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Betreff: [isworld] CFP: International Journal of Information & Decision
Sciences (IJIDS) - Special Issue on Open-Source Innovation for New
Business Models
Datum: Wed, 10 Dec 2008 11:09:26 -0500
Von: Silvana <strimi(a)unlnotes.unl.edu>
Antwort an: Silvana <strimi(a)unlnotes.unl.edu>
An: AISWORLD Information Systems World Network <isworld(a)lyris.isworld.org>
International Journal of Information & Decision Sciences - IJIDS
Published: Quarterly (both in Print and Electronic form)
Listed in the Cabell's Directory (11th Edition) of Refereed Publications
and indexed in Science Direct..
****Call for Papers
****Special Issue: Open-Source Innovation for New Business Models
****Submit by: April 1, 2009
Guest Editors:
Prof. Sang M. Lee, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Prof. Silvana Trimi, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Scope and Theme:
In the Web 2.0 era, online communities, social networks, user generated
content, and open-source collaboration have become prevalent. From the
traditional organization�s perspective, open-source communities are
socio-technical systems of volunteers with a variety reasons of motivation
for participation such as the intrinsic satisfaction of seeing their work
shared, attention gained, etc. Even though many open-source communities
are for voluntary and social networking purposes, open-source innovation
represents a revolutionary process of horizontalizing R&D efforts for
value creation. While these communities are becoming important sources of
new knowledge and innovation, it is a challenge to create business value
out of such innovation because the participants are novices, collaborating
without any meaningful organizational structure. Thus, it is important for
both academicians and practitioners to explore innovative approaches to
exploiting the value of collaborative open-source communities for
developing new business models and value creation. The focus of this
Special Issue will be on the use of open-source innovation to foster
knowledge creation and sharing, capture opportunities for developing new
products and services, redesign the value chain for efficiency
improvement, reinvent the concept of customer value, and expand the
customer base. New business models that bring benefits to both
participants and the organization are the real core value of open-source
innovation. Thus, the primary interest of the Special Issue would be to
identify strategic contingencies and critical success factors (CSFs) that
influence effective open-source innovation for business model development.
We welcome conceptual and empirical papers, as well as interesting case
studies that are within the scope of this issue.
Topic of Interest:
Recommended topic areas to consider for inclusion in this special issue
include, but are not limited to, the following:
* Open-source community collaboration: types, efficiency and
effectiveness, motivation, etc.
* Open-source innovation for value chain improvement
* Open-source innovation for new product/service development and
convergence opportunities
* Knowledge management in open-source communities
* Web 2.0 and open-source community
* Open-source innovation and intellectual property issues
* Security and privacy issues in open-source innovation
* Open-source innovation for new customer value creation
* Open-source innovation for blue ocean strategy
* Collaboration, motivation, and reward in open-source innovation
* Power, social capital, psychological capital, and trust in open-source
collaboration
* Comparative analysis of open-source innovation in diverse cultures and
markets
* Open-source innovation for e-business, m-business, and e-government
* Community behavior factors (herd vs. hive) in innovation
* Measurement issues: members� contributions/satisfaction, individual and
organizational productivity/performance, community success/failure, etc.
Timeline:
Call for Papers Issued: December 8, 2008
Submission of full paper: April 1, 2009
Feedback from referees: August 1, 2009
Submission due date of revised paper: November 1, 2009
Notification of acceptance: January 10, 2010
Submission of final revised paper: February 1, 2010
Publication date: June, 2010
Submission guidelines:
All submissions must strictly adhere to the general guidelines of the
journal as specified under the "Author Guidelines" tab at
http://www.inderscience.com/mapper.php?id=31 The manuscripts will be peer
reviewed according to the journal's general policy; all reviews are
double-blind.
Please send electronic submissions (Word or PDF format) directly to the
guest editor, Dr. Silvana Trimi (strimi2@ unl.edu). Prospective authors
are welcome to submit an abstract to the guest editor for preliminary
feedback on the appropriateness of their planned manuscript. Please
clearly identify your submission in the email subject line �IJIDS-Open
Source Innovation for New Business Model-Special Issue�.
Prof. Sang M. Lee
Management Department
University of Nebraska � Lincoln
slee1(a)unl.edu
Prof. Silvana Trimi
Management Department
University of Nebraska � Lincoln
strimi2(a)unl.edu
For more information on the Journal, please visit the IJIDS website:
www.inderscience.com/ijids
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Betreff: [isworld] Final call for papers for the 4th International
Confernce on -e-Learning 2009
Datum: Wed, 10 Dec 2008 06:53:59 -0500
Von: Sue Nugus <sue(a)academic-conferences.org>
Antwort an: Sue Nugus <sue(a)academic-conferences.org>
An: AISWORLD Information Systems World Network <isworld(a)lyris.isworld.org>
ICEL 2009
4th International Conference on e-Learning
University of Toronto, Canada
16-17 July 2009
This is the final call for papers for the 4th International Conference on
e-Learning, which will be held at the University of Toronto, Canada on the
16-17th July 2009.
The International Conference on e-Learning (ICEL-2009) invites
researchers, practitioners and academics to present their research
findings, work in progress, case studies and conceptual advances in areas
of work where education and technology intersect. This year the conference
also welcomes proposals for posters, round table discussions and product
demonstrations.
You can read the full call for papers on
http://academic-conferences.org/icel/icel2009/icel09-call-papers.htm
Abstract submissions are due by 4th January 2009.
You can find full details about the conference at
http://academic-conferences.org/icel/icel2009/icel09-home.htm
If you would like a .pdf copy of the call for papers for your notice
board, please email me.
Please feel free to circulate this message to any colleagues or contacts
you think may be interested.
