-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [AISWorld] CFP for JMIS SI on the Metaverse
Date: Sun, 20 Nov 2022 14:33:38 -0500
From: paul.lowry.phd(a)gmail.com
To: aisworld(a)lists.aisnet.org
Journal of Management Information Systems (JMIS) Call for Submission to
the Special Issue Fostering the Design and Governance of the Metaverse
Guest Editors: Prof. Paul Benjamin Lowry, Virginia Tech; Prof. Waifong Boh,
Nanyang Technological University; Prof. Stacie Petter, Wake Forest
University; Prof. Jan Marco Leimeister, University of St. Gallen and
University of Kassel
JMIS, a top-tier scholarly journal, invites the best papers addressing the
components of the potential emergence of the Metaverse as a complement to
and a potential replacement for the current Web.
The Metaverse is envisioned as a collection of technologies and initiatives
intended to create a next-generation Internet (Web3) that is highly
immersive, persistent, in 3D, and based on the latest developments in
extended reality (XR)-an umbrella term for virtual reality (VR), mixed
reality (MR), and augmented reality (AR)-as supplemented by artificial
intelligence (AI), cloud computing, quantum computing, and other supporting
technologies. Given the compelling and disruptive potential for the
Metaverse to generate the Web3, several of the world's leading technology
companies are investing tens of billions of dollars on related software and
hardware to foster this market, including Meta (famously renamed from
"Facebook" as an all-in bet on the Metaverse), Microsoft, Snapchat, Amazon,
NVIDIA, Epic Games, Apple, among others.
This is an opportune time for researchers to examine what can be learned
from the past failed efforts of AR/VR platforms such as Second Life and
over-hyped failed AR technologies like Google Glass, and to examine the many
more successes that are occurring, perhaps more quietly, with XR (i.e., VR,
MR, AR) in education, manufacturing, gaming, branding, healthcare,
retailing, logistics, aerospace and defense, architecture, advertising, and
athletics. It is these successes and disruptive business models that are
likely to form what will be known as the Metaverse. However, this is no
minor feat, just as the Internet as we know it took decades to develop. To
create a truly persistent 3D, virtual, and immersive Metaverse, there will
need to be further advances in supporting hardware (goggles, headsets,
sensors), and an exponential increase in computing power, storage, and
memory. If the Metaverse is to succeed it must be based on making things
better for people than the status quo, and thus must foster innovative
business models that are profitable, and yet foster interoperability,
efficiency, remote work, reliability, fairness, accountability, open
governance, inclusivity, safety, community, and to do so in a manner that is
sustainable environmentally, socially and ethically.
This is the time for scientists to work with policy makers, companies, and
not-for-profit organizations to break the current social media models and
envision a Metaverse that can best serve collective global needs.
Accordingly, we are pleased to announce a Special Issue (SI) on this subject
at JMIS. Our strong preference is for contributions of original and rigorous
theory-guided behavioral or empirical data around information systems
artifacts that inform design, practice, research, and the products and
foundations of theory of meaningful aspects of the Metaverse. We seek any
methodological approaches that are legitimate and rigorous, and that can
shed light on important phenomena related to the Metaverse. However, we are
not seeking review papers or those that focus on discussions of further
research alone.
Honorary Senior Scholar advisors and editors to the special issue:
. Patrick Y.K. Chau, University of Nottingham . Alan Dennis, Indiana
University
. Juho Hamari, Tampere University
. Suprateek Sarker, University of Virginia
. Viswanath (Venki) Venkatesh, Virginia Tech
. Doug Vogel, Harbin Institute of Technology
Dates:
. Optional extended abstracts for initial guidance (not formal peer
review) January 30, 2023
. First round submissions due date: May 1, 2023
. First round decisions provided by: July 15, 2023
. Second round submissions due date: November 15, 2023
. Second round decisions provided by: January 15, 2024
. Third round submissions due date: March 15, 2024
. Final decisions on papers provided by: April 30, 2024
. Special issue publication in late 2024
For full information on the CFP see:
<https://sites.google.com/site/professorlowrypaulbenjamin/jmis-si-on-the-met
averse-new?authuser=0>
_______________________________________________
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-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: ML 2023 - Invitation for submissions - 2nd call for papers
Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2022 14:43:37 +0000
From: Andreia Silva <andreiasilva.conf(a)gmail.com>
To: secretariat(a)mlearning-conf.org
Dear Sir/Madam,
Since you submitted a paper to a previous edition of the International
Conference on Mobile Learning, we are inviting you to join us and submit
a paper to the 2023 edition that will be held in Lisbon (Portugal) from
11 to 13 March 2023.
The deadline for the second call is 12 December 2022. For more
information and to check the detailed Call for Papers, please access
http://mlearning-conf.org/.
Important Dates:
- Submission Deadline (2nd call): 12 December 2022
- Notification to Authors (2nd call): 9 January 2023
- Final Camera-Ready Submission and Early Registration (2nd call): Until
3 February 2023
- Late Registration (2nd call): After 3 February 2023
- Conference: 11 – 13 March 2023
**If you want to be removed from our mailing list, please reply to this
email or click on http://unsubscribe.isrlab.org/unsubscribe.php?conf=ML
and enter your e-mail.
Best Regards
ML 2023 Secretariat
----------------------------------
URL: http://www.esociety-conf.org/
Join us on social media:
https://www.linkedin.com/company/iadis-associationhttp://twitter.com/IADIShttp://www.facebook.com/IADIS
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: CFP: Trans- and Inter-Disciplinary Research, Education, and
Communication - Your Abstract Is Welcome!
Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2022 13:59:46 +0000
From: IIIS 2023 Spring Conferences <cfp-spring(a)2023conf-iiis.org>
To: gustaf.neumann(a)wu-wien.ac.at
IIIS 2023 Conferences
Dear Gustaf Neumann,
Please consider contributing to the *Special Multi-Track Event to be
held in the context of 14^th International Multi-Conference on
Complexity, Informatics and Cybernetics: IMCIC 2023*, which has been
based in Orlando, Florida, USA, and will take place on *March 28 - 31,
2023*.
