-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [AISWorld] Call for contributions (journal focused
on the Systems Approach)
Date: Thu, 30 Sep 2010 13:46:07 -0500 (CDT)
From: Manuel Mora T. <mmora(a)securenym.net>
Reply-To: mmora(a)securenym.net
To: aisworld(a)lists.aisnet.org
============================================================================
CFP of IJITSA July 2012 issue: deadline is March 15, 2011
============================================================================
Int. Journal of Information Technologies and the Systems Approach
http://www.igi-global.com/ijitsa
Published: Semi annual (both in Print and Electronic form)
============================================================================
COVERAGE
?Foundations on systems science and the systems approach
?Innovative cases by using the systems approach
?Philosophy of systems sciences
?Review of IT tools for conducting systems research
?Systems methodologies
============================================================================
SUBMISSION PROCEDURE:
Please visit instructions in the IJITSA website at:
http://www.igi-global.com/ijitsa
============================================================================
IJITSA EDITORS
?Frank Stowell (EiC), University of Portsmouth, England
?Manuel Mora (co EiC), Autonomous University of Aguascalientes, México
?Amitava Dutta, George Mason University, USA
?Denis Edgar-Nevill, Canterbury Christ Church University, England
?Miroljub Kljajic), University of Maribor, Slovenia
?Yasmin Merali, University of Warwick, England
?James Burns, Texas Tech University, USA
?Robert Cloutier, Stevens Institute of Technology, USA
?Rory O?Connor, Dublin City University, Ireland
============================================================================
PUBLISHER:
IGI Global (formerly Idea Group Inc.)
============================================================================
_______________________________________________
AISWorld mailing list
AISWorld(a)lists.aisnet.org
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [WI] CFP Data and Information Quality Track at
ECIS 2011
Date: Fri, 1 Oct 2010 10:41:51 +0200
From: Mathias KLIER <Mathias.Klier(a)uibk.ac.at>
To: <wi(a)lists.uni-karlsruhe.de>
************************************************
CALL FOR PAPERS
19^th European Conference on Information Systems (ECIS 2011)
Track: "Data and Information Quality"
http://project.hkkk.fi/ecis2011/track_data_information_quality.htm
June 9-11, 2011, Helsinki, Finland (http://www.ecis2011.fi)
************************************************
Deadline for paper submissions: December 1, 2010
==========================================
Track Description:
===============
The quality of data and information plays a critical role in
our knowledge-based economy. Moreover, novel fields of
application such as online social networks and customer
relationship management have given rise to a high relevance
of data and information quality issues in theory and
practice. This is due to the fact that the benefit of data
and information depends heavily on their quality. Executives
and employees need high-quality data and information to
perform business, innovation, and decision-making processes
properly. Against this background, it is not surprising that
bad data and information quality may lead to wrong decisions
and correspondingly high costs. According to an
international survey up to 75% of executives have already
made wrong decisions because of bad data and information
quality. In addition, they and their staff spend up to 30%
of their working time on checking the quality of data and
information. Furthermore, 67% of marketing executives think
that the satisfaction of their customers suffers from bad
data and information quality. In this respect, the
consequences of bad data and information quality are
manifold: they range from insufficient decision support for
executives to worsening customer relationships and customer
satisfaction by addressing customers inadequately.
Against this background, the assessment and improvement as
well as the economic impacts of data and information quality
currently find a great deal of attention in science and
practice. In this context, the Data and Information Quality
Track focuses on novel managerial as well as technological
data and information quality challenges and solutions. The
track welcomes theoretical and empirical contributions as
well as design science-oriented research.