Kind regards
Mandy
Mandy Limbrick-Butler
Academic Conferences Limited
mandy(a)academic-conferences.org
tel +44 (0) 118 972 4148
http://www.academic-conferences.org/conference-home.htm
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-------- Original-Nachricht --------
Betreff: [computational.science] 2nd CfP: Emerging Parallel
Architectures Workshop at ICCS 2009
Datum: Wed, 10 Dec 2008 16:08:17 +0800
Von: Bertil Schmidt (Assoc Prof) <ASBSchmidt(a)ntu.edu.sg>
Organisation: "OptimaNumerics"
An: Computational Science Mailing List
<computational.science(a)lists.optimanumerics.com>
Referenzen:
<B2AE7CD206EB7F4BAB7DDD263F09981E7F032332(a)EXCHANGE21.staff.main.ntu.edu.sg>
*****************************************************************************
CALL FOR PAPERS
Workshop on "Using Emerging Parallel Architectures for Computational Science"
http://www3.ntu.edu.sg/home/asbschmidt/
held in conjunction with the
International Conference on Computational Science (ICCS 2009) - http://www.iccs-meeting.org/
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, May 25-27, 2009
****************************************************************************
The computing landscape has undergone significant transformation with the emergence of more powerful processing elements such as GPUs, FPGAs, Cell B.E., multi-cores, etc. On the multi-core front, Moore's Law has transcended beyond the single processor boundary with the prediction that the number of cores will double every 18 months. Going forward, the primary method of gaining processor performance will be through parallelism. Multi-core technology has visibly penetrated the global market.
Accordingly to the latest Top500 lists the HPC landscape has evolved from supercomputer systems into large clusters of dual or quad-core processors. Furthermore, GPUs, FPGAs and heterogeneous multi-cores have been shown to be formidable computing alternatives, where certain classes of applications witness more than one order of magnitude improvement over their GPP counterpart. Therefore, future computational science centers will employ resources such as FPGAs, GPUs and Cell architectures to serve as co-processors to offload appropriate compute-intensive portions of applications from the servers.
This workshop provides a forum for exploring the capabilities of emerging parallel architectures to accelerate computational science applications. Papers are being sought on a wide variety of topics related to the field of using emerging parallel architectures for computational science including but not limited to:
* Application studies on emerging architectures such as GPUs, FPGAs and Cell B.E.
* Parallel algorithms and methodologies on emerging architectures
* Languages, models, tools, and compilation techniques for emerging architectures
* Hybrid computer systems consisting of a combination of GPUs, FPGAs, etc.
* Use of emerging architectures in clusters, grids and supercomputers
-------------------------
Submission Guidelines:
-------------------------
Authors are invited to submit manuscripts reporting original, unpublished research and recent developments. All accepted oral papers will be printed in the conference proceedings published by Springer-Verlag in the Lecture Notes in Computer Science series. The submitted paper must be camera-ready and formatted according to the rules of LNCS (for LNCS formatting information see http://www.springeronline.com/sgw/cda/frontpage/0,10735,5-164-2-72376-0,00.…).
Submission implies the willingness of at least one of the authors to register and present the paper. PostScript and source versions of your paper must be submitted electronically through the ICCS paper submission system: http://www.iccs-meeting.org/iccs2009/papers/upload.php (choosing the "Using Emerging Parallel Architectures for Computational Science" workshop).
Note that papers must not exceed ten pages in length, when typeset using the LNCS format. A paper without figures can be around 5500 words maximally.
------------------------
Important Dates:
-----------------------
* Full paper submission: December 20, 2008
* Acceptance notification: February 2, 2009
* Camera ready papers: February 15, 2009
* Early registration opens: February 2, 2009
* Early registration ends: March 15, 2009
-----------------------------------
Workshop Co-Chairs:
----------------------------------
* Bertil Schmidt, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, asbschmidt(a)ntu.edu.sg, http://www3.ntu.edu.sg/home/asbschmidt/
* Douglas Maskell, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, asdouglas(a)ntu.edu.sg, http://www3.ntu.edu.sg/home/asdouglas/
-----------------------------------
Program Committee:
-----------------------------------
* Manfred Schimmler (University of Kiel, Germany)
* David Luebke (NVIDIA, USA)
* Simon See (SUN Microsystems)
* Neil Bergmann (University of Queensland, Australia)
* Philip Leong (Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)
* Heiko Schroder (RMIT, Australia)
* Alexandros Stamatakis (TU Munich, Germany)
* Dominique Lavenier (IRISA, France)
* Tarek El-Ghazawi (George Washington University, USA)
* Jaroslaw Zola (Iowa State Uni, USA)
* Michela Taufer (University of Delaware, USA)
* Rick Goh (IHPC, Singapore)
* Scott Emrich (University of Notre Dame, USA)
* Ananth Kalyanaraman (Washington State University, USA)
* Shi Haixiang (NTU, Singapore)
* Gerrit Voss (Fraunhofer Institute, Germany and NTU, Singapore)
* Weiguo Liu (NTU, Singapore)
* Malcolm Low (NTU, Singapore)
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Betreff: [isworld] NGITS 2009 - 2nd cfp
Datum: Tue, 9 Dec 2008 10:08:41 -0500
Von: Tsvi Kuflik <tsvika-k(a)bezeqint.net>
Antwort an: Tsvi Kuflik <tsvika-k(a)bezeqint.net>
An: AISWORLD Information Systems World Network <isworld(a)lyris.isworld.org>
NGITS'2009
The 7th conference on Next Generation Information Technologies
and Systems
June 15th � June 18th, 2009
Haifa, Israel
http://mis.haifa.ac.il/~ngits2009
NGITS 2009 is the seventh conference in a series that was launched in 1993
to
promote research on new technologies in information systems.
Information on the previous six NGITS conference may be found at
http://www.informatik.uni-trier.de/~ley/db/conf/ngits/index.html.
The NGITS conference is a 4-day event that combines keynote addresses,
presentations of research papers, posters session, technical
demonstrations,
industrial tracks, tutorials and social events.
Call for Research Papers (a call for industrial track papers and tutorials
will be published separately)
The NGITS series of workshops was launched in 1993 to promote research on
new technologies in information systems,
and NGITS 2009 is the seventh workshop in this series. We invite technical
research papers on all aspects of information systems.
Of particular interest are papers that combine multiple disciplines of
computer science to develop new technologies for information systems.
Submissions may report original research results, outline new viewpoints
and challenges,
or describe the implementation or deployment of a novel technology in an
actual setting.