This special multi-track event includes the following tracks:
* *Trans- and Inter-Disciplinary Research, Education, and
Communication: TIDREC 2023*
* *Research, Education, and Trans-Disciplinary Communication: RETDC 2023*
* *Case Studies Approach, Methods, and/or Application: CSAMA 2023*
*_You can submit your abstract(s)_ (300-600 words) at*:
https://www.iiis-2023conf.org/Spring-SpecialEvents
This web page has a more detailed call for papers for each track; which
has suggested non-exclusive topics for each of the three tracks.
*_A second article_* submitted to any of the above tracks will have no
additional cost for its presentation and inclusion in the conference
proceedings as long as: 1) its respective abstract is accepted, 2) goes
through the same reviewing process as the first one, and 3) is presented
and written *FOR Transdisciplinary Communication*.
*_Publications_*
All accepted and presented articles will be published in:
1. The conference proceedings (IMCIC proceedings has been *indexed by
SCOPUS* since 2010)
2. A special issue of the Journal of Systemics, Cybernetics, and
Informatics (JSCI), indexed, since 2003, by DOAJ (Directory of Open
Access Journals, considered a whitelist). DOAJ affirms that being
DOAJ's Index available for free, "Many aggregators, databases,
libraries, publishers, and search portals collect our free metadata
and include it in their products. Examples are Scopus, Serial
Solutions, and EBSCO… DOAJ is OAI compliant and once an article is
in DOAJ, it is automatically harvestable".
3. For the publication of the article in the Special Issue of the
Journal, the author needs to adapt the paper for trans-disciplinary
communications and meet the format and the additional requirement of
the journal. There will be no additional processing cost to be paid
by the authors, who may extend their paper up to 10.000 words, which
is the limit of the journal. The transdisciplinary adaptation of the
content may include the title of the paper.
4. Potential printed copies of the electronic special issue, or a
multi-author book, to be distributed via Amazon at a very low price.
This third publication would depend on the effectiveness of the
authors in writing FOR Transdisciplinary Communication, i.e., any
scholar in any academic discipline should be able to understand, or
at least, to be informed about the content of the article. This may
require trans- or inter-textualism to relate different semiotic
systems, i.e., to translate from disciplinary semiotic systems to
non-disciplinary semiotic systems, as it is the case, for example,
of natural language semiotic systems.
*_Deadlines and Steps_*
The following steps and deadlines are just for this special track/event,
*not to be confused with the deadlines of the general conference*.
1. *November 30, 2022: *Submission of abstracts (300-600 words) which
should be made via the web page posted at:
https://www.iiis-2023conf.org/Spring-SpecialEvents (*Not via the
IMCIC 2023 website*). Abstracts will be accepted, or not, during the
following 4 days after they had been submitted.
2. *December 20, 2022: *Submission of the full papers (2,000-5,000
words, in two-column format)
3. *January 7, 2023: *Acceptance notification for the full paper, after
Participative Peer-to-Peer Reviewing (PPPR) has been made.
4. *January 20, 2023: *Uploading of the paper's final version to the
conference server.
5. *Publication of the Journal's Special Issue* will be made in Volume
21 (The year 2023). It will require another format (one-column
format) and additional editing reviewing of the format and
expressive form.
*_Presentations_*
*Both synchronous and asynchronous virtual presentations are possible*.
Therefore, the authors have the options of:
* Submitting a slide show and/or a pre-recorded video of their
presentation (asynchronous presentation) or
* Making their presentation via Zoom (synchronous presentation)
Additionally, each paper to be presented at the event may be read and
commented on, via electronic forums, and evaluated by those participants
who have registered for the conference.
Keynote speakers will be selected from registered authors whose
submissions are among the best according to their external reviewers.
The identification of the best submissions will be based on the
quantitative and qualitative evaluation of the reviewers and the
percentage of reviewers recommending the acceptance of the submission as
related to all the reviewers who made their respective reviews. For this
reason, we recommend you submit your paper early.
Thank you for your time, and we look forward to your contribution.
Respectfully,
Organizing Committee of the Multi-Track Special Event*
*
If you wish to be removed from this mailing list, you may unsubscribe
here
<https://www.iiis-2023conf.org/Unsubscribe/Unsubscribe.asp?e=gustaf%2Eneuman…>.
If you have difficulty with the unsubscribe link, you may also send an
e-mail to remove(a)2023conf-iiis.org with REMOVE MLCONFERENCES in the
subject line. Address: 13750 West Colonial Dr, Suite 350 - 408, Winter
Garden, Florida 34787, USA.
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [AISWorld] Electronic Markets (EM) Issue 32-3 - ToC and CfP
Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2022 09:15:03 +0100
From: editors(a)electronicmarkets.org
To: aisworld(a)lists.aisnet.org
--- Apologies for cross-postings---
Dear colleagues,
Electronic Markets' third issue in 2022 includes four papers of the special
issue on "The cultural impact in platform competition", and 35 papers in the
general research section. An overview on all papers in the context of
"platform culture" may be found in the issue's editorial and the preface of
the special issue. All articles are available via SpringerLink, twenty-three
of them as open access. In addition, four open call for papers for future
special issues are included at the end of this ToC-Alert.
