The CAMS workshop have been organized by Annika Hinze, from the University of Waikato, and George Buchanan from Swansea University.
There were six scheduled presentations, but only three actually happened (one per session). This was a bit disappointing because it meant that there were fewer people than expected atteding the workshop and so, discussion was a bit impaired.
The first session was about "Models and Frameworks".
Emiliano Pérez talk was about "Rethinking Context Models" where he presented the two opposing views by Paul Dourish about context (they called them "positivist" and "phenomenological" views) and proposed a set of guidelines for modeling context in a way that integrates those two views.
The second session was about "Context at Work".
Hannes Wolf presented an object oriented context model for workflows. Their model allows workflows to real-world objects and ways of dynamically defining context for those objects using rules that are evaluated at run-time.
The third and last session was about "Novel Contextual Technologies".
My presentation ended up being the last presentation of the workshop. It was about how public displays can sense people's preferences and adapt to those preferences using digital footprints that result from interactions with the displays. Here are the slides: