Subject: | [wkwi] 3rd Workshop on the Digitization of the Individual (DOTI) - Pre-ICIS2018 Workshop |
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Date: | Thu, 30 Aug 2018 13:12:12 +0200 (CEST) |
From: | Matt, Christian <matt@bwl.lmu.de> |
Reply-To: | postmaster@seda.wiai.uni-bamberg.de |
*** Apologies for
cross-posting ***
Call for Papers:
3rd Workshop on the
Digitization of the Individual (DOTI) Pre-ICIS 2018
Workshop, including an expert panel on “the dark side” of
the Digitization of the Individual
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12 December 2018,
1:00-5:30pm, San Francisco, USA
Deadline for paper
submissions: 10 September 2018
Notification of
acceptance/rejection decisions: 24 September 2018
Workshop website: http://doti.is-research.com
WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION
As our lives become
immersed by powerful digital devices and services, questions
of implications for individuals’ lives as well as their
social interactions and structures arise. IS research has
traditionally focused rather on institutional contexts
(Baskerville 2011). However, the digitization of
individuals' private contexts offers manifold important
research questions to be solved (Hess et al. 2014). In
everyone’s life outside the organizational context these
pertain individual behavior and decision making and the
positive and negative consequences thereof, but also
communication and interactions with other individuals as
well as firms. The emerging fully digitized and connected
environment implies changes to the development, exploitation
and management of personal IS. While particular scenarios
(e.g. smart home, connected cars, social networks) have
received partial attention in different fields, this
workshop seeks to gather these fragmented views and bring
together researchers interested in the impact of
digitization on individuals.
Research in this area
is beneficial in two ways. First, understanding the
implications, opportunities and threats of the digitization
of private lives enables suppliers of digital technologies
to form closer and stronger connections with their customers
and to build services and devices that better match their
expectations and improve their everyday lives. Second, this
research can help to develop policies and practices that
improve the usage and exploitation of digital technologies
on a societal level. By encouraging a systematic focus on
the individual, this workshop strives for a common
understanding of the role of the individual and the
challenges and opportunities owing to novel digital
technologies.
The 3rd workshop on
the Digitization of the Individual will be held in San
Francisco, USA, in conjunction with ICIS 2018 and is
scheduled for 12 December 2018, 1:00 PM - 5:30 PM. To
promote further impactful research on individuals, strong
emphasis during the workshop will be given to paper
development discussions, among others, facilitated by
discussants providing direct feedback. As part of the
workshop, an expert panel on “the dark side of the
digitization of the individual” will provide
thought-provoking discussions on important aspects and
trends in this particular domain. Workshop participants will
be charged a registration fee that will include snacks and
coffee breaks (details will be announced as the conference
program is finalized).
Possible topics of
submissions include, but are not limited to:
- Individual behavior
in connected digital environments, such as
• Choice making in
digital environments
• Individual behavior
in social networks and the sharing economy
• Individual
communication and consumption patterns
• Digital
collaboration among individuals
- Positive and
negative outcomes of digitization and connectivity, such as
• Effects of usage of
digital devices and ubiquitous connectivity on individuals’
attitudes, behaviors and performance
• Techno-overload and
techno-stress
• Privacy and
IT-security issues for individuals’ private lives
• The impact of
quantification on the self
- Development,
exploitation and management of personal IS
• IT-facilitated
learning
• Individual’s
information system architectures and connected environments
• Development of
solutions for individual use
• Personal health
devices
SUBMISSION, REVIEW,
AND ACCEPTANCE PROCESS Manuscripts should be submitted as
email attachments to the workshop co-chairs at (doti@is-research.com) with the subject heading "DOTI workshop
submission".
The deadline for
submission is 10 September 2018. Authors will be notified of
acceptance/rejection decisions by 24 September 2018. As a
paper development workshop there will no be formal
proceedings; accepted papers will be made available to other
attendees for the period of the workshop and a printed
abstract will be included as part of the workshop materials.
SUBMISSION FORMAT
There are two types
of submissions: full papers and research-in-progress papers.
The length of full papers and research-in-progress papers is
limited to 7,000 words and 4,500 words respectively
(excluding references). The format of the submission is a
Word or PDF document that includes a title, author names and
affiliations, and 3-5 keywords. The submission should follow
the ICIS formatting guidelines (https://icis2018.aisconferences.org/submissions/submission-formatting-checklist/).
All submissions to
DOTI must represent original work that has not already been
published in a journal or conference proceedings. If the
work has been presented at another conference or is
currently under consideration for publication or
presentation elsewhere, the authors must disclose this fact.
At least one author for every accepted paper must register
for the workshop and be prepared to present their ideas in
person (both full and RIP papers will be presented). Due to
the strong emphasis of the workshop on paper development,
the workshop schedule ensure room for detailed discussions
and each presentation will be accompanied by a discussant
providing direct feedback to the individual work.
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Alexander Benlian, TU
Darmstadt
Andrew Burton-Jones,
UQ Business School
Yulin Fang, City
University of Hong Kong
Thomas Hess, LMU
Munich
Hanna Krasnova,
University of Potsdam
Christoph Peters,
University of St. Gallen
Jella Pfeiffer,
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
René Riedl,
University of Linz
Yongqiang Sun, Wuhan
University
Juliana Sutanto,
Lancaster University Management School
Chuan Hoo Tan,
National University of Singapore
Monideepa Tarafdar,
Lancaster University Management School
Jason Thatcher,
University of Alabama
Virpi Tuunainen,
Aalto University
Daniel Veit,
University of Augsburg
Bo Sophia Xiao,
University of Hawaii at Manoa
We look forward to
welcoming you in San Francisco
Christy Cheung (Hong
Kong Baptist University)
Christian Matt
(University of Bern)
Manuel Trenz
(University of Augsburg)
Ofir Turel
(California State University)