********************************
ToC Electronic Markets Vol. 32-3
********************************
Editorial *open access*
Electronic Markets on platform culture
Rainer Alt https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00604-5
Preface The cultural impact in platform competition
Yun Wan, Makoto Nakayama, Chei Sian Lee, Simon Poon & Panagiotis
Stamolampros https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00587-3
Research Paper *open access*
Cultural differences in processing online customer reviews: Holistic versus
analytic thinkers
Benedikt M. Brand, Cristopher Siegfried Kopplin & Theresa Maria Rausch
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00543-1
Research Paper
Cultural differences in hospitality service evaluations: Mining insights of
user generated content
Chong Guan, Yu-Chen Hung & Wenting Liu
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00545-z
Research Paper
Your reviews or mine? Exploring the determinants of "perceived helpfulness"
of online reviews: a cross-cultural study
Baidyanath Biswas, Pooja Sengupta & Boudhayan Ganguly
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-020-00452-1
Research Paper *open access*
The role of social trust in reward crowdfunding campaigns' design and
success
Rotem Shneor, Urszula Mrzygłód, Joanna Adamska-Mieruszewska & Anna
Fornalska-Skurczyńska
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-021-00456-5
Interview *open access*
Managing AI is managing complexity - An interview with Rahul C. Basole
Rainer Alt
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00585-5
Research Paper *open access*
Does personality still matter in e-commerce? How perceived hubris influences
the assessment of founders' trustworthiness using the example of
reward-based crowdfunding
Janina Sundermeier & Tyge-F. Kummer
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00584-6
Research Paper Social commerce affordances for female entrepreneurship:
the case of
Facebook
Sonia Camacho & Andrés Barrios
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-021-00487-y
Research Paper *open access*
Explaining reviewing effort: Existing reviews as potential driver
Christoph Rohde, Alexander Kupfer & Steffen Zimmermann
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00595-3
Research Paper *open access*
It's all about the text: An experimental investigation of inconsistent
reviews on restaurant booking platforms
Andreas J. Steur, Fabian Fritzsche & Mischa Seiter
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00525-3
Research Paper *open access*
Explaining consumer suspicion: Insights of a vignette study on online
product reviews
Tim Kollmer, Andreas Eckhardt & Victoria Reibenspiess
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00549-9
Research Paper Network engagement from learning friends' preferences:
Evidence from a video
gaming social network
Michael R. Ward https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00583-7
Research Paper *open access* Uncovering the identity of Electronic
Markets research through text mining
techniques
Nora Nahr & Marikka Heikkilä
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00560-0
Research Paper *open access* Data modalities, consumer attributes and
recommendation performance in the
fashion industry
Sylwia Sysko-Romańczuk, Piotr Zaborek, Anna Wróblewska, Jacek Dąbrowski &
Sergiy Tkachuk
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00579-3
Research Paper An empirical analysis of experienced reviewers in online
communities: What,
how, and why to review
Hoon S. Choi & Michele Maasberg https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-021-00499-8
Research Paper Understanding reviewer characteristics in online reviews
via network
structural positions
Hui-Ju Wang https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00561-z
Research Paper Network promoter score (NePS): An indicator of product
sales in E-commerce
retailing sector
Supriyo Mandal & Abyayananda Maiti
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-021-00503-1
Research Paper *open access* The effects of advertisement disclosure on
heavy and light Instagram users
Zofia Saternus, Patrick Weber & Oliver Hinz
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00546-y
Research Paper *open access* Empowering users to control ads and its
effects on website stickiness
Dominick Werner, Martin Adam & Alexander Benlian
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00576-6
Research Paper *open access* Improving customer satisfaction in
proactive service design
Annette Wenninger, Daniel Rau & Maximilian Röglinger
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00565-9
Research Paper *open access*
No matter what the name, we're all the same? Examining ethnic online
discrimination in ridesharing marketplaces
Olga Abramova
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-021-00505-z
Research Paper Customer behavior of online group buying: An
investigation using the
transaction cost economics theory perspective
Mohammad Alamgir Hossain, Shahriar Akter & Shams Rahman
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-021-00479-y
Research Paper Collaborative consumption continuance: A mixed-methods
analysis of the
service quality-loyalty relationship in ride-sharing services
Weng Marc Lim, Gaurav Gupta, Baidyanath Biswas & Rohit Gupta
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-021-00486-z
Research Paper
Effects of perceived risks and benefits in the formation of the consumption
privacy paradox: A study of the use of wearables in people practicing
physical activities
Renata Benigna Gonçalves & Júlio César Bastos de Figueiredo
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00541-3
Research Paper *open access* Uncovering the digitalization impact on
consumer decision-making for
checking accounts in banking
Maik Dehnert & Josephine Schumann
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00524-4
Invited Paper *open access* Evaluating the emotional bidding framework:
New evidence from a decade of
neurophysiology
Marc T. P. Adam & Jan Krämer
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00555-x
Research Paper
Electronic marketplaces under conditions of oligopsony and relational
marketing - An empirical exploration of electronic agricultural markets in
India
Aashish Argade, Arnab Kumar Laha & Anand Kumar Jaiswal
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00539-x
Research Paper
Digital valuation of personality using personal tokens
Kamilla Marchewka-Bartkowiak, Karolina Anna Nowak & Michał Litwiński
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00562-y
Research Paper *open access*
It is not (only) about privacy: How multi-party computation redefines
control, trust, and risk in data sharing
Wirawan Agahari, Hosea Ofe & Mark de Reuver
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00572-w
Research Paper *open access*
Microexpressions in digital humans: Perceived affect, sincerity, and
trustworthiness
Aliya Tastemirova, Johannes Schneider, Leona Chandra Kruse, Simon Heinzle &
Jan vom Brocke
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00563-x
Research Paper *open access*
Perceived fairness of direct-to-consumer genetic testing business models
Philipp A. Toussaint, Scott Thiebes, Manuel Schmidt-Kraepelin & Ali Sunyaev
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00571-x
Research Paper
Factors impacting behavioural intentions to adopt the electronic
marketplace: Findings from small businesses in India
Richa Misra, Renuka Mahajan, Nidhi Singh, Sangeeta Khorana & Nripendra P.
Rana
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00578-4
Research Paper
Continued usage of smart wearable devices (SWDs): Cross-level analysis of
gamification and network externality
Juin-Ming TsaiShiu-Wan HungGuan-Ting Lin
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00575-7
Research Paper
Game-swinging on Twitch: An affordances perspective
E. Mitchell Church & Ravi Thambusamy
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00574-8
Research Paper *open access*
Initial coin offerings and the cryptocurrency hype - The moderating role of
exogenous and endogenous signals
Ferdinand Thies, Sören Wallbach, Michael Wessel, Markus Besler & Alexander
Benlian
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-021-00460-9
Research Paper Decentralized platform economy: Emerging blockchain-based
decentralized
platform business models
Oscar Lage, María Saiz-Santos & José Manuel Zarzuelo
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00586-4
Research Paper *open access*
Tarzan and chain: Exploring the ICO jungle and evaluating design archetypes
Nina M. Bachmann, Benedict Drasch, Gilbert Fridgen, Michael Miksch,
Ferdinand Regner, André Schweizer & Nils Urbach
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-021-00463-6
Position Paper
Do cryptocurrencies really have (no) intrinsic value?