Suggested Topics:
==============
* Impact of data and information quality
* Assessment of data and information quality
* Cost/benefit analyses of data and information quality
improvement
* Data and information quality in sustainable decision making
* Management of data and information quality
* Data and information quality tools, methods, and concepts
* Data and information quality in the enterprise context
* Data and information quality of unstructured data
* Quality of ontologies
* Value of information (quality)
* Data and information quality cases and applications
- Web 2.0
- E-business
- Healthcare
- Financial services industry
- E-government
- Customer relationship management
- Supply chain management
- Data Warehousing and data mining
- Master data management
- Data integration
- Quality of metadata
* Research Methodologies in data and information quality
Fast-Track Publication:
===================
Outstanding papers will be fast-tracked for ACM Journal of
Data and Information Quality (ACM JDIQ) (http://jdiq.acm.org/)
Track Chairs:
===========
Bernd Heinrich, University of Innsbruck, Austria
Yang W. Lee, Northeastern University, USA
Mathias Klier, University of Innsbruck, Austria
Best regards
Mathias Klier
--------------------------------------------------------------
Dr. Mathias Klier
Leopold-Franzens-University of Innsbruck
School of Management
Information Systems
-------------------------------------
Universitaetsstrasse 15
A-6020 Innsbruck
Austria
Phone: +43 (0) 512 507 7685
Fax: +43 (0) 512 507 9809
Email: mathias.klier(a)uibk.ac.at
<mailto:bernd.heinrich@uibk.ac.at>
WWW: http://www.uibk.ac.at/wipl
----------------------------------------------------------------
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [computational.science] Deadline extended to
October 8: Workshop on Latest Advances in Scalable
Algorithms for Large-Scale Systems (ScalA) 2010
Date: Thu, 30 Sep 2010 16:58:59 -0400
From: Christian Engelmann <engelmannc(a)ornl.gov>
Organization: "ICCSA"
To: Computational Science Mailing List
<computational.science(a)lists.iccsa.org>
We apologize if you receive multiple copies.
The deadline was extended to October 8.
Also, the best (extended) papers will be published in a special Issue
(or Special Section) of Elsevier Science's International Journal of
Computational Science (http://www.elsevier.com/wps/locate/jocs).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Workshop on Latest Advances in
Scalable Algorithms for Large-Scale Systems (ScalA)
New Orleans, LA, USA, November 14-15, 2010
<http://www.csm.ornl.gov/srt/conferences/Scala/2010>
held in conjunction with the 23rd IEEE/ACM International Conference on
High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis (SC) 2010
Novel scalable scientific algorithms are needed in order to enable key
science applications to exploit the computational power of large-scale
systems. This is especially true for the current tier of leading
petascale machines and the road to exascale computing as HPC systems
continue to scale up in compute node and processor core count. These
extreme-scale systems require novel scientific algorithms to hide
network and memory latency, have very high computation/communication
overlap, have minimal communication, and have no synchronization points.
Scientific algorithms for multi-petaflop and exa-flop systems also need
to be fault tolerant and fault resilient, since the probability of
faults increases with scale. Resilience at the system software and at
the algorithmic level is needed as a crosscutting effort. Finally, with
the advent of heterogeneous compute nodes that employ standard
processors as well as GPGPUs, scientific algorithms need to match these
architectures to extract the most performance. This includes different
system-specific levels of parallelism as well as co-scheduling of
computation. Scientific key science applications require novel
mathematical models and system software that address the scalability and
resilience challenges of current- and future-generation extreme-scale
HPC systems.
Submission Guidelines:
Authors are invited to submit manuscripts in English structured as
technical papers not exceeding 8 letter size (8.5x11) pages including
figures, tables and references using the IEEE format for conference
proceedings. Submissions not conforming to these guidelines may be
returned without review. Reference style files are available at
<http://www.ieee.org/web/publications/pubservices/confpub/AuthorTools/
conferecceTemplates.html>. All manuscripts will be reviewed and judged
on correctness, originality, technical strength, and significance,
quality of presentation, and interest and relevance to the workshop
attendees. Submitted papers must represent original unpublished research
that is not currently under review for any other conference or journal.