Accordingly, authors should categorize their submission as "research,"
"vision," or "experience," depending on its primary contribution.
NGITS 2009 will feature an additional industrial track.
See the call for papers at:
http://mis.hevra.haifa.ac.il/~ngits2009/industrial.html.
In addition to technical research papers, we are also seeking proposals
for panels and demonstrations.
The proceedings of NGITS 2009 will be published in Springer's LNCS series.
To illustrate the scope of NGITS, a list of topics is given below, but
submissions are not limited to these topics.
Methodologies, models and tools for IS development
Requirements engineering
Model-driven engineering
Design of IS
Human aspects
Software asset/portfolio management
Business Transformation and Optimization
IT Governance
Agile software development
Ontologies
Verification, testing, and evaluation of IS
Technologies
Database management
Information retrieval and filtering
Flexible querying
Knowledge discovery and data mining
Data warehousing
Knowledge management
Agent oriented technologies
Programming languages and development environments
Service-Oriented Architecture
Web services
Middleware
Virtualization
Collaboration technologies
Applications
Enterprise applications
Workflow management systems
Medical information systems
Decision support systems
Agricultural information systems
Demos should feature mature systems or innovative prototypes of
information systems.
They should be attractive, address an application of broad interest in
such a way that it can be appreciated by a diverse audience,
and clearly show the contributions to the conference themes.
We also encourage submission of demos that have already been described in
the literature.
All submissions should be in LNCS format. For camera-ready format
instructions, please see �Information for LNCS Authors� instructions at:
www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html. Full paper submissions should not
exceed 12 pages, and poster submissions should not exceed 4 pages.
Authors of demos should submit short (1-3 pages) informal descriptions of
their proposed presentation.
Please describe what attendees will be able to see or do during your demo
(e.g., screenshots),
and itemize any equipment or facilities that you will require for your
demonstration. Abstracts must be submitted by January 25, 2009,
and full papers are due February 2, 2009. Detailed information on the
paper submission procedure will be available at the workshop's Web site:
http://mis.hevra.haifa.ac.il/~ngits2009/ in time for submission.
Important Dates
Submission of abstracts: January 25, 2009
Submission of papers: February 2, 2009
Author notification: March 16, 2009
Final papers due: May 3, 2009
Organizing & Program Committees
STEERING COMMITTEE:
Opher Etzion, IBM Haifa Research Lab, Israel, Avigdor Gal, Technion,
Israel, Tsvi Kuflik, Haifa University, Israel
LOCAL ARRANGEMENTS:
Nilly Schnapp, Israel
PROGRAM CO-CHAIRS:
Yishai Feldman, IBM, Israel, Donald Kraft, USA
MEMBERS:
Nabil Adam, Rutgers University, USA, Hamideh Afsarmanesh, University of
Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Mathias Bauer mineway GmbH, Germany,
Maria Jose Martin-Bautista, Universidad de Granada, Spain, Iris Berger,
Haifa University, Israel, Dan Berry, Waterloo University, Canada,
Elisa Bertino, Purdue University, USA, Gloria Bordogna, CNR, Italy,
Patrick Bosc, ENSSAT, France, Jen-Yao Chung, IBM Watson, USA,
Alessandro D'Atri, Luiss University, Italy, Asuman Dogac, Middle East
Technical University, Turkey, Ophir Frieder, Illinois Institute of
Technology, USA,
Mati Golani, Israel, Paolo Giorgini, University of Trento, Italy, Enrique
Herrera-Viedma, Universidad de Granada, Spain,
S.S. Iyengar, Louisiana State University, USA, Judy Kay, University of
Sidney, Australia, Larry Kerschberg, George Mason University, USA,
David Konopnick, IBM, Israel, Manolis Koubarakis, National and
Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece, Amnon Meisels, Ben-Gurion
University, Israel,
Naftaky Minsky, Rutgers University, USA, Amihai Motro, George Mason
University, USA, George Papadopoulos, University of Cyprus, Cyprus,
Gabriella Pasi, Italy, Mor Peleg, Stanford University, USA, Fred
Petry,USA, Haggai Roitman, Israel, Doron Rotem, Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory, USA,
Charles A. Shoniregun, University of East London, UK, Pnina Soffer, Haifa
University, Israel, Steve Schach, Vanderbilt University, USA,
Bracha Shapira, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Israel, Bernhard
Thalheim, Kiel University, Germany, Eran Toch, Technion, Israel,
Yair Wand, University of British Columbia, Canada, Ouri Wolfson,
University of Illinois - Chicago, USA, Amiram Yehudai, Tel Aviv
University, Israel
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-------- Original-Nachricht --------
Betreff: [isworld] CFP: Reframing humans in information systems
development
Datum: Tue, 9 Dec 2008 16:36:18 +0200
Von: Pekkola Samuli <samuli.pekkola(a)tut.fi>
Antwort an: Pekkola Samuli <samuli.pekkola(a)tut.fi>
An: AISWORLD Information Systems World Network <isworld(a)lyris.isworld.org>
[APOLOGIES FOR MULTIPLE POSTINGS]
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
CALL FOR BOOK CHAPTER PROPOSALS
Book title: "Reframing Humans in Information Systems Development"
To be published by: Springer.
Editors: Hannakaisa Isomäki & Samuli Pekkola
IMPORTANT DATES
Deadline for chapter proposal submission: February 28, 2009
Notification of proposal acceptance: March 15, 2009
Full chapter due: May 1, 2009
Feedback to the authors: August 15, 2009
Deadline for the second version of the paper: November 1, 2009
Final acceptance, final editorial comments to authors: December 1, 2009
Camera-ready version, December 31st, 2009
*INTRODUCTION, AIM AND TARGET AUDIENCE OF THE BOOK *
Recent development of information and communication technologies (ICT) provides information systems designers with new technical potentialities to build systems for various purposes. Especially the emergence of ubiquitous computing and wearable computers supported by wireless technologies and distributed interfaces could facilitate the design of innovative new applications for users. In addition to work-related activities, people use new technologies for increasingly diverse purposes, such as organizing their domestic affairs, for finding information and e-services, and for staying in touch with their friends and relatives. This means that there is a growing need of know-how regarding IS as constructed for mediating and supporting users' needs, purposes, and experiences, as is often the case in approaches known as human-centered information systems development (ISD).
