Subject: | [wkwi] Call for Papers: The Dark Sides of AI |
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Date: | Tue, 11 Feb 2020 18:32:24 +0100 |
From: | Electronic Markets <editors@electronicmarkets.org> |
Reply-To: | Electronic Markets <editors@electronicmarkets.org> |
To: | 'Electronic Markets' <editors@electronicmarkets.org> |
--- Apologies for cross-postings---
Electronic Markets – The International
Journal on Networked Business
Call for Papers: The Dark Sides of AI
Guest Editors
* Lin Xiao, Nanjing University of Aeronautics
and Astronautