-------- Original-Nachricht -------- Betreff: [WI] CfP: Information Systems Special Issue on "Management and Engineering of Process Aware Information Systems" Datum: Mon, 5 Oct 2009 16:55:39 +1000 Von: Jan Recker j.recker@qut.edu.au An: WI@aifb.uni-karlsruhe.de wi@aifb.uni-karlsruhe.de
*Motivation and Background*
Process-aware information systems are at the heart of an ongoing trend that has seen the attention of information systems engineers and managers shift from data and objects to the processes that the information system is intended to support, enable or enact. This trend has resulted in a myriad of approaches to support the analysis, design, implementation, execution and maintenance of information systems, ranging from those supported by groupware to those supported by workflow management systems and more recently business process management systems. We subsume such different information systems with a “process focus” under the umbrella of Process-Aware Information Systems (PAIS). A PAIS is a work system that supports the delivery of products and/or services to customers by processing information on the basis of explicit process models.
Process awareness has emerged as a guiding principle not only in the design and analysis of information systems, but also as a management discipline in its own right. As a result, PAIS are complex systems in which managerial and organizational aspects are often entangled with system analysis, design and implementation aspects. An integrated understanding of these complementary aspects is essential to reap the potential benefits of PAIS. However, management and engineering aspects of PAIS have to date mostly been studied separately. On the one hand, the information systems engineering community has concentrated on PAIS analysis, design and implementation, using for example case handling systems, workflow technology, business process management systems or service-oriented architectures. On the other hand, the information systems management community has focused on the impact of information systems technology to support process-oriented organizations, or the management of cultural and organizational change to enable process improvement. Overall these research streams have remained isolated from one another, and no studies exist that fully embrace the holistic and boundary-spanning nature of PAIS.
*Scope and Aims*
The aim of this special issue is to provide a forum to bridge the viewpoints of the information systems engineering community and the information systems management community, as it pertains to PAIS. The special issue explicitly advocates multi-disciplinary approaches that expand and integrate isolated research efforts in engineering and management of PAIS, or that bridge design-oriented with behavioral IS research efforts.
Of particular interest to the special issue are studies showing how management and organizational aspects have an impact on the design and implementation of business processes, or how emerging technology frameworks and paradigms (such as service-oriented architectures, Web 2.0 and cloud computing) affect the management and organization of PAIS. Accordingly, the special issue encourages studies that use a mixed or multiple-method approach spanning empirical research and design science.
To facilitate this integrated perspective into PAIS, the editorial board of this special issue brings together researchers from the management and engineering communities of PAIS research and who have a commitment to fostering open dialogue and knowledge sharing between these communities.
*About the Journal*
Information Systems is an international, peer-reviewed journal published by Elsevier that publishes articles concerning the design and implementation of languages, data models, algorithms, software and hardware for information systems. Its current impact factor is 1.660 and its five-year impact factor is 2.261.
http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/236/description
*Topics*
The special issue will solicit submissions that address any phenomenon or problem that can be ascribed to PAIS. Potential topics include but are not limited to:
- success, failure and contingency models for PAIS
- usability, effectiveness and efficiency studies of PAIS
- PAIS-related standards, their development, adoption, and use
- PAIS modeling and design methods
- management of process model repositories
- collaborative process modeling and PAIS-enabled process collaboration
- open-source software for PAIS
- service-oriented and cloud-based architectures for PAIS
- PAIS monitoring and performance measurement
- decision support in the context of PAIS
- impact of emerging technology on PAIS management
- flexibility and change management in PAIS
- philosophical and methodological issues in research on PAIS
- industry-specific requirements towards PAIS
- learning and education in PAIS
- PAIS lifecycle management**
- strategic alignment of PAIS**
- governance of PAIS**
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*Review Process*
All submissions will be peer-reviewed in accordance with the reviewing standards of the journal of Information Systems. This special issue follows a developmental review process. The objective is to apply very high standards of acceptance while ensuring fair, timely and efficient review cycles. The review process consists of three phases as outlined below.