Traditionally, the perspectives of human-centered ISD are discussed from several different viewpoints: participatory design and other user-oriented approaches consider how end users can be more involved in IS design; ethnomethodological approaches offer tools for capturing requirements and understanding work processes, cognitive engineering aims at the implementation of systems that effectively support adaptive perception-based behavior, and some other scholars aim at understanding information systems as social systems, among many other perspectives. For IS researchers and practitioners embracing a user-oriented approach in their work the current situation is awkward since an accurate view on the aforementioned issues is missing. Without such view the IS discipline will not evolve effectively, since mutual approaches are never met. This prohibits both effective development of IS that meet users' needs and valuable theory development in the field.
By this book, we aim at providing a thorough examination on the dimensions of end-users in ISD. The minitrack "End-Users in Information Systems Development: Theories, Applications and Implications" run by the editors in HICSS conferences in 2005 and 2006 and ongoing work on Information Systems Journal special issue on "User - the great unknown" (with Prof. Juhani Iivari) has made the need for a complete and profound analysis and introduction of methods and approaches evident. It is also obvious that the detached tradition of human-centred ISD creates problems in terms of accurate sources of information when trying to understand the multifaceted nature of the area. At present, it is important to aim for a solid view of human-centred ISD.
We target the book for IS researchers, practitioners and students whom we believe would benefit from a book providing a comprehensive view to different human-centered ISD methods and approaches. Also the representatives of the fields of human-computer interaction (HCI) and computer supported collaborative work (CSCW) are most likely interested in our approach. For this reason, we do not offer only a theoretical handbook or a collection of practical experiences, but both of them as well as some critical discussions of utilization the methods in ISD and their implications with some interconnecting commentary viewpoints. Hence, as the title of the book: "Reframing Humans in Information Systems" illustrates, we aim at providing a novel and accurate viewpoint to the understanding of the user in ISD holistically. Our aim is to reframe the phenomenon by connecting scientific constructs produced within information systems science that has recently provided a plethora of multidisciplinary user views without explicitly defining clear constructs that serve the IS field in particular.
RECOMMENDED TOPICS
We are interested in papers that discuss, for example, one (or more) of the following topics:
* theoretical methods or models on developing IS with and for the users
* studies aiming at holistic views of user involvement in IS development
* experiences on implications of involving end users is IS design
* end users' and developers cooperation in ISD
* developers', managers', customers' or end users' representatives perceptions and understanding of user-centric methods and approaches, or of their needs and application in practice
* studies on involving end users in information systems design
The papers may be theoretical or empirical targeted to practitioners or academics. The papers will be evaluated according to their contribution, theoretical and practical relevance, and diversity.
* SUBMISSION PROCEDURE *
Please submit a 800 word chapter proposal clearly outlining the mission and objective of the proposed chapter and its relation to the mission of this book. Submissions should be made by e-mail to both editors: hannakaisa.isomaki(a)jyu.fi and samuli.pekkola(a)tut.fi by February 28 2009. Authors will be notified by March 15, 2009 about the status and suitability of their proposals. We strongly encourage other topics that have not been listed in our suggested list.
Authors of accepted proposals are invited to prepare and submit full chapters (4000 to 8000 words max.) by May 1, 2009. All submitted chapters will be reviewed on a double-blind review basis.
This book will be publishing by Springer-Verlag in late 2010.
About the editors:
Hannakaisa Isomäki
PhD, Adjunct Professor, Research Director
Faculty of Information Technology
University of Jyväskylä, P.O. Box 35 (Agora) ,FIN-40014 University of Jyväskylä, Finland
email: hannakaisa.isomaki(a)jyu.fi
Samuli Pekkola
PhD, Professor
Department of Business Information Management and Logistics
Tampere University of Technology, PO Box 541, FIN 33101 Tampere, Finland
email: samuli.pekkola(a)tut.fi
--
Samuli Pekkola
Professor, Adjunct Professor, PhD
Department of Business Information Management and Logistics
Tampere University of Technology
PO Box 541, 33101 Tampere, Finland
t: +358 (0)40 586 0791
e: samuli.pekkola(a)tut.fi
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-------- Original-Nachricht --------
Betreff: [isworld] CfParticipation: IEEE-CS Conference on Software
Engineering Education and Training
Datum: Tue, 9 Dec 2008 08:48:22 -0500
Von: Valerie Maxville <maxville(a)ivec.org>
Antwort an: Valerie Maxville <maxville(a)ivec.org>
An: AISWORLD Information Systems World Network <isworld(a)lyris.isworld.org>
22nd IEEE-CS Conference on Software Engineering Education and Training
February 17 - 19, 2009, Hyderabad, India
== Call For Participation ==
Scalability in Software Engineering Education and Training
http://serl.iiit.ac.in/CSEET
CSEE&T has become the premier international conference focusing on
education and training in software engineering. It seeks to answer the
question: "As educators, how do we adjust our teaching to meet the
personal preferences and technical challenges of the next generation of
software engineers?"
You are invited to register and participate in CSEE&T�09 to be held in
Hyderabad, India.
Hyderabad is the fifth largest city in India and has its own distinct
culture. The city is more than 400 years old and is noted for its natural
beauty, mosques and minarets, bazaars and bridges, hills and lakes. A
multitude of influences have shaped Hyderabad�s character: culturally and
linguistically it is a meeting ground between North and South India; its
rich history, culture and architecture make it a city of enchantment,
while the courtly influence as the former capital of the Nizamate can be
seen in Hyderabadi cuisine, also heavily influenced by traditional
Telangana, Mughal and Persian cuisine. Hyderabad is known as Cyberabad,
owing to the presence of large number of IT companies. It is also an
important seat of learning, with over ten universities situated there.
An exciting program of international and local speakers will provide
numerous opportunities for academic and industry participants to interact
and learn from each other. A welcome dinner, conference banquet and
cultural excursion, all included within the registration fee, will
facilitate networking across all aspects of SE education and training.
