2026

Paper Submission: January 6, 2026
Authors Notification: January 20, 2026
Camera Ready and Registration: January 28, 2026


Chair

Eunji Lee
Chalmers University of Technology
Sweden
e-mail
 
Scope

This session will explore innovative approaches to designing monitoring systems that can enhance healthcare delivery and patient outcomes. Topics will include service design, user-centred design, integration of wearable and/or IoT technologies, synthetic data and sandboxes, and the role of artificial intelligence in optimizing monitoring and diagnostics. The session will also address challenges such as interoperability and usability in diverse healthcare settings. We welcome contributions that present case studies, novel frameworks, and design methodologies aimed at creating effective, scalable, and accessible monitoring solutions for various types of patients or general population.


Special Session on Organ on Chip Micro-Devices - microOrganChip 2026

Paper Submission: January 6, 2026
Authors Notification: January 20, 2026
Camera Ready and Registration: January 28, 2026


Co-chairs

Hadar Ben-Yoav
Ben-Gurion University, Negev
Israel
e-mail
 
Janina Bahnemann
Institute of Physics, University of Augsburg
Germany
e-mail
 
Scope

Study of the human body and organs physiology traditionally involves monolayer culture cells and animal models. However, transferability of these models is very limited since not all species-specific mechanisms can be replicated; importantly, tested drugs and diets that show results in animal models do not have the same effect in humans. Organ-on-chip (OOC) devices emerge as a novel physiological model devoid of these drawbacks. The OOC goal is to mimic cell and tissue structures under their physiological conditions. OOC architecture benefits from the advantages of both in-vivo and in-vitro systems, allowing the study of physiology, pathology, and pharmacology. OOC devices have the potential to bring cell culture models into greater alignment with human physiology than animal models have ever achieved.


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