Horst Treiblmaier
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-021-00491-2
Research Paper *open access*
Exploring the use of self-sovereign identity for event ticketing systems
Simon Feulner, Johannes Sedlmeir, Vincent Schlatt & Nils Urbach
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00573-9
Position Paper *open access*
The transparency challenge of blockchain in organizations
Johannes Sedlmeir, Jonathan Lautenschlager, Gilbert Fridgen & Nils Urbach
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00536-0
Correction to: The cultural impact in platform competition
Yun Wan, Makoto Nakayama, Chei Sian Lee, Simon Poon & Panagiotis
Stamolampros
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00601-8
Correction to: Effects of perceived risks and benefits in the formation of
the consumption privacy paradox: A study of the use of wearables in people
practicing physical activities
Renata Benigna Gonçalves & Júlio César Bastos de Figueiredo
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-022-00559-7
********************************
Please also note the three open calls for papers:
- Special issue on "Blockchain and electronic commerce"
Submissions deadline: December 31, 2022
https://bit.ly/3uBClLO
- Special issue on "Environmental, social, and governance (ESG) for Online
Marketplaces"
Submissions deadline: January 31, 2023
https://bit.ly/3xnL7ik
- Special issue on "Data economy in a globalized world: Opportunities and
challenges for public and private organizations"
Submissions deadline: April 01, 2023
https://bit.ly/3PH90YB
- Special issue on "AI-enabled information systems: Teaming up with
intelligent agents in networked business"
Submissions deadline: April 30, 2023
https://bit.ly/3Na47qA
- Special issue on "Social Welfare Computing"
Submissions deadline: June 15, 2023
https://bit.ly/3VjO9h3
********************************
Information for authors is available via
http://www.electronicmarkets.org/authors/general-information/ .
To sign-up for Electronic Markets ToC-Alert please go to
http://springer.com/tocsubscription/12525.
Best regards and we hope you enjoy reading this issue,
Rainer Alt, Hans-Dieter Zimmermann, Ramona Coia
====================================================================
Electronic Markets - The International Journal on Networked Business
====================================================================
Editors-in-Chief: Rainer Alt, Leipzig University, Hans-Dieter Zimmermann,
Eastern Switzerland University of Applied Sciences Executive Editor:
Ramona Coia, Leipzig University
Editorial Office:
c/o Information Systems Institute
Leipzig University 04109 Leipzig, Germany
Mail: editors(a)electronicmarkets.org Phone: +49-341-9733611
electronicmarkets.orghttps://www.facebook.com/ElectronicMarketshttps://twitter.com/Journal_EMhttps://www.linkedin.com/company/emjournalhttps://www.springer.com/journal/12525 Journal Impact Factor 2021: 6.017
_______________________________________________
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-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [AISWorld] 29th International European Conference on Parallel
and Distributed Computing (Euro-Par 2023): First Call for Papers
Date: Wed, 9 Nov 2022 13:26:24 +0200
From: George A. Papadopoulos <george(a)cs.ucy.ac.cy>
To: aisworld(a)lists.aisnet.org
*** First Call for Papers ***
29th International European Conference on Parallel and Distributed Computing
(Euro-Par 2023)
August 28 - September 1, 2023, St. Raphael Resort, Limassol, Cyprus
http://2023.euro-par.org
SCOPE
Euro-Par is the prime European conference covering all aspects of
parallel and
distributed processing, ranging from theory to practice, from small to
the largest
parallel and distributed systems and infrastructures, from fundamental
computational problems to applications, from architecture, compiler,
language and
interface design and implementation, to tools, support infrastructures, and
application performance aspects. The main audience of Euro-Par are
researchers in
academic institutions, government laboratories and industrial organisations.
Euro-Par aims to be the primary choice of such professionals for the
presentation of
new results in their specific areas. Euro-Par provides an excellent
forum for focused
technical discussion, as well as interaction with a large, broad and
diverse audience.
In addition, Euro-Par conferences provide a platform for a number of
accompanying,
technical workshops for smaller and emerging communities.
VENUE AND ORGANIZATION
Euro-Par 2023 will be held as a primarily in-person event (although remote
presentation and participation will be supported, if needed). The venue
place is
the 5* St. Raphael Resort, in Limassol, Cyprus. Euro-Par 2023 is
organised by the
Department of Computer Science of the University of Cyprus. The General
Chair
is George A. Papadopoulos and the Program Chairs are Marios D. Dikaiakos
and Rizos Sakellariou. The Organizing Committee is listed on the web site:
https://2023.euro-par.org/conference/committees/ .
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
The Euro-Par 2023 proceedings will be published by Springer in the LNCS
series. • Papers must be in PDF format and should not exceed 14 pages
(including
references)
• Papers must be formatted in the Springer LNCS style:
https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-gu…
• Papers that don’t meet these requirements might be rejected without a
review
• Contributions submitted elsewhere or currently under review will not
be considered • All submitted papers will be checked for originality by
Springer iThenticate;
papers which show an insufficient originality might be rejected without
a review
• Paper submissions are made through EasyChair using the link:
https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=europar2023
IMPORTANT DATES
• Abstract Submission: February 17, 2023
• Paper Submission: February 24, 2023
• Author Notification: April 30, 2023
• Camera-Ready Papers: June 2, 2023
• Author Registration: June 2, 2023
ARTEFACTS
Authors of accepted papers will be invited to submit an artefact that
will be evaluated
separately.
TOPICS
We invite submissions of high-quality, novel and original research
results in areas
of parallel and distributed computing covered by the following list of
tracks. More
information on the tracks can be found on the conference web page:
https://2023.euro-par.org/submission-of-papers/call-for-papers/
Track 1. Programming, Compilers and Performance
Chairs:
• Biagio Cosenza, University of Salerno, Italy
• Thomas Fahringer, University of Innsbruck, Austria
Track 2. Scheduling, Resource Management, Cloud, Edge Computing, and
Workflows
Chairs:
• Marco Aldinucci, University of Torino, Italy
• Ivona Brandic, Vienna University of Technology, Austria
Track 3. Architectures and Accelerators
Chairs:
• Jesus Carretero, University Carlos III of Madrid, Spain
• Leonel Sousa, University of Lisbon, Portugal
Track 4. Data Analytics, AI, and Computational Science
Chairs:
• Maciej Malawski, AGH University of Science and Technology, Poland
• Radu Prodan, University of Klagenfurt, Austria
Track 5. Theory and Algorithms
Chairs:
• Chryssis Georgiou, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
• Christos Kaklamanis, University of Patras, Greece
Track 6. Multidisciplinary, Domain-specific and Applied Parallel and
Distributed Computing
Chairs:
• Francisco F. Rivera, University of Santiago de Compostela, Spain
• Domenico Talia, University of Calabria, Italy
_______________________________________________
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-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [WI] Erster Einreichungsaufruf / First Call for Papers (18.