== Keynotes ==
Our keynote speakers draw on a wealth of experience within the discipline
of SE:
Len Bass, Software Engineering Institute, Carnegie Mellon University
Topic: Making Quality Attributes First Class Entities
Ed Cohen, Chief Learning Officer, Satyam Computer Services Limited
Topic: Software Engineer to Global Leader: Service Provider and
Trusted Advisor
Rajeev Sangal, Director, International Institute of IT Hyderabad
Topic: Software Engineering: Research-led Education with Human Values
== Tutorials/Workshops ==
Participants will be able to exchange experiences and opinions in
Workshops or learn more about a topic relevant to the conference theme in
a Tutorial. The following have been accepted:
Tutorial 1
Enriching the Culture of Software Engineering Education through Theories
of Knowledge and Learning
Tutorial 2
Software Engineering: A System Dynamics Simulated Pedagogical Practice
Workshop 1
SWEBOK Refresh and Continuous Update: A Call for Feedback and
Participation
Workshop 2
The Graduate Software Engineering Reference Curriculum (GSwERC)
Workshop 3
Improving Communication Skills of SE Students Through Curricular
Innovation
Workshop 4
An Examination of Learning Technologies that support Software Engineering
and Education
Workshop 5
Multimedia Case Studies in Software Engineering: A Look at MDM CAP: A Case
Authoring Platform for Education and Training
Workshop 6
How Can We Scale-up Student Admissions and Graduate Completions?
A Panel of industry leaders and senior SE academics is also planned to
discuss the theme of the conference.
Join us in exploring scalability in SE education and training.
== ASEET ==
A special one-day Academy for Software Engineering Educators & Trainers
will be held on Friday, February 20, 2009. The purpose of the Academy is
to provide an opportunity for software engineering educators and trainers
to learn from master instructors in a highly dynamic, hands-on,
interactive environment. The following master educators will be
Len Bass, Software Engineering Institute, Carnegie Mellon University
Topic: Software Architecture Design
Lynn Carter, Principal Fellow, Associate Teaching Professor, Carnegie
Mellon University (Qatar)
Topic: Delivering Software Engineering Skill
Pankaj Jalote, Director, IIIT Delhi; Microsoft Chair Professor IIT Delhi
Topic: Teaching an Introductory Software Engineering Course in a
Computer Science Program
== Grants and Further Information ==
We have a special grant to partially support Indian academics and full
time research students.
If you need this support, please send an email to cseet09(a)iiit.ac.in with
the subject line CSEET09 financial support for India.
Enquiries:
For more information visit http://serl.iiit.ac.in/CSEET or email
cseet09(a)iiit.ac.in
== Conference Committee ==
Conference Chair:
Vasudeva Varma, IIIT Hyderabad, India
Program Chairs:
Jocelyn Armarego, Murdoch University, Australia
Pankaj Jalote, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, India
Experience Reports / Short Papers Chairs:
Heidi Ellis, Trinity College, USA
Ashley Aitken, RunningCode, Australia
ASEET Chair:
Sasi Rekha, Advanced Learning Group, India
Panels Chair:
Daniel Berinson, Systec Engineering Pty Ltd, Australia
Workshop Chair:
Gil Taran, Carnegie Mellon U, USA
Tutorials Chair:
Helen Edwards, University of Sunderland, UK
Local Organization Chairs:
Rajul Asthana, Satyam Computer Services, India
R K Bagga, IIIT Hyderabad, India Finance Chair:
Sunita Lanka, Satyam Computer Services, India
Publicity Chair:
Valerie Maxville, iVEC, Australia
Student Volunteer Chair:
Kirti Garg, IIIT Hyderabad, India
Conference Secretary:
Vijay Sekhar, IIIT Hyderabad, India
Web masters:
Vivek Prakash, IIIT Hyderabad, India
Lloyd Johnson, Murdoch University, Australia
Sponsored By
IEEE Computer Society
Co-Sponsored By
SIGSE, Computer Society of India
Supported By
International Institute of Information Technology, Hyderabad
Satyam Computer Services
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-------- Original-Nachricht --------
Betreff: [isworld] AMCIS Minitrack: Pragmatic and Action-Oriented
Approaches to Positive Design
Datum: Tue, 9 Dec 2008 11:42:38 -0500
Von: Mark Aakhus <aakhus(a)rutgers.edu>
Antwort an: Mark Aakhus <aakhus(a)rutgers.edu>
An: AISWORLD Information Systems World Network <isworld(a)lyris.isworld.org>
AMCIS Minitrack: Pragmatic and Action-Oriented Approaches to Positive Design
Objective and Aspirations
The objective of this minitrack is to explore how pragmatic and
action-oriented perspectives on IS and IT can provide grounds for
making the shift from design science to positive design.
Description
Information and communication technology, in general, and computerized
information systems in particular, are used in organizations and
society to support and facilitate collaborative human activity. How
people act and work through information systems in this way presents
an important challenge for understanding and practising design in IS.
This year's Design Theory and Research track, however, points out that
the term design has been used primarily to denote the activity of
creating IT applications. Positive Design refers to the contribution
of design in driving positive change and fostering betterment for all
levels of human rganizations and communities.
Prior interests in IT design attend principally to the artifact which
is problematic when it directs attention way from social and
organizational contexts in which the artifact exists and the human
activity in which it is taken up. This way of attending to design
arises in part from viewing information systems as tools for
computation and information storage rather than for communication and
construction of social reality.
Pragmatic and action-oriented theories address this by attending to
the relationship among IT artifacts,
human activity, and organizational and societal contexts. Indeed, the
widespread use of the Internet and
other, often related, communication-centric technologies emphasize the
social action character of information systems more than ever. But,
what are the implications for IS design and for the possibilities of
Positive Design when viewing information systems primarily as tools
for communication? Refocusing attention to communication requires
reconsideration of IT design (both as process and as product) as well
as the role of IT in constructing social action spaces.
