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Dear Colleagues:
This is to remind you to submit your research work to the
Behavioral Information Security mini-track under the Information
Security and Privacy (SIGSEG) tack at AMCIS 2019, to be held in
Cancun, Mexico on August 15-17, 2019. A brief description of the
mini-track is provided below; you may also visit
https://amcis2019.aisconferences.org/submissions/track-descriptions/.
The online submission system
(
https://new.precisionconference.com/ais) will be closed on March
1.
Fast-tracking opportunity:
Best-papers in this mini-track will be fast-tracked to The DATA
BASE for Advances in Information Systems. For interested authors,
please read the latest special issue on information security at
DATA BASE at
https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=3210530.
Mini-track description:
Cyber security continues to be a big challenge for organizations
which are exposed to considerable risk due to security breaches.
Technological advancements have been made to improve cybersecurity
and companies have invested heavily in cyber security however,
human vulnerabilities continue to bypass security defenses. There
are various reasons for this, including, apathy, carelessness, or
malicious intent. Understanding and changing human security
behavior is a critical need to improve security and it continues
to be a strong research area. This mini-track is focused on
behavioral security including, theoretical developments, empirical
research findings, case studies, methodologies, artifacts, etc.
This track will include elements of motivation, reasoning, and
learning for both malicious and non-malicious intent of attacks.
The 2019 Americas Conference on Information System focuses on
digital convergence that is redefining society and business. A key
enabling technology for this digital transformation is cyber
security which is a big challenge for organizations which are
exposed to considerable risk due to security breaches.
Technological advancements have been made to improve cybersecurity
and companies have invested heavily in cyber security however,
human vulnerabilities continue to bypass security defenses. There
are various reasons for this, including, apathy, carelessness, or
malicious intent. Understanding and changing human security
behavior is a critical need to improve security and it continues
to be a strong research area. This mini-track is focused on
behavioral security including, theoretical developments, empirical
research findings, case studies, methodologies, artifacts, etc.
This track will include elements of motivation, reasoning, and
learning for both malicious and non-malicious inte
nt of attacks.
Mini-track co-chairs:
Yuan Li, University of Illinois Springfield,
yli295@uis.edu
Rohit Valecha, University of Texas San Antonio,
rohit.valecha@utsa.edu
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