Papers not following these guidelines will be rejected without review
and further action may be taken, including (but not limited to)
notifications sent to the heads of the institutions of the authors and
sponsors of the conference. Submissions received after the due date,
exceeding length limit, or not appropriately structured may also not be
considered. At least one author of an accepted paper must register for
and attend the workshop. Authors may contact the workshop program chair
for more information. Papers should be submitted electronically at
<http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=scala2010>.
Important Dates:
- Full paper or extended abstract submission: 8 October, 2010
- Notification of acceptance: 15 October, 2010
- Camera-ready papers and extended abstracts: 3 November, 2010
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Novel scientific algorithms that improve performance, scalability,
resilience and power efficiency
- Porting scientific algorithms and applications to many-core and
heterogeneous architectures
- Performance and resilience limitations of scientific algorithms and
applications at scale
- Crosscutting approaches (system software and applications) in
addressing scalability challenges
- Scientific algorithms that can exploit extreme concurrency (e.g.
1 billion for exascale by 2018)
- Naturally fault tolerant, self-healing or fault oblivious scientific
algorithms
- Programming model and system software support for algorithm
scalability and resilience
Workshop Chairs:
- Prof. Vassil Alexandrov, The University of Reading, UK
- Prof. Jack Dongarra, The University of Tennessee, USA
- Al Geist, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA
Workshop Program Chair:
- Dr. Christian Engelmann, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA
Program Committee:
- Prof. Vassil Alexandrov, The University of Reading, UK
- Dr. Rob Allan, Daresbury Laboratory, UK
- Prof. Marian Bubak, University of Science and Technology, Krakow,
Poland
- Prof. Jack Dongarra, The University of Tennessee, USA
- Al Geist, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA
- Dr. Kirk Jordan, IBM T.J. Watson Centre, USA
- Prof. Dieter Kranzlmueller, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich,
Germany
- Prof. Ron Perrott, Queen's University Belfast, UK
- Dr. Stephen L. Scott, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA
--
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Dr. Christian Engelmann Phone: +1 (865) 574-3132
Research and Development Staff Member Fax: +1 (865) 576-5491
Oak Ridge National Laboratory One Bethel Valley Road
mailto:engelmannc@ornl.gov P.O. Box 2008, MS-6173
http://www.csm.ornl.gov/~engelman Oak Ridge, TN 37831, USA
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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To unsubscribe, e-mail: computational.science-unsubscribe(a)lists.iccsa.org
For additional commands, e-mail: computational.science-help(a)lists.iccsa.org
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [AISWorld] Deadline Extension for PhD Student
Research Proposals – SIG IS Cognitive Research Exchange
Workshop (IS-CoRE)
Date: Thu, 30 Sep 2010 16:02:40 -0500
From: Bob Otondo <rotondo(a)cobilan.msstate.edu>
To: <aisworld(a)lists.aisnet.org>
Due to several requests, we have extended the submission deadline for
the SIG IS-CoRE Doctoral Research Roundtable to October 11, 2010.
Doctoral Research Roundtable
The Ninth Annual SIG IS Cognitive Research Exchange Workshop
Sunday, December 12, 2010 (Pre-ICIS)
St. Louis, Missouri
CALL FOR DOCTORAL STUDENT RESEARCH PROPOSALS
Extended Submission Deadline: October 11, 2010
The organizing committee for the SIG IS Cognitive Research Exchange
(IS-CoRE) Workshop invites doctoral students to submit research
proposals for its Ninth Annual meeting. Like other papers in the
workshop, proposals should address human cognition (i.e., how we know
things, through processes such as reasoning, perception, and judgment)
in an IS context. Doctoral research proposals will be discussed in a
special portion of the workshop, the format of which will depend on the
number of proposals accepted. Discussions are expected to be open and
constructive, in a spirit of collegial community-building. A discounted
rate for attendance will be extended to these students (TBA).
IS-CoRE is intended to represent and support researchers in information
systems who view understanding human cognition as a critical component
to the successful design and implementation of information systems.