We solicit contributions related to all aspects of design theory that
can be useful in this endeavour, including theoretical constructs and
design methods as well as concrete implementations and their
evaluation. We envisage that contributions draw upon one or more of a
variety of theoretical orientations, including activity theory,
actor-network theory, design science, language/action theory,
structuration theory, activity theory, conversation analysis, social
phenomenology, symbolic interactionism, ethnomethodology, soft systems
theory, critical social theory, hermeneutics, social semiotics,
socio-pragmatism, situated cognition theory, practice theory and
affordance theory.
In general, pragmatic and action-oriented approaches in IS research
rest on the following set of assumptions from
(http://www.sigprag.org/):
• Human life is a life of activity.
• Humans do things that effect changes in their environment and/or
within themselves.
• Doing permeates thinking, conceptualizations and language use.
• Human consciousness is a practical one that is in constant interplay
with interventive, investigative,
and evaluative actions.
• Practical consciousness is formed by experience from previous
actions and participation in social
contexts.
• IT and information systems are fundamentally symbolic language systems.
• Linguistically expressed collective presuppositions, norms and
categories (such as those embedded in
IT and information systems) serve human activity and life.
• The true value of IT and information systems lies in their potential
to support human communication
and collaboration central to human activity and life.
Suggested Topics
• Action-oriented theorization of IT artifacts
• The social action and interaction of IS design
• Collaborative Design Process
• User-designer interaction in IS development
• Organizational Online Communities
• Collaborative Communities
• Pragmatic evaluation of information systems
• Action-oriented ontologies for conceptual modeling
• Sensemaking, Deliberation, Decision-Making Support
• Design and method rationale
• IS development methods as action knowledge
• Rationality resonance in ISD
• Action theoretic concepts for meta-modeling
• Action modeling in ISD contexts
• IS and action in context
• Contextually aware systems
• IS agency in organizations
• Embodied interaction
• User interfaces as languages for action
• Actability and usability
• Accountability in information systems
• New forms of action and interaction spaces
• Socially responsible IS design
The minitrack on Pragmatic and Action-Oriented Approaches to Positive
Design is organized by the AIS
Special Interest Group on Pragmatist IS Research (SIGPrag).
Minitrack Chairs:
Mark Aakhus, Rutgers University, USA, aakhus(a)rutgers.edu
Pär J. Ågerfalk, Uppsala University, Sweden, par.agerfalk(a)dis.uu.se
Contact Email: pragamcis(a)gmail.com
Important Dates
January 2, 2009: Manuscript Central will start accepting paper submissions
February 20, 2009 (11:59 PM Pacific time zone): Deadline for paper submissions
April 2, 2009: Authors will be notified of acceptances on or about this date
April 20, 2009 (11:59 PM Pacific time zone): For accepted papers,
camera ready copy due
Further information about the conference and minitrack proposals is
available in AMCIS2009 Web site at: http://www.amcis2009.org
--
Mark Aakhus, PhD
Associate Professor
School of Communication, Information and Library Studies
Rutgers University
www.scils.rutgers.edu/~aakhus
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-------- Original-Nachricht --------
Betreff: [isworld] CFP AMCIS Minitrack: Generating the Design Space -
Goal Setting, Requirements, and Beyond
Datum: Tue, 09 Dec 2008 17:48:09 -0500
Von: Nicholas Berente <nicholas.berente(a)case.edu>
Antwort an: Nicholas Berente <nicholas.berente(a)case.edu>
An: AISWORLD Information Systems World Network <isworld(a)lyris.isworld.org>
CC: berente(a)umich.edu, j.whyte(a)reading.ac.uk
We invite submissions to the AMCIS 2009 minitrack:
"Generating the Design Space - Goal Setting, Requirements, and Beyond"
(within the "Design Theory and Research" track)
Objective
This mini-track seeks submissions on the up-front activities that frame
design processes, broadly defined. While research into the design of
software-intensive systems is encouraged, we also welcome submissions
relating to the early stages in the design of other types of artifacts,
socio-technical environments, or organizations.
Description
A wide range of up-front activities and representational practices frame
design processes, shape subsequent design activity, and influence the
character of the design output itself. Whether this first stage of a
design can be described in terms such as “requirements elicitation,”
“ideation,” or “goal setting” (as well as a host of other expressions),
these early activities address what should be designed and why. Goals,
specifications, and constraints are typically not self-evident from the
start, but must be constructed, negotiated, and developed at some point
near the beginning of any design process. Therefore, understanding the
variety of practices that make up the very first activities of design is
crucially important to insight into design processes in general, as well
as their outcomes – and this understanding is vital if we wish to
improve these processes and outcomes.
A variety of representational artifacts and practices are common in the
early stages of design processes. For example, requirements documents,
specifications, sketches, diagrams, client briefs, and conceptual models
can all be leveraged within practical attempts to generate or frame a
‘space’ for productive design inquiry. As design problems elude complete
definition, this work involves simplification and symbolic
representation with the aim of shaping subsequent development work.
This mini-track seeks submissions on the up-front activities that frame
a design processes, broadly defined. While research into the design of
software-intensive systems is encouraged, we also welcome submissions
relating to the early stages in the design of other types of artifacts,
socio-technical environments, or organizations. We particularly
encourage studies that draw upon case-based research; experiments;
comparative studies; rich qualitative data; interpretive or critical
methods; and/or empirically-driven theory generation. Potential topics
for the mini-track include, but are not limited to the following:
Suggested Topics
• Investigating the roles that documents, diagrams, and other artifacts
play early in the design process in shaping that process and/or its
outcomes;
• Analysis of the generation of goals, requirements, or specifications
for a design;
• Studies that emphasize the use of digital technologies in the early
stages of any type of design process;
• Any aspect of the early stages in the development of digital technologies;
• Novel forms of representations such as fantasy documents, mind maps,
wikis, etc., that are leveraged in early stages of design processes;
• Innovative methods for generating desirable design goals, processes,
or requirements such as design thinking, systems thinking, storytelling,
appreciative inquiry, etc.
• Explorations of collaborative group activity involving ideation,
creativity, brainstorming, sensemaking, etc., in generating the design
space;
• The role of iteration, prototyping, and exploration in framing
subsequent design activity;
• Trade-offs associated with different early-stage practices.
