Subject: | [AISWorld] Call for paper..HICSS-45 ...Emerging Issues in Distributed Group Decision-Making: Opportunities and Challenges ..minitrack |
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Date: | Thu, 24 Mar 2011 19:01:05 -0400 |
From: | Anil Aggarwal <aaggarwal@ubalt.edu> |
To: | <aisworld@lists.aisnet.org> |
Dear Colleagues:
After having successful minitracks at HICSS
-43 and HICSS-44, we are continuing our track on Emerging Issues in Distributed Group
Decision-Making: Opportunities and Challenge, which
is part of Collaboration Systems and Technology Track at the
HICSS -45 conference..
More information is available at:
http://home.ubalt.edu/ntsbagga/hicss_45.htm
We would like to invite you to submit your
paper to the Emerging Issues in distributed group support system
mini track which is part of Collaboration and Technology track.
Best regards,
Anil Aggarwal
Doug Vogel
Sree Nilakanta
CALL FOR PAPERS FOR the Mini-track
Emerging
Issues (e.g. Collaboration Support in Cloud) in
Distributed Group Decision-Making: Opportunities and
Challenges
(Part
of the Collaboration
Systems and Technology Track )
for
the Forty- Fifth Annual
HAWAI'I
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SYSTEM SCIENCES
(HICSS-45)
January 4-7, 2012
at
on
the beautiful Island of Maui
Given the current turbulent state of world
economy, outsourcing is coming under tremendous pressure.
Companies are no longer providing long-term contracts but are
renewing them based on deliverables from outsourced companies.
This is putting tremendous pressure on teams to deliver quality
product on time. Team adaptability and team configuration are
becoming crucial to meet deadlines. Teams must be able to adapt
quickly to the changing environment. Agile teams adapt and
deliver quickly and provide maximum customer satisfaction. By
definition, however, agile teams must be co-located. Can
distributed teams be agile and adaptable? This requires careful
team configuration. This mini-track examines the emerging issues
related to team configuration and performance in distributed
environment. Some research related to outsourcing of structured
tasks has been done, but research related to emerging issues
like diversity, cohesiveness, agility and adaptability related
to group collaboration across semi or unstructured tasks is
still emerging. In addition, the “e (Internet)” to “m (mobile)”
transformation is creating exciting opportunities for groups to
make real time decisions in a mobile environment.
Distributed teams,
however, face many challenges of time,
location, infrastructure, language, customs, socialization and
politics. This is further compounded in globally distributed
teams by diversity, nationality and cultural issues. As old
issue are resolved, new challenges emerge that require knowledge
from multiple disciplines such as information systems, social
sciences, international management, leadership and political
science. It is almost impossible for one individual to have
expertise in so many domains, which makes this a very
challenging but ultimately rewarding collaborative area of
research. Given the richness and research potential of this
area, it is essential to brainstorm and bring diverse points of
view to develop underlying theory and frameworks. The mini track
will attempt to accomplish these objectives.
The mini track will address emerging issue
such as diversity, culture, adaptability and agility related to
teams in distributed group decision making, as well as the
underlying theories of group dynamics, coordination,
communications and decision-making in distributed environments,
in creation of competitive advantage. Examples of topics in the discussion of
globally distributed decision making mini-track will include
the following (but are not limited to):
· Framework
for distributed decision making in the cloud.
· Economics
of distributed decision making in the clouds
· Trust
and distrust as motivator in distributed decision making
· Can
agile teams be globally distributed?
· Agile/Adaptable
team configuration in globally distributed teams
· The “e (internet)” to “m
(mobile)” transformation of globally distributed teams
· Communication and
coordination in globally distributed teams
· Diversity issues in
globally distributed teams
· Customer satisfaction,
performance and “trust” building in globally distributed
teams
· Synchronous and
asynchronous decision making in globally distributed teams
· Comparison of issues across
internal, inter-, intra and offshore distributed teams
· Turbulent economy and its
impact on outsourcing
· Models of globally
distributed agile/adaptable teams
· Knowledge creation,
transfer and integration across globally distributed teams
· Leadership/cohesiveness
issues in globally distributed teams
· Issues related to
functional and dysfunctional globally distributed teams
· Security, privacy and risk
associated with globally distributed teams
· Case
Studies (success/failures) related to decision making by
globally distributed teams
Contact Information for Mini-Track
Chair:
Important
Deadlines:
each accepted paper attend the
conference. Therefore, all travel guarantees – including visa
or fiscal/ funding procedures – should begin immediately. Make
sure your server accepts the address from our review system https://precisionconference.com/~hicss.
Instructions for Paper Submission:
HICSS conferences are devoted to
advances in the information, computer, and system sciences, and
encompass developments in both theory and practice. Invited
papers may be theoretical, conceptual, tutorial or descriptive
in nature. Submissions undergo a double-blind peer referee
process and those selected for presentation will be published in
the Conference Proceedings. Submissions must not have been
previously published.
For the latest information visit the
HICSS web site at: http://www.hicss.hawaii.edu/
CONFERENCE ADMINISTRATION:
Ralph Sprague, Conference Chair
Email: sprague@hawaii.edu
Sandra Laney, Conference Administrator
Email: hicss@hawaii.edu