Accordingly, doctoral research proposals should address IS research
questions using theories and methods from the cognitive and
psychological sciences. There is a wide range of diverse topics from
which these questions can come. These include, but are not limited to:
* Situated, shared, social, distributed, and team cognition
* Cognition in Virtual Worlds
* Collaborative work
* Group and individual decision support systems
* Group and individual group problem-finding, problem-solving
* Cognitive perspectives on human or computer-mediated
knowledge-sharing
* Cognitive perspectives on decision processes
* Cognitive perspectives on knowledge management
* Cognitive perspectives on the design or use of information systems
* Cognitive processes of programmers/systems developers
* Cognitive aspects of learning and innovation
* Creativity and creative cognition
* Design of user learning and training interventions
* Human factors in information environments
* Human-computer interaction or human factors perspectives involving
cognition or perception
* Research methods to investigate cognitive issues in IS
Authors of accepted proposals will be notified of the format decision
in their acceptance letters. Regardless of format, doctoral students
will receive feedback from IS-CoRE members and workshop attendees. In
prior years, students have found this portion of the workshop to be very
helpful.
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
Doctoral students should limit their proposals to about 5,000 words,
including tables, figures, and references. Proposals must also include
an abstract not exceeding 300 words. Papers are to be submitted
electronically to rotondo(a)cobilan.msstate.edu with the subject line
"CORE Submission-PhD Proposal".
Before submitting manuscripts, please format papers so that:
(1) the first page contains only the paper title, the subtitle
“Doctoral Student Research Proposal,” author names, affiliations,
and e-mail addresses
(2) the second page contains only the paper title, the subtitle
“Doctoral Student Research Proposal,” and abstract, but no author
names
(3) identifying information is removed from the file properties
(4) all comments are removed and changes are accepted (if necessary)
Papers may be submitted in Word, WordPerfect, or Acrobat formats. If
submitting in Acrobat, please submit the title page with author
information separately.
WORKSHOP FORMAT
For more information about the workshop and IS-CoRE, please see our Web
site at http://www.ou.edu/is-core/.
EXTENDED ABSTRACTS
This workshop is a forum to present and discuss papers and to help
authors publish their papers in top academic journals. In order to
prevent copyright issues for subsequent publication, doctoral students
can, if they wish, submit an extended abstract which will be distributed
at the workshop and made available on the SIG website. The purpose of
this extended abstract is to highlight key aspects of the proposal
presented for discussion. The abstract should include a synthesis of the
theoretical background. Depending on the student’s progress, the
abstract can also include proposed methods and findings. The extended
abstract should not exceed 2 pages of single-spaced text including any
tables, figures and references.
IMPORTANT DATES
Extended submission deadline: October 11, 2010
Acceptance notification: October 31, 2010
Workshop: Sunday, December 12, 2010
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
Robert F. Otondo
Mississippi State University
rotondo(a)cobilan.msstate.edu
Norman Johnson
University of Houston
Norman.Johnson(a)mail.uh.edu
Deb Armstrong
Florida State University
djarmstrong(a)cob.fsu.edu
Alison Parkes
University of Melbourne
aparkes(a)unimelb.edu.au
AIS Liaison for IS-CoRE:
Teresa Shaft
University of Oklahoma
tshaft(a)ou.edu
Robert F. Otondo, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Dept. of Management& Information Systems
College of Business& Industry
Mississippi State University
Mississippi State, MS 39762
Phone: (662) 325-1961
Fax: (662) 325-8651
_______________________________________________
AISWorld mailing list
AISWorld(a)lists.aisnet.org
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [AISWorld] TOC: latest issue of the International
Journal of Mobile and Blended Learning (IJMBL)
Date: Fri, 1 Oct 2010 10:36:51 +1300
From: Parsons, David <D.P.Parsons(a)massey.ac.nz>
To: aisworld(a)lists.aisnet.org <aisworld(a)lists.aisnet.org>
TOC: latest issue of the International Journal of Mobile and
Blended Learning (IJMBL)
Volume 2, Issue 3, July-September 2010
Published: Quarterly in Print and Electronically
ISSN: 1941-8647 EISSN: 1941-8655
Published by IGI Publishing, Hershey-New York, USA
www.igi-global.com/ijmbl
Editor-in-Chief: David Parsons, Massey University -
Auckland, New Zealand
GUEST EDITORIAL PREFACE
Norbert Pachler, University of London, UK.