Internationale Tagung Wirtschaftsinformatik)
Date: Tue, 8 Nov 2022 14:33:29 +0000
From: Daniel Beverungen <daniel.beverungen(a)uni-paderborn.de>
Reply-To: Daniel Beverungen <daniel.beverungen(a)uni-paderborn.de>
To: wi(a)lists.kit.edu <wi(a)lists.kit.edu>
Liebe Kolleginnen und Kollegen,
sehr geehrte Damen und Herren,
liebe Freundinnen und Freunde,
wir laden Sie herzlich ein, Ihre Forschungsbeiträge zur 18.
Internationalen Tagung Wirtschaftsinformatik einzureichen, die wir in
2023 unter dem Leitthema „DIGITAL RESPONSIBILITY: SOCIAL, ETHICAL,
ECOLOGICAL IMPLICATIONS OF IS“ ausrichten.
Bitte beachten Sie, dass diese sog. Wi23 vom 18.-21.09.2023 in Paderborn
stattfinden wird. Da wir die Konferenz somit vom Winter in den
Spätsommer verschoben haben, verändert sich auch die gewohnte Zeitlinie
der Konferenz. Details zur Zeitlinie, zu den insgesamt 20
wissenschaftlichen Tracks sowie dem weiteren Programm finden Sie auf der
Webseite der Konferenz www.wi23.de <http://www.wi23.de>.
Einreichungen zur Konferenz werden wir zum Beginn des kommenden
Kalenderjahres ermöglichen. Das Ende der Einreichungsfrist ist der
10.03.2023.
Workshops und Tutorials können Sie weiterhin bis zum 15.11.2022 bei uns
beantragen.
Gemeinsam mit unseren 70 Track Chairs freuen wir uns auf Ihre
Einreichungen und auf die Wiederaufnahme unseres Tagungsbetriebs in Präsenz!
Mit freundlichen Grüßen
Christiane Lehrer, Matthias Trier und Daniel Beverungen (Programmkomitee)
Dennis Kundisch, Milad Mirbabaie, Oliver Müller, Guido Schryen, Matthias
Trier und Daniel Beverungen(Conference Chairs)
****
Dear fellow researchers,
Ladies and gentlemen,
Dear friends,
We invite you to submit your latest information systems research to the
18^th International Conference on Wirtschaftsinformatik, which will be
held in 2023 in Paderborn (Germany). The theme of this conference is
„DIGITAL RESPONSIBILITY: SOCIAL, ETHICAL, ECOLOGICAL IMPLICATIONS OF IS“.
Please notice that this Wi23 will take place from 18^th -21^st September
2023, since we moved the conference from winter to late summer to avoid
restrictions related to the Covid-19 pandemic. We needed to shift the
timeline for this conference accordingly. You can find all the important
dates and information on the 20 scientific tracks on the conference’s
website www.wi23.de <http://www.wi23.de>.
Submissions to the conference can be made from the beginning of 2023.
The submission deadline is 10^th March 2023.
You can still propose workshops or tutorials as ancillary events, until
15^th November 2022.
With our 70 track chairs, we look forward to receiving your latest
submissions and meeting you (again, or even for the first time) at the
conference!
Cordially,
Christiane Lehrer, Matthias Trier, and Daniel Beverungen (Program Committee)
Dennis Kundisch, Milad Mirbabaie, Oliver Müller, Guido Schryen, Matthias
Trier, and Daniel Beverungen (Conference Chairs)
____________________________________________________________
UPB_LOGO_KOMP_RGB_GB_2015**
*Dr. Daniel Beverungen***
*Professor for Information Systems*
Chair of Business Information Systems,
Faculty of Business Administration and Economics
Paderborn University
Warburger Str. 100
33098 Paderborn
Germany
E: daniel.beverungen(a)upb.de <mailto:daniel.beverungen@upb.de>**
| W: www.upb.de/bis <http://www.upb.de/bis> | R: Q2.313(Map
<https://unipin.uni-paderborn.de/karten.html?room=Q2.313>)
P: +49-5251-60-5600
| F: +49-5251-60-3430
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-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [AISWorld] ACM IUI Workshop -- HUMANIZE 2023 1st CALL FOR PAPERS
Date: Fri, 4 Nov 2022 14:48:03 +0200
From: Panagiotis Germanakos <pgerman(a)media.uoa.gr>
Reply-To: pgerman(a)media.uoa.gr
To: aisworld(a)lists.aisnet.org
ACM IUI Workshop -- HUMANIZE 2023 FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS
The 7th International Workshop on Transparency and Explainability in
Adaptive Systems through User Modeling Grounded in Psychological Theory
(HUMANIZE), in conjunction with the 28th ACM Conference on Intelligent
User Interfaces (ACM IUI 2023), Sydney, Australia, 17-31 March 2023
Full details are available online: http://www.humanize-workshop.org/
# IMPORTANT DATES
- Submission Deadline: 02 January 2023
- Notification to Authors: 29 January 2023
- Camera-ready: 08 February 2023
# MOTIVATION AND GOALS
More and more systems are designed to be intelligent; By relying on data
and the application of machine learning, these systems adapt themselves to
match predicted or inferred user needs, preferences.
Observable, measurable, objective interaction behavior plays a central
role in the design of these systems, in both the predictive modeling that
provides intelligence (e.g., predicting what web pages a website visitor
will visit based on their historic navigation behavior) and the evaluation
(e.g., decide if a system performs well based on the extent that
predictions are accurate and used correctly).
When designing more conventional systems (following approaches such as
user-centered design or design thinking), designers rely on latent user
characteristics (such as beliefs and attitudes, proficiency levels,
expertise, personality) aside from objective, observable behavior. By
relying on qualitative studies (e.g., observations, focus groups,
interviews) they consider not only user characteristics or behavior in
isolation, but also the relationship among them. This combination provides
valuable information on how to design the systems.
HUMANIZE aims to investigate the potential of combining the quantitative,
data-driven approaches with the qualitative, theory-driven approaches. We
solicit work from researchers that incorporate variables grounded in
psychological theory into their adaptive/intelligent systems. These
variables allow for designing adaptive systems from a more user-centered
approach in terms of requirements or needs based on user characteristics
rather than solely interaction behavior, which allows for:
Explainability
Any adaptive system that relies solely on the interaction behavior data
can be explained in terms of expectations, perceptions, variables and
models used from theory and define the users as entities, their thinking
and feeling, while undertaking purposeful actions (and reactions)
regarding e.g., learning, reasoning, problem solving, decision making.
Fairness
Any adaptive system that considers a human-centred model in its core may
consider and respect the individual differences, enabling the design and
creation of environments, interventions and AI algorithms that are
ethical, open to diversity, policies and legal challenges, and treating
all users with fairness regarding their skills and unique characteristics.
Transparency
Any adaptive system that utilizes the full potential of its human-centred
model in terms of definition and impact on decisions made by AI algorithms
may facilitate the visibility and transparency of the subsequent actions
bringing the control back to the users, for regulating, monitoring and
understanding an adaptive outcome that directly affects them.
Bias
Any adaptive system's AI algorithms and adaptive processes which are
designed and developed considering human-centred model characteristics,
the impact and relationships of subsequent variables, may facilitate
informed interpretations and unveil possible bias decisions, actions and
operations of users during their multi-purpose interactions.
# TOPICS OF INTEREST
A non-exhaustive list of topics for this workshop is:
- Identifying theory (e.g., personality, level of domain knowledge,
cognitive styles) that can be used for user models for personalizing user
interfaces.
- Investigating the impact of incorporating psychological theory on
explainability, fairness, transparency, and bias
- Modeling for inferring of user variables from
observable/measureable/objective data (e.g., how to infer personality from
social media, how to infer level of domain knowledge from clickstreams).
- Designing better adaptive systems from inferred user variables (e.g.,
altering the number of search results, ordering of interface elements,
visual versus textual representations).
- User studies investigating one or more of the aspects mentioned above.
# TYPES OF PAPERS
For this workshop we encourage three kinds of submissions:
- Full papers (anonymized 6-8 pages)
- Short papers (anonymized up to 4-6 pages)
- White papers/Position Statements (anonymized up to 2-4 pages)
* page count is excluding references
Submissions should follow the standard SigCHI format via the new ACM
workflow. Use either the Microsoft Word template or the LaTeX template:
https://www.acm.org/publications/taps/word-template-workflow
# SUBMISSION & PUBLICATION
All submissions will undergo a peer-review process to ensure a high
standard of quality. Referees will consider originality, significance,
technical soundness, clarity of exposition, and relevance to the
workshop's topics. The reviewing process will be double-blind so
submissions should be properly anonymized.
Research papers should be submitted electronically as a single PDF through
the EasyChair conference submission system:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=humanize2023
In order for accepted papers to be included in the proceedings, at least
one author should be registered -- https://iui.acm.org/2023/index.html --
and attend the workshop.
# ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
Bruce Ferwerda -- bruce.ferwerda(a)ju.se
Department of Computer Science and Informatics
School of Engineering
Jönköping University, Sweden
http://www.bruceferwerda.com
Marko Tkalcic -- marko.tkalcic(a)unibz.it
Faculty of Computer Science
University of Primorska, Koper, Slovenia
http://markotkalcic.com/
Panagiotis Germanakos -- panagiotis.germanakos(a)sap.com
User Experience S/4HANA, Product Engineering
Intelligent Enterprise Group
SAP SE, Germany
PulseX Research Institute gUG, Germany
http://www.pgermanakos.com
_______________________________________________
AISWorld mailing list
AISWorld(a)lists.aisnet.org
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [WI] Call for Papers (full papers) 14th International
Conference on Computational Creativity (ICCC'23)
Date: Fri, 4 Nov 2022 17:30:44 +0200
From: Christian Guckelsberger <iccc23conf(a)gmail.com>
Reply-To: Christian Guckelsberger <iccc23conf(a)gmail.com>
(Apologies for cross-posting)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
14th International Conference on Computational Creativity (ICCC'23)
June 19 - 23, 2023, Waterloo in Ontario, Canada
Call for papers: Full Papers
https://computationalcreativity.net/iccc23/full-papers/
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Computational Creativity (or CC) is a discipline with its roots in
Artificial Intelligence, Cognitive Science, Engineering, Design,
Psychology and Philosophy that explores the potential for computers to
be autonomous creators in their own right. ICCC is an annual conference
that welcomes papers on different aspects of CC, on systems that exhibit
varying degrees of creative autonomy, on systems that act as creative
partners for humans, on frameworks that offer greater clarity or
computational felicity for thinking about machine (and human)
creativity, on methodologies for building or evaluating CC systems, on
approaches to teaching CC in schools and universities or to promoting
societal uptake of CC as a field and as a technology, and so on.
*** Important Dates ***
Abstracts due: February 17, 2023
Submissions due: February 24, 2023
Acceptance notification: April 21, 2023
Camera-ready copies due: May 12, 2023
Conference: June 19-23, 2023
All deadlines are 23:59 anywhere on Earth time.
A call for short papers will be announced shortly.
*** Special Topics ***
In addition to the topics listed in the subsequent section, this year we
encourage submissions in the following areas. The aim is to explore
overlaps between Computational Creativity and the following critical issues.
Climate Change: Climate change is an urgent issue that impacts all of
us. What role can CC play in tackling this challenge? This year we would
like to explore the overlap between Computational Creativity and the
global climate crisis. We welcome submission on systems that create, or
engage in the creation of, creative artifacts (visual art, music,
poetry, etc) that bring awareness to the climate change crisis. Other
related research may include systems that propose creative solutions to
the climate crisis, or any other valuable ideas that combine CC and the
topic of climate change and environmental sustainability.
Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI): We welcome submissions that
combine CC with issues of diversity, equity and inclusion. These are
some of the questions behind this special topic:
– How can Computational Creativity support DEI (e.g. increasing cultural
diversity, reducing bias, etc.)?
– How well do existing creative systems represent diversity?
– What can we do to improve representation in creative machines and the
artifacts that they are used to create?