/Phase A: Extended Abstract Review (Optional)/
In this phase, potential authors are encouraged to submit a 2-3 page extended abstract of their proposed papers by e-mail to the special issue editors. The special issue editors will review the abstracts and provide feedback regarding (1) the potential of the proposed paper to make an innovative and substantive contribution to the field; and (2) the appropriateness of the proposed paper to the special issue.
/Phase B: First-round review/
During this phase, authors shall submit a full version of their papers. The submissions will be reviewed by the editors, with the assistance of a group of invited domain experts. The editors will provide their recommendations and feedback to the authors for revision and development of the submitted papers. The objectives of this phase are to: (1) provide a timely turnaround so that authors get a clear indication of the reactions to their work, (2) enable promising works to develop into solid publishable material, (3) improve the success rates of high quality work by providing feedback at each developmental milestone and (4) ensure the high quality standards of IS in an efficient manner.
The papers that successfully complete this stage will be invited to submit a revised version to the final peer review phase. We are also planning to provide an opportunity for authors who successfully complete this stage, to present their research results as part of a workshop affiliated with one of the major international IS conferences prior to submitting these papers for the peer-review phase.
/Phase C: Second-round review/
The authors of papers successfully completing Phase B will be asked to submit a fully revised version of their manuscript for second peer-review phase. Final acceptance decisions will be made after authors received the chance to respond to the second-round review, if required.
*Schedule*
Extended abstract submission (*optional*): 15 November 2009
Feedback from editors on abstract: 1 December 2009
Full initial paper submission deadline: 15 January 2010
1st round feedback: 15 April 2010
Revised paper submission deadline: 1 October 2010
2nd round feedback: 1 January 2011
Final paper submission deadline: 15 April 2011
Acceptance decision deadline: 15 May 2011
Camera-ready paper submission deadline: 15 June 2011
Publication of special issue: 4th quarter 2011
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*Submission*
Extended abstracts may be submitted by e-mail to Jan Recker (j.recker at qut.edu.au). Submission of extended abstracts is optional.
Full manuscripts must be submitted via the online submission system for Information Systems (http://ees.elsevier.com/is/). Please indicate that this is a submission to the Special Issue on Engineering and Management of PAIS. Authors should follow the guidelines for submissions to Information Systems, available from the Elsevier homepage:
http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/236/authorinstr...
Manuscripts typically do not exceed 30 pages in length.
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*Special Issue Editorial Board*
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/Guest Editors:/
*Dr Marlon Dumas* is Professor of Software Engineering at University of Tartu, Estonia. From 2000 to 2007, he held various academic appointments at Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane, Australia. He has also been visiting professor at University of Grenoble (France) and visiting researcher at SAP Research, Australia. His research interests include Business Process Management, Service-Oriented Architecture and Web Technology. His research findings have been published in journals such as /ACM Transactions on Software Engineering Methodology/, /IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering/ and /IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering/. He was program co-chair of the 6^th International Conference on Business Process Management (BPM 2008). He holds two patents in the field of BPM, and several other pending patent applications. He is co-editor of a textbook on Process-Aware Information Systems (John Wiley and Sons, 2005).
*Dr Jan Recker* is Senior Lecturer at the Information Systems Program at Queensland University of Technology Brisbane, Australia. His research interests include Process Standards, User-centred Analysis and Design of Process-aware Information Systems, Process Flexibility and Post-Adoptive Usage. Findings from his research have been published in journals such as the /Journal of the Association for Information Systems, Information Systems/, the /Scandinavian Journal for Information Systems/, the /Communications of the Association for Information Systems/, the /Australasian Journal of Information Systems/, the /Business Process Management Journal/, and others. Jan serves on the editorial board of two journals, is editor of two journal special issues, and co-chairs the ER-BPM workshop series.
*Dr Mathias Weske* is Professor of Computer Science and chair of the business process technology research group at Hasso Plattner Institute at University of Potsdam, Germany. His research interests include business process modelling and analysis, process choreographies, modelling methodologies, and service computing. He leads Oryx, an open source project on business process management. Dr. Weske has published over 80 scientific papers and twelve books, including a textbook on business process management. He is on the steering committee of the BPM conference series. He is a member of ACM, IEEE, and GI, and he is the chairperson of EMISA, the German Computer Science Society Special Interest Group on Development Methods for Information Systems and their Application.