To read the preface, please consult the issue of IJMBL in
your library or click here.
http://www.igi-global.com/Bookstore/TitleDetails.aspx?TitleId=45993
PAPER ONE
Mobile Phones as Mediating Tools within Augmented Contexts
for Development
John Cook (London Metropolitan University, UK)
PAPER TWO
Mobile, Inquiry-Based Learning and Geological Observation:
An Exploratory Study
Brenda Bannan (George Mason University, USA)
Erin Peters (George Mason University, USA)
Patricia Martinez (Arlington Public Schools, USA)
PAPER THREE
Mobile Learning, Digital Literacies, Information Habitus and
At-Risk Social Groups
Margit Böck (University of Salzburg, Austria)
PAPER FOUR
Mobile Media, Mobile Texts: Assessing the Abilities Needed
to Communicate and Represent in the Contemporary Media Landscape
Elisabetta Adami (University of Verona, Italy)
****************************************************
For full copies of the above articles, check for this issue
of the International Journal of Mobile and Blended Learning
(IJMBL) in your institution's library. This journal is also
included in the IGI Global aggregated "InfoSci-Journals"
database:
http://www.igi-global.com/EResources/InfoSciJournals.aspx.
*****************************************************
CALL FOR PAPERS
Interested authors should consult the journal's web page at
www.igi-global.com/ijmbl.
All inquiries and submissions should be sent to:
Editor-in-Chief: Dr. David Parsons at ijmbl(a)igi-global.com
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [AISWorld] Volume 2 Issue 3 of AIS Transactions on
Human-Computer Interaction Published
Date: Thu, 30 Sep 2010 23:33:48 -0400
From: Galletta, Dennis <galletta(a)katz.pitt.edu>
To: AISWorld(a)lists.aisnet.org <AISWorld(a)lists.aisnet.org>
Announcing the Publication of
Volume 2 Issue 3 of /AIS Transactions on Human-Computer
Interaction/
(http://thci.aisnet.org)
We are excited to report that this has been an increasingly
busy time for /AIS Transactions on Human-Computer
Interaction. /The last several months have provided an
especially dramatic uptick in submissions to this 21-month
old journal. In addition, we have received many papers for
our first special issue on Design Science.
/ /
/THCI/ is located within the AIS (Association for
Information Systems) e-library
(http://aisel.aisnet.org/thci). To increase awareness and
readership, /THCI/ is *freely available* to everyone during
its first two years of publishing (2009 and 2010). You can
find information related to all aspects of /THCI/ at its
website, <http://aisel.aisnet.org/> including how to submit.
We would like to thank AIS <http://home.aisnet.org/> Council
for its continued support of the journal through these
difficult economic times.
==================
In this issue
==================
The first paper by Babu, Singh, and Ganesh, investigates the
topic of usability and accessibility for blind web users.
The authors make use of protocol analysis, a time-tested
technique, to provide deep understanding of situations faced
by blind users. This analysis provides valuable insights for
researchers and designers. Qualitative techniques developed
in this paper can provide researchers with a rich set of
tools in the future.
The second paper by Schuff, Turetken, and Zaheeruddin,
provides a timely look at Web 2.0 to serve as an avenue for
public discourse. In recent weeks, the blossoming attention
on the upcoming election has initiated much discussion of
the role of blogs in political campaigns. The paper provides
recommendations of design artifacts that can reduce the
cognitive overload inherent in attempting to make millions
of voices count. A prototype system is described in this
paper that puts the recommendations to work and provides
greater support for the task of integrating and
comprehending public discourse. A research agenda provides
guidance for future research.
We hope these papers are as interesting to you as they were
to the editorial panels that worked with them.
