Betreff: | [AISWorld] CFP: Mediated Conversation minitrack. HICSS site now open for submission |
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Datum: | Tue, 4 Apr 2017 15:30:49 +0300 |
Von: | Yoram Kalman <yoram.kalman@gmail.com> |
An: | aisworld@lists.aisnet.org |
> Mediated Conversation > > Conversations are at the heart of every human activity. Mediated > conversations that use text, audio, images and video are a part of every > aspect of life: From the Cluetrain Manifesto’s “markets are conversations”, > through Robin Dunbar’s conversations as devices for social grooming. > Accordingly, this minitrack is open to research on mediated conversation > from a variety of disciplinary perspectives including Communication, > Management, Education, Computer Science, Sociology, Political Science, > Psychology, Linguistics, Law, and the like. The mediated conversation > minitrack is home for research of the interface of conversation and > technology at HICSS. > > > > As the role of mediated conversation in everyday life and in the workplace > becomes more dominant, we encounter new research questions. Many mediated > conversations leave a persistent record and become persistent > conversations. This persistence transforms the essence of conversation that > was, until recently, predominantly volatile and ephemeral. On the other > hand, some forms of mediated conversation are deliberately ephemeral and > impermanent, as demonstrated by media such as Snapchat.* This is the > successor of the Persistent Conversation minitrack established by Tom > Erickson and Susan Herring at HICSS in 1999*, which was originally > focused on the novelty of conversational persistence. > > Since then, the mediation of human communication has been imposing a new > set of challenges. For example, what are the mechanisms that perform the > role of the ephemeral social cues of face-to-face conversation? What are > the consequences of the creation of potentially permanent records in terms > of privacy, accountability, and the right to be forgotten? What of the > ability to erase, steal, hijack and selectively leak and disseminate > conversations that were meant to remain under the control of their > participants? How do platforms affect or mediate conversations, for example > by imposing algorithmic biases? Can we evaluate the claims about loss of > intimacy, depth, and quality of human communication when carried out > digitally? > > This minitrack brings together researchers and innovators to explore > mediated conversation and its implications for learning, commercial > transactions, entertainment, news, politics, and other forms of human > interaction; to raise new socio-technical, ethical, pedagogical, linguistic > and social questions; and to suggest new methods, perspectives, and design > approaches. Examples of appropriate topics include, but are not limited to: > > > > * Innovation in digital conversational practice: turn-taking, threading, > and other structural features of CMC > > * The dynamics and analysis of large scale conversation systems (e.g., > MOOCs and big data applications) > > * Methods for analyzing mediated conversation > > * Studies of virtual communities or other sites of digital conversation > > * The role of mediated conversation in knowledge management > > * The role of mediated conversation in organizations > > * Domain specific applications, opportunities and challenges of mediated > conversations and conversational exchanges (e.g., in education, healthcare, > social movements, government, citizen participation) > > * Conversation visualization, and visual cues > > * The role of listeners, lurkers, and silent interactions > > * Novel properties of mediated conversation > > * Social presence and the mediation of an attributed user’s identity > > * The platform's role in mediating the conversation > > > > Submit online at: https://confs.precisionconference.com/~hicss/ > > > *Submission deadline: June 15, 2017, 11:59 pm HST* > > > For questions, please contact one of the co-chairs > > *Minitrack Co-Chairs:* > > *Sheizaf Rafaeli* (Primary Contact) > University of Haifa > sheizaf@rafaeli.net > > *Yoram M Kalman* > The Open University of Israel > yoramka@openu.ac.il > > *Carmel Kent* > University of Exeter, UK > kent.carmel@gmail.com > > -- Yoram Kalman, PhD Cell: +972 54 574 7375 www.kalmans.com _______________________________________________ AISWorld mailing list AISWorld@lists.aisnet.org