-------- Forwarded Message --------
CALL FOR PAPERS
Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS-56),
Maui, Hawaii, January 3-6, 2023
http://www.hicss.org/
Knowledge, Innovation, and Entrepreneurial Systems Track
For most of us, 2020-21 were years like no other. Work, school,
and society as we knew it was turned upside down and we all had to
learn to work, study, and socialize in new ways. Many of us worked
and studied and even socialized from home. We found that the
systems we were used to using weren’t sufficient; applications
such as Zoom, YouTube, TikTok, and Facebook played even larger
roles in all aspects of our lives.
Knowledge Innovation and Entrepreneurial Systems focuses on the
evolving nature of work and society. Competitive, political, and
cultural pressures are forcing organizations to do more with less
and to leverage all they know to succeed. Knowledge, innovation,
and entrepreneurial systems are the systems we’re developing to
facilitate collaboration, socialization, and work to improve
knowledge capture, storage, transfer and flow. The use of
knowledge and the systems that support it fosters creativity and
innovation while providing the infrastructure of organizational
learning and continuous improvement. This track explores the many
factors that influence the development, adoption, use, and success
of knowledge, innovation, and entrepreneurial systems. These
factors include culture, measurement, governance and management,
storage and communication technologies, process modeling and
development. The track also looks at the societal drivers for
knowledge systems including an aging work force, a remote work
force and its need to distribute knowledge and encourage
collaboration in widely dispersed organizations and societies, and
competitive forces requiring organizations of all types to adapt
and change rapidly. Increasingly, these systems rely on systems
and associated analytics to support knowledge assets. Finally, the
track addresses issues that impact society in the use of these
systems in what is now called the “new norm.” These issues include
disinformation and forgetting, social identity, social justice,
remote socialization, resource allocation, and decision making,
including automated, augmented, artificial, and human based
decision making. Papers are invited that address any of these
issues through the following minitracks:
DESIGN AND APPROPRIATION OF KNOWLEDGE AND AI SYSTEMS
DIGITALIZATION OF WORK
EDTECH AND EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES
GAME-BASED LEARNING
GLOBAL DIGITAL BUSINESS
INNOVATION AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP: THEORY AND PRACTICE
INNOVATION IN ORGANIZATIONS: LEARNING, UNLEARNING, AND INTENTIONAL
FORGETTING
INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES FOR CYBERSECURITY
JUDGEMENT, BIG DATA-ANALYTICS, AND DECISION-MAKING
KNOWLEDGE FLOWS, TRANSFER, SHARING, AND EXCHANGE
REPORTS FROM THE FIELD: KNOWLEDGE AND LEARNING APPLICATIONS IN
PRACTICE
SECURING KNOWLEDGE, INNOVATION, AND ENTREPRENEURIAL SYSTEMS AND
MANAGING KNOWLEDGE RISKS
THE FUTURE OF KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT: VISIONS, OPPORTUNITIES AND
CHALLENGES
THE TECHNICAL, SOCIO-ECONOMIC, AND ETHICAL ASPECTS OF AI
VALUE, SUCCESS, AND PERFORMANCE MEASUREMENTS OF KNOWLEDGE,
INNOVATION, AND ENTREPRENEURIAL SYSTEMS
Important dates (
https://hicss.hawaii.edu/):
June 15, 2022 (Hawaii Time) Submit full manuscripts - the review
is double-blind
August 17, 2022 Acceptance notice is emailed to authors by the
review system
September 22, 2022 Submit final paper for publication in the
conference proceedings
January 3-6, 2023 HICSS Conference
Track Co-Chairs:
Murray Jennex
Paul and Virginia Engler College of Business
West Texas A&M University
mjennex@wtamu.edu<mailto:mjennex@wtamu.edu>
Dave Croasdell
Accounting and Information Systems Department
University of Nevada, Reno
davec@unr.edu
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