-------------
Abstracts
-------------
Paper #1: "Understanding Blind Users' Web Accessibility and
Usability Problems"
By Rakesh Babu, Rahul Singh, and Jai Ganesh
Abstract
Our motivation for this research is the belief that blind
users cannot participate effectively in routine Web-based
activities due to the lack of Web accessibility and
usability for non-visual interaction. We take a cognitive,
user-centered, task-oriented approach to develop an
understanding of accessibility and usability problems that
blind users face in Web interactions. This understanding is
critically needed to determine accessibility and usability
requirements for non-visual Web interaction. We employ
verbal protocol analysis for an in-depth examination of
difficulties participants face in completing an online
assessment through a course management system. We analyze
the problems that hinder accessibility and usability and
explain the nature of these problems in terms of design
principles. Our study contributes an effective method for
qualitative evaluation of Web accessibility and usability.
Our findings will guide future research to develop more
accessible and usable Web applications for blind users.
Paper #2: "Designing Systems that Support the Blogosphere
for Deliberative Discourse"
By David Schuff, Ozgur Turetken, and Asif Zaheeruddin
Abstract
Web 2.0 has great potential to serve as a public sphere
(Habermas, 1974; Habermas, 1989) -- a distributed arena of
voices where all who want to do so can participate. A
well-functioning public sphere is important for pluralistic
decision-making at many levels, ranging from small
organizations to society at large. In this paper, we analyze
the capability of the blogosphere in its current form to
support such a role. This analysis leads to the
identification of the principal issues that prevent the
blogosphere from realizing its full potential as a public
sphere. Most significantly, we propose that the sheer volume
of content overwhelms blog readers, forcing them to restrict
themselves to only a small subset of valuable content. This
ultimately reduces their level of informedness. Based on
past research on managing discourse, we propose four design
artifacts that would alleviate these issues: a communal
repository, textual clustering, visual cues, and a
participation facility for blog users. We present a
prototype system, called FeedWiz, which implements several
of these design artifacts. Based on this initial design, we
formulate a research agenda for the creation of new tools
that effectively harness the potential of the growing body
of user-generated content in the blogosphere and beyond.
==================
Call for Papers
==================
/THCI/ is a high-quality peer-reviewed international
scholarly journal on Human-Computer Interaction. As an AIS
journal, /THCI/ is oriented to the Information Systems
community, emphasizing applications in business, managerial,
organizational, and cultural contexts. However, it is open
to all related communities that share intellectual interests
in HCI phenomena and issues. The editorial objective is to
enhance and communicate knowledge about the interplay among
humans, information, technologies, and tasks in order to
guide the development and use of human-centered Information
and Communication Technologies (ICT) and services for
individuals, groups, organizations, and communities.
Topics of interest to /THCI/ include but are not limited to
the following:
* The behavioral, cognitive, motivational and affective
aspects of human and technology interaction
* User task analysis and modeling; fit between
representations and task types
* Digital documents/genres; human information seeking
and web navigation behaviors; human information
interaction; information visualization
* Social media; social computing; virtual communities
* Behavioral information security and information
assurance; privacy and trust in human technology
interaction
* User interface design and evaluation for various
applications in business, managerial, organizational,
educational, social, cultural, non-work, and other domains
* Integrated and/or innovative approaches, guidelines,
and standards or metrics for human centered analysis,
design, construction, evaluation, and use of
interactive devices and information systems
* Information systems usability engineering; universal
usability
* The impact of interfaces/information technology on
people's attitude, behavior, performance, perception,
and productivity
* Implications and consequences of technological change
on individuals, groups, society, and socio-technical
units
* Software learning and training issues such as
perceptual, cognitive, and motivational aspects of
learning
* Gender and information technology
* The elderly, the young, and special needs populations
for new applications, modalities, and multimedia
interaction
* Issues in HCI education
The language for the journal is English. The audience
includes international scholars and practitioners who
conduct research on issues related to the objectives of the
journal. The publication frequency is quarterly: 4 issues
per year to be published in March, June, September, and
December. The AIS Special Interest Group on Human-Computer
Interaction (SIGHCI, http://sigs.aisnet.org/SIGHCI/) is the
official sponsor for /THCI/.