Minitrack co-chairs:
Nicholas Berente
School of Information
University of Michigan
berente(a)umich.edu
Jennifer Whyte
School of Construction Management & Engineering
University of Reading
j.whyte(a)reading.ac.uk
Further information about the conference and minitrack proposals is
available in AMCIS2009 Web site at:
http://www.amcis2009.orghttp://amcis2009.org/images/stories/amcis09/doc/amcis-mt-178-2009-File001.p…
Important Dates:
Papers Due February 20, 2009 (11:59 PST)
Notification of Acceptance April 02, 2009
Camera Ready Copy Due April 20, 2009 (11:59 PST)
--
Nick Berente
University of Michigan
www.berente.com
440.725.6150
berente(a)umich.edu
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-------- Original-Nachricht --------
Betreff: [isworld] CFP AMCIS2009 Minitrack "Spreadsheets: The Dark
Matter and Dark Energy of IT"
Datum: Mon, 08 Dec 2008 21:42:37 -1000
Von: Ray Panko <panko(a)hawaii.edu>
Antwort an: Ray Panko <panko(a)hawaii.edu>
An: AISWORLD Information Systems World Network <isworld(a)lyris.isworld.org>
SPREADSHEETS: THE DARK MATTER AND DARK ENERGY OF IT
End-user Information Systems (SIGOSRA) Track
15th Americas Conference on Information Systems (AMCIS)
San Francisco, California
August 6 - 9, 2009
Mini-track website:
http://panko.shidler.hawaii.edu/SSR/
Description:
Until recently, the spreadsheet was the Rodney Dangerfield of corporate IT. I got little respect. Spreadsheet applications were believed to be numerous but collectively unimportant from a strategic point of view. Recently, however, pressure from compliance laws have forced organizations to examine how their key business processes really use IT. What they have almost always found were spreadsheets—large numbers of massive, complex, and mission-critical spreadsheets—all developed by end users. They found that many processes use spreadsheets predominantly for their IT, and even processes that use packaged applications often use spreadsheets for the riskiest computations, such as end-of-period adjustments in corporate financial reporting. It now appears that spreadsheets are the dark matter of IT—larger collectively than traditional central applications in terms of computerized units of core business logic, yet invisible to IT (“It’s a business side thing”) and also to corporate management. Spreadsheets are also dark in the sense that research has shown that errors in corporate spreadsheets seem to be nearly universal. In addition, spreadsheets are an enormous liability for corporate efforts to protect personally sensitive information and trade secrets. At the same time, spreadsheets seem to be the dark energy of corporate IT, spreading information technology far beyond central computing to nearly every business function. IT professionals who believe that they can solve control problems by banning spreadsheets are at best misinformed.
Possible Topics:
汹Human error theory applied to spreadsheet errors.
汹Functional nuclear magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies
汹Errors in spreadsheet development and testing/inspection
汹The effectiveness of automated spreadsheet error detection tools
汹Corporate experiences using spreadsheets in specific business processes
汹Corporate experiencing governing spreadsheets
汹Errors in operational spreadsheets
汹Spreadsheet productivity and quality
汹The extension of spreadsheet development functionality
汹Surveys of developers and users
汹Surveys of spreadsheets
汹Surveys of corporate policies and practices
强Viewing spreadsheets as appropriate development tools
强Best practice recommendations backed by empirical data
强Exploding spreadsheet myths with data
强Advantages and disadvantages of spreadsheets as application development tools
Mini-track Chair:
Dr. Ray Panko, Shidler College of Business, University of Hawaii
E-mail: Panko(a)hawaii.edu or Ray(a)Panko.com
Submission Process
Full paper submissions must be made electronically through the AMCIS on-line submission system by February 20th 2009. Papers should not exceed 5,000 words, including attachments.
Important Dates:
Full Papers Due: February 20, 2009
Notification of Acceptance: April 2, 2009
Camera Ready Copy Due: April 20, 2009
Please contract Ray if you are interested in the minitrack (Panko(a)hawaii.edu)
Conference Website
http://www.amcis2009.org/
Ray Panko
IT Management Department
Shidler College of Business
University of Hawai`i
http://panko.shidler.hawaii.edu
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-------- Original-Nachricht --------
Betreff: [isworld] ICSE'09: CALL FOR WORKSHOPS PARTICIPATION
Datum: Mon, 8 Dec 2008 15:22:57 -0000 (WET)
Von: Joao Araujo <ja(a)di.fct.unl.pt>
Antwort an: Joao Araujo <ja(a)di.fct.unl.pt>
An: AISWORLD Information Systems World Network <isworld(a)lyris.isworld.org>
CC: isworld(a)lyris.isworld.org
*******************************************************************************************************************
31st International Conference on Software Engineering
CALL FOR WORKSHOPS PARTICIPATION
VANCOUVER, CANADA
May 16th-24th 2009
*******************************************************************************************************************
ICSE 2009 will offer a wide variety of workshops, so please consider
submitting a workshop paper.
Note that deadlines range from late December to the end of January so you
need to move fast!
Please double check abstract and/or paper submission deadlines
on each workshop's website.