*** Topics ***
Original research contributions are solicited in all areas related to
Computational Creativity research and practice, including, but not
limited to:
- Application of Computational Creativity: Applications that address
creativity in specific domains such as music, language, narrative,
poetry, games, visual arts, graphic design, product design,
architecture, entertainment, education, mathematical invention,
scientific discovery, and programming.
- Human-Machine Creativity: Applications and frameworks that allow for
co-creativity between humans and machines, in which the machine acts as
a meaningful creative partner.
- Evaluation: Metrics, frameworks, formalisms and methodologies for the
evaluation of creativity in computational systems, and for the
evaluation of how systems are perceived in society.
- Computational Models and Paradigms: Computational models of social
aspects of creativity, including the relationship between individual and
social creativity, diffusion of ideas, collaboration and creativity,
formation of creative teams, and creativity in social settings.
Computational paradigms for understanding creativity, including
heuristic search, analogical and meta-level reasoning, and representation.
- Interdisciplinary perspectives: Cognitive and psychological
computational models of creativity, and their relation with existing
cognitive architectures and psychological accounts; Perspectives on
computational creativity which draw from philosophical and/or
sociological studies in a context of creative intelligent systems.
- Focus on data: Big data approaches to computational creativity;
Resource development and data gathering/knowledge curation for creative
systems, especially resources and data collections that are scalable,
extensible and freely available as open-source materials.
- Societal Impact: Ethical considerations in the design, deployment or
testing of CC systems, as well as studies that explore the societal
impact of CC systems.
- Novel experiences & factors:Innovation, improvisation, virtuosity and
related pursuits investigating the production of novel experiences and
artifacts within a CC context. Computational accounts of factors that
enhance creativity, including emotion, surprise (unexpectedness),
reflection, conflict, diversity, motivation, knowledge, intuition,
reward structures.
- CC Provocations: Raising new issues that bring the foundations of the
discipline into question or throw new light on seemingly settled ones.
*** Paper Types ***
We welcome the submission of five different types of long papers:
Technical papers, System or Resource description papers, Study papers,
Cultural application papers and Position papers.
*** More Information ***
More information on the paper types and submission process can be found at
https://computationalcreativity.net/iccc23/full-papers/
*** Organising Committee ***
– General Chair: Dan Brown
– Program Chairs: Alison Pease, João Miguel Cunha and Maya Ackerman
– Doctoral Consortium Chair: Pablo Gervás
– Demo Chair: Rob Saunders
– Publicity Chair: Christian Guckelsberger
– Webmaster: Paul Bodily
------------------------------------------------
ICCC Proceedings:
http://computationalcreativity.net/home/resources/bibliography/
Follow us at:
facebook – https://www.facebook.com/pg/computationalcreativity/
twitter – https://twitter.com/iccc_conf
instagram – https://www.instagram.com/iccc_conf/
Subscribe our updates: https://mailchi.mp/f7b08f4ab14f/iccc23
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-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [AISWorld] JMIS CFP SI on the Metaverse
Date: Fri, 4 Nov 2022 17:34:48 -0400
From: paul.lowry.phd(a)gmail.com
To: aisworld(a)lists.aisnet.org
<https://www.jmis-web.org/> Journal of Management Information Systems
(JMIS)
Call for Submission to the Special Issue
Fostering the Design and Governance of the Metaverse
Guest Editors: Prof. Paul Benjamin Lowry
<https://sites.google.com/site/professorlowrypaulbenjamin/home> , Virginia
Tech; Prof. Waifong Boh, <https://www3.ntu.edu.sg/home/awfboh/index.htm>
Nanyang Technological University; Prof. Stacie Petter
<https://business.wfu.edu/directory/stacie-petter/> , Wake Forest
University; Prof. Jan Marco Leimeister
<https://iwi.unisg.ch/lehrstuhl-leimeister/#header> , University of St.
Gallen and University of Kassel
JMIS, a top-tier scholarly journal, invites the best papers addressing the
components of the potential emergence of the Metaverse as a complement to
and a potential replacement for the current Web.
The Metaverse is envisioned as a collection of technologies and initiatives
intended to create a next-generation Internet (Web3) that is highly
immersive, persistent, in 3D, and based on the latest developments in
extended reality (XR)-an umbrella term for virtual reality (VR), mixed
reality (MR), and augmented reality (AR)-as supplemented by artificial
intelligence (AI), cloud computing, quantum computing, and other supporting
technologies. Given the compelling and disruptive potential for the
Metaverse to generate the Web3, several of the world's leading technology
companies are investing tens of billions of dollars on related software and
hardware to foster this market, including Meta (famously renamed from
"Facebook" as an all-in bet on the Metaverse), Microsoft, Snapchat, Amazon,
NVIDIA, Epic Games, Apple, among others.
This is an opportune time for researchers to examine what can be learned
from the past failed efforts of AR/VR platforms such as Second Life and
over-hyped failed AR technologies like Google Glass, and to examine the many
more successes that are occurring, perhaps more quietly, with XR (i.e., VR,
MR, AR) in education, manufacturing, gaming, branding, healthcare,
retailing, logistics, aerospace and defense, architecture, advertising, and
athletics. It is these successes and disruptive business models that are
likely to form what will be known as the Metaverse. However, this is no
minor feat, just as the Internet as we know it took decades to develop. To
create a truly persistent 3D, virtual, and immersive Metaverse, there will
need to be further advances in supporting hardware (goggles, headsets,
sensors), and an exponential increase in computing power, storage, and
memory. If the Metaverse is to succeed it must be based on making things
better for people than the status quo, and thus must foster innovative
business models that are profitable, and yet foster interoperability,
efficiency, remote work, reliability, fairness, accountability, open
governance, inclusivity, safety, community, and to do so in a manner that is
sustainable environmentally, socially and ethically.
This is the time for scientists to work with policy makers, companies, and
not-for-profit organizations to break the current social media models and
envision a Metaverse that can best serve collective global needs.
Accordingly, we are pleased to announce a Special Issue (SI) on this subject
at JMIS. Our strong preference is for contributions of original and rigorous
theory-guided behavioral or empirical data around information systems
artifacts that inform design, practice, research, and the products and
foundations of theory of meaningful aspects of the Metaverse. We seek any
methodological approaches that are legitimate and rigorous, and that can
shed light on important phenomena related to the Metaverse. However, we are
not seeking review papers or those that focus on discussions of further
research alone.