====================================================================
Call for Special Issue on User Participation/Centeredness in
New, Challenging IS Contexts
<http://aisel.aisnet.org/thci/Special_issue_participation.pdf>
Deadline: submissions are due October 31, 2010
====================================================================
Call for Special Issue on HCI in the Web 2.0 Era
<http://mjsciald.mysite.syr.edu/thci_web20_special_issue.pdf>
Deadline: submissions are due February 1, 2011
====================================================================
Please visit the links above or the links from our AIS THCI
page <http://aisel.aisnet.org/thci/> for details on these
special issue calls. We anticipate calls for additional
special issues in the future, so please keep checking our
home page to see what is brewing! If you have an idea for a
special issue, please drop us a line or speak with us at
ICIS in St. Louis <http://icis2010.aisnet.org/> in December.
==================
AIS THCI Editorial Boards
==================
Editors-in-Chief
---------------------
Dennis Galletta, University of Pittsburgh, USA
Ping Zhang, Syracuse University, USA
Advisory Board
---------------------
Izak Benbasat, University of British Columbia, Canada
John M. Carroll, Penn State University, USA
Phillip Ein-Dor, Tel-Aviv University, Israel
Jenny Preece, University of Maryland, USA
Gavriel Salvendy, Purdue University, USA and Tsinghua
University, China
Ben Shneiderman, University of Maryland, USA
Jane Webster, Queen's University, Canada,
K.K Wei, City University of Hong Kong, China
Senior Editor Board
-------------------------
Fred Davis, University of Arkansas, USA
Mohamed Khalifa, Abu Dhabi University, United Arab Emirates
Anne Massey, Indiana University, USA
Lorne Olfman, Claremont Graduate University, USA
Kar Yan Tam, Hong Kong University of Science & Technology,
China
Dov Te'eni, Tel-Aviv University, Israel
Viswanath Venkatesh, University of Arkansas, USA
Susan Wiedenbeck, Drexel University, USA
Associate Editor Board
-----------------------------
Michel Avital, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Jane Carey, Arizona State University, USA
Hock Chuan Chan, National University of Singapore
Carina de Villiers, University of Pretoria, South Africa
Matt Germonprez, University of Wisconsin Eau Claire USA
Khaled Hassanein, McMaster University, Canada
Milena Head, McMaster University, Canada
Traci Hess, Washington State University, USA
Shuk Ying (Susanna) Ho, Australian National University,
Australia
Netta Iivari, Oulu University, Finland
Zhenhui Jack Jiang, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Weiling Ke, Clarkson University, USA
Sherrie Komiak, Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada
Paul Benjamin Lowry, Brigham Young University, USA
Ji-Ye Mao, Renmin University, China
Scott McCoy, College of William and Mary, USA
Fiona Fui-Hoon Nah, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA
Sheizaf Rafaeli, University of Haifa, Israel
Stefan Smolnik, European Business School (EBS), Germany
Jeff Stanton, Syracuse University, USA
Heshan Sun, University of Arizona USA
Jason Thatcher, Clemson University, USA
Noam Tractinsky, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel
Horst Treiblmaier, Vienna University of Business
Administration and Economics, Austria
Ozgur Turetken, Ryerson University, Canada
Mun Yi, University South Carolina, USA
Managing Editor
---------------------
Michael Scialdone, Syracuse University, USA
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dennis F. Galletta Professor of
Business Administration
University of Pittsburgh Katz Graduate
School of Business
342 Mervis Hall
Pittsburgh, PA 15260
Phone +1 412-648-1699 Fax
+1 412-648-1693
E-mail: galletta @
homepage:
katz.pitt.eduwww.pitt.edu/~galletta
<http://www.pitt.edu/%7Egalletta>
----------------------------------------------------------------------------