The workshops are listed below, however additional information is
available at
http://www.cs.uoregon.edu/events/icse2009/workshops/
Aspect-Oriented Requirements Engineering and Architecture Design
Organizers: Mónica Pinto and Ruzanna Chitchyan
Website: http://www.aosd-europe.net/eaICSE09
Deadline: Abstract: January 26; Paper: February 02
Meeting Date: May 18
Automation of Software Test
Organizers: Paul Strooper, Dimitris Dranidis, and Stephen Masticola
Website: http://ast2009.com/
Deadline: January 22
Meeting Date: May 18/19
Comparison and Versioning of Software Models
Organizers: Jürgen Ebert, Udo Kelter, and Tarja Systä
Website: http://pi.informatik.uni-siegen.de/CVSM09/
Deadline: TBA
Meeting Date: May 17
Coooperative and Human Aspects of Software Engineering
Organizers: Cleidson de Souza, Yvonne Dittrich, Helen Sharp, and Janice
Singer
Website: http://softwareresearch.ca/seg/CHASE2009/
Deadline: January 21
Meeting Date: May 17
Domain Engineering
Organizers: Iris Reinhartz-Berger, Arnon Sturm, and Yair Wand
Website: http://www.bgu.ac.il/~sturm/DE@ICSE09/
Deadline: December 25
Meeting Date: May 17
Emerging Trends in Free/Libre/Open Source Software Research and Development
Organizers: Andrea Capiluppi and Gregorio Robles
Website: http://icse.libresoft.es/
Deadline: January 26
Meeting Date: May 18
Leadership and Management in Software Architecture
Organizers: Brian Berenbach and Len Bass
Website:
http://www.lmsa-community.org/wikis/index.php/Leadership_and_Management_in_…
Deadline: January 11
Meeting Date: May 19
Model-Based Methodologies for Pervasive and Embedded Software
Organizers: João M. Fernandes, Ricardo J. Machado, Flávio R. Wagner, and
Luís Lamb
Website: http://www.di.uminho.pt/~mompes/2009/
Deadline: January 15
Meeting Date: May 16
Modeling in Software Engineering
Organizers: Robert Baillargeon, Robert France, Geri Georg, Bernhard Rumpe,
Steven Völkel, and Steffen Zschaler
Website: http://wikiserver.sse.cs.tu-bs.de/mise09/index.php/Main_Page
Deadline: January 11
Meeting Date: May 17/18
Multicore Software Engineering
Organizers: Adam Porter, Victor Pankratius, and Lawrence Votta
Website: http://www.multicore-systems.org/iwmse2009/
Deadline: January 26
Meeting Date: May 18
Principles of Engineering Service Oriented Systems
Organizers: Elisabetta Di Nitto and Schahram Dustdar
Website: http://home.dei.polimi.it/dinitto/PESOS2008/
Deadline: January 18
Meeting Date: May 18/19
Search-Driven Development Users, Infrastructure, Tools and Evaluation
Organizers: Sushil Bajracharya, Adrian Kuhn, and Yunwen Ye
Website: http://smallwiki.unibe.ch/suite2009/
Deadline: January 28
Meeting Date: May 16
Sharing and Reusing architectural Knowledge
Organizers: Patricia Lago, Paris Avgeriou, and Philippe Kruchten
Website: www.cs.rug.nl/~paris/SHARK2009
Deadline: January 26
Meeting Date: May 16
Socio-Technical Congruence
Organizers: Marcelo Cataldo, Daniela Damian, Premkumar Devanbu, Steve
Easterbrook,
James Herbsleb, and Audris Mockus
Website: http://docs.google.com/View?id=dhncd3jd_405fzt842gv
Deadline: March 3
Meeting Date: May 19
Software Architectures and Mobility
Organizers: Rami Bahsoon, Wolfgang Emmerich, Nenad Medvidovic, and Mohamed
E. Fayad
Website: http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/~rzb/sam09.htm
Deadline: January 28
Meeting Date: May 19
Software Development Governance
Organizers: Yael Dubinsky and Philippe Kruchten
Website: http://www.cs.technion.ac.il/~yael/SDG2009/
Deadline: January 12
Meeting Date: May 17
Software Engineering Challenges of Cloud Computing
Organizers: Kamal Bhattacharya, Martin Bichler, and Stefan Tai
Website: http://www.icse-cloud09.org
Deadline: January 26
Meeting Date: May 23
Software Engineering for Adaptive and Self-Managing Systems
Organizers: Hausi Müller, Jeff Magee, Betty Cheng, David Garlan, Holger
Giese,
Marin Litoiu, and Richard Taylor
Website: http://www.seams2009.cs.uvic.ca/
Deadline: January 26
Meeting Date: May 18/19
Software Engineering for Computational Science and Engineering
Organizers: Jeffrey Carver, Steve Easterbrook, Tom Epperly, Michael Heroux,
Lorin Hochstein, Diane Kelly, Chris Morris, Judith Segal, and Greg Wilson
Website: http://www.cs.ua.edu/~SECSE09
Deadline: January 19
Meeting Date: May 23
Software Engineering for Secure Systems
Organizers: Bart De Win, Seok-Won Lee, and Mattia Monga
Website: http://homes.dico.unimi.it/~monga/sess09.html
Deadline: January 17
Meeting Date: May 19
Software Engineering Foundations for End User Programming
Organizers: Dennis Smith, Grace A. Lewis, Len Bass, Brad Myers
Website: http://www.sei.cmu.edu/isis/workshops/seeup-2009/
Deadline: January 20
Meeting Date: May 23
Software Engineering in Health Care
Organizers: Leon J. Osterweil and Barbara Paech
Website: http://www-swe.informatik.uni-heidelberg.de/sehc09/index.htm
Deadline: January 7
Meeting Date: May 18/19
Software Quality
Organizers: Bernard Wong, Barry Boehm, Sunita Chulani, and June Verner
Website: http://attend.it.uts.edu.au/icse2009
Deadline: January 19
Meeting Date: May 16
Traceability in Emerging Forms of Software Engineering
Organizers: Giulio Antoniol, Rocco Oliveto, Denys Poshyvanyk
Website: http://web.soccerlab.polymtl.ca/tefse09/
Deadline: Abstract: January 19; Paper: January 24
Meeting Date: May 18
Wikis for Software Engineering
Organizers: Ademar Aguiar, Paulo Merson, and Uri Dekel
Website: http://wikis4se.org
Deadline: TBA
Meeting Date: May 16
For further information please visit the general ICSE 2009 website at
http://www.cs.uoregon.edu/events/icse2009/home/
With best wishes
Jane Cleland-Huang,PhD
Joao Arujo, PhD
ICSE 2009 Publicity Chairs
The AISWorld LISTSERV is a service of the Association for Information Systems (http://www.aisnet.org). To unsubscribe, redirect, or change subscription options please go to http://lyris.isworld.org/. You are subscribed to AISworld as: neumann(a)wu-wien.ac.at. Each Sender assumes responsibility that his or her message conforms to the AISWorld LISTSERV policy and conditions of use available at http://lyris.isworld.org/isworldlist.htm.