Honorary Senior Scholar advisors and editors to the special issue:
* Patrick Y.K. Chau, University of Nottingham * Alan Dennis, Indiana
University
* Juho Hamari, Tampere University
* Suprateek Sarker, University of Virginia
* Viswanath (Venki) Venkatesh, Virginia Tech
* Doug Vogel, Harbin Institute of Technology
Dates:
* Optional extended abstracts for initial guidance (not formal peer
review) January 30, 2023
* First round submissions due date: May 1, 2023
* First round decisions provided by: July 15, 2023
* Second round submissions due date: November 15, 2023
* Second round decisions provided by: January 15, 2024
* Third round submissions due date: March 15, 2024
* Final decisions on papers provided by: April 30, 2024
* Special issue publication in late 2024
For full information on the CFP see:
https://sites.google.com/site/professorlowrypaulbenjamin/jmis-si-on-the-meta
verse-new?authuser=0
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-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [AISWorld] Call for papers: Special Issue of Production and
Operations Management on “Responsible Data Science” - (Apologize for
Multiple Posts)
Date: Fri, 4 Nov 2022 04:12:12 +0000
From: Wu, Xianghua <xianghua.wu(a)mavs.uta.edu>
To: aisworld(a)lists.aisnet.org <aisworld(a)lists.aisnet.org>
Guest editors
Maxime C. Cohen; Desautels Faculty of Management, McGill University
Nina Huang; Miami Herbert Business School, University of Miami
Meng Li, Paul A. Pavlou; C. T. Bauer College of Business, University of
Houston
Submissions open: August 1, 2022
Deadline: November 30, 2022
Motivation
Our society is experiencing a rapid digital transformation, changing the
way how different players in supply chains and technological systems
interact with each other and exert their influences. For example, the
way that businesses and customers interact has changed in the digital
economy with the influence of computing technology and information
sharing. Businesses now routinely collect large volumes of fine-grained
data to analyze consumers' behavior, and consumers can also track
changes in firms' strategies to make informed purchasing decisions. An
iconic trend in the era of digital transformation is the increasingly
extensive use of data analytics and machine learning tools in decision
making as both strategic and operational levers. The use of rich and
large data sets also raises critical societal concerns. For example,
data sets often include personal sensitive information that can be
exploited, without explicit knowledge and/or consent from the involved
individuals, for various purposes including monitoring, discrimination,
and illegal activities. On the one hand, data- and AI-driven algorithms
may have created a competitive advantage for firms that are using these
algorithms. For example, large corporations can create unequal
competition in the market against smaller players. Similarly, firms may
attract customers with stronger financial records by offering
personalized enticing incentives, leading to a social bias toward
individuals who are offered fewer appealing opportunities. On the other
hand, algorithms that do consider social inclusion and fairness
considerations have a great potential to reduce the inequalities induced
by social status, gender, and race, just to name a few. Responsible data
science is defined as the utilization and exploitation of data via
manual analysis or automated algorithms (such as machine learning) that
aim at improving the terms of participation in society, particularly for
individuals or corporate entities that are disadvantaged. Such societal
participation improvements include, but are not limited to, enhanced
opportunities, increased access to resources, and greater voice and
respect for human rights.
Call for submissions
This special issue aims to attracting submissions that are closely
connected to real-world operational problems and have the potential to
impact practice from the lens of responsible data science. All
submissions must have clear managerial or theoretical contributions, and
must be built upon rigorous research methods that serve as an
appropriate framework to analyze problems: including analytical
modeling, econometric analysis, field experimentation, and
behavioral theories.
All submissions must contribute to the operations management literature
and practice. Areas of focus include the following:
• Algorithmic bias in search and recommendation
• Price discrimination
• Social inequality
• Gender and racial inequality
• Corporate inequality and corporate social responsibility
• Discrimination in resource allocation or hiring
• Workforce relationships
• Inclusive healthcare
• Fairness, accountability, and explainability in AI
• AI standard and regulation
• Privacy concerns in data science and decision-making
• AI ethics
To fit the mission of this special issue, submitted papers should have a
solid scientific foundation and fit into one or more of the following
categories:
• Analytical: Papers well-grounded in frameworks that fall under the
category of social inclusion, ethics, fairness, and privacy.
• Empirical: Papers that use public data, proprietary data, or
experiments to test theories related to social inclusion, ethics,
fairness, and privacy.
• Technical: Papers that develop or improve upon algorithms that address
social inclusion, ethics, fairness, and privacy.
• Multimethod: Papers that combine different quantitative methods
mentioned above or qualitative approaches, such as case studies and
interviews, for triangulation purposes.
Submission process
Papers should be submitted through the POM manuscript central website:
https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/poms.
Specifically, please follow the prompts below(See details in the
attached file):
On the author tab, please choose "Special Issue Article" (see the image
below) in Step 1
In the drop-down menu (see the image below) that then appears in Step 1,
please select appropriate department editor: Special Issue on
Responsible Data Science.
For Step 6, please upload a cover letter that includes the title of the
special issue and the specific article type you are submitting. Towards
the end of Step 6, please indicate "yes" for the question "Is this
submission for a special issue?" and enter the title of the special
issue in the text box
below: "Responsible Data Science."
Submission guidelines
• All papers must conform to the POM's submission guidelines, which can
be found at
https://www.poms.org/journal/author_instructions.
• All authors need to follow the ethical guidelines, which can be found at
https://www.poms.org/2021/05/poms_ethical_guidelines_for_au.html.
• We do not allow resubmission of a rejected paper in the same
department or a different department of the journal. Also, the paper
rejected in a special issue cannot be resubmitted to the regular issue
(and vice-versa).
• All papers by authors that have a conflict of interest with either of
the special issue editors will be handled by the Editor-in-Chief and
others, not by the special issue editors.
Projected Timeline
• Submissions will be accepted starting from August 1, 2022.
• First submission deadline: November 30, 2022.
• Workshop on invited papers: May 2023.
----------------------------------------------------
Jason Xianghua Wu, PhD
Postdoc Research Fellow, Human-Centered AI Lab
Department of Decision & Information Sciences
C.T. Bauer College of Business, University of Houston
Email: xwu28(a)central.uh.edu
Cell: (+01) 682-583-6349