-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [AISWorld] CFP HICSS-52 Minitrack: Advances in Trust, Identity, and Trusted Systems in Technology-Mediated Environments
Date: Sat, 31 Mar 2018 11:41:11 +0000
From: Sirkka Jarvenpaa <Sirkka.Jarvenpaa@mccombs.utexas.edu>
To: aisworld@lists.aisnet.org <aisworld@lists.aisnet.org>


Call for Papers: Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences-52 ( HICSS-52)



Minitrack: Advances in Trust, Identity, and Trusted Systems in Technology-Mediated Environments


8-11 January, 2019
Grand Wailea Maui
http://hicss.hawaii.edu

Minitrack Chairs: Sirkka L. Jarvenpaa, Mareike Möhlmann, and Robin Teigland

This mini-track advances in trust and identity research in technology-mediated environments. How do new advancements in both hardware and software technologies change the way we trust and identify? What forms will digital trust and trust in digital environments take? What shapes identity and its consequences? What are the various risks and vulnerabilities to trust and identity imposed by emerging algorithmic capabilities, cloud-based platforms, complex platform infrastructures, and highly distributed peer-to-peer systems, e.g., cryptocurrencies or other applications in the financial industry? What are the implications for trust and identity as technologies take on capabilities with both social and moral agency? How do driverless cars change the way we relate to the automobiles, their manufacturers, and other institutions? Some digital technologies may replace the trust we now have in institutions, as trust shifts from humans and central organizations to computers and anonymous decentralized organizations that know no geographic boundaries. Digital technologies may create new fluid identities. How does trust in humans differ from trust in technology? Is it possible that human-like systems exacerbate rather than compensate weaknesses common in trust assessments? How do trust and identity relate?

We welcome papers that theoretically or empirically advance our understanding of different forms of trust and identity in technology-mediated environments, including in organizational, inter-organizational, network, platform, collective, and interpersonal contexts. Papers can use any acceptable methodology and theory. We welcome papers at any level of analysis and encourage papers that take a cross-level and/or inter-disciplinary perspective. Some possible topic areas include but are not limited to the following:


· Understanding issues of digital trust, identity, and risk in the context of sharing economy and other platform-based organizations, e.g., in the digital platform, among the users of the platform, in the organization behind the platform, in financial and other transactions conducted through the platform.

· Understanding the relationship between an organization's handling of its users' data, e.g., privacy/integrity/security, use of the cloud, and trust and identities in the organization.

· Understanding the relationship between trust in an organization and trust in the organization's technology-based offerings and understanding the difference between trust in humans and trust in technology.

· How do changes in trust influence identity and identification processes? And vice versa?

· Understanding how regulation and policy at the national and international levels influence issues of digital trust and the penetration of technology, e.g., in the financial industry and the sharing economy, and vice versa.

· How to leverage trust levels by implementing new forms of digital trust tools online?

· Understanding trust and or identity relationships between users and emerging technologies, e.g., personal robots, smart toys, wearables, personal voice assistants, 3D printing, autonomous vehicles, drones.

· Understanding the role of trust in the development of algorithms, e.g., functions, openness of coding, data collection.

· Investigating new digital trust cues that can signal and form trust

· Understanding the relationship between trust and business models in startups and emerging industries as well as in the commercialization of new technologies by established firms.

· Understanding the relationship between trust and the development and dynamics of self-regulated, decentralized, peer-to-peer networks.

· How does trust change in blockchain technology and cryptography contexts?

· How does trust evolve in complex and multi-layered environments such as digital platforms?

· Understanding the relationship between national culture and institutions and trust in technology and digital environments that know no geographic boundaries.

· Understanding the relationship between trust, identity, control, and influence in digital environments.

IMPORTANT DATES FOR CALL FOR PAPERS
June 15, 2019 Paper Submission DEADLINE
August 15, 2019 Acceptance Notifications
September 15, 2019 Submission camera-ready paper
October 1, 2019 Early Registration fee deadline

More info: http://hicss.hawaii.edu


HICSS Author Guidelines: http://hicss.hawaii.edu/tracks-and-minitracks/authors/




Minitrack Co-Chairs:
Sirkka L. Jarvenpaa (Primary Contact), McCombs School of Business, The University of Texas at Austin, Sirkka.Jarvenpaa@mccombs.utexas.edu<mailto:Sirkka.Jarvenpaa@mccombs.utexas.edu>

Mareike Möhlmann, Warwick Business School, University of Warwick, Mareike.Moehlmann@wbs.ac.uk<mailto:Mareike.Moehlmann@wbs.ac.uk>

Robin Teigland, Center for Strategy and Competitiveness, Stockholm School of Economics,
Robin.Teigland@hhs.se<mailto:Robin.Teigland@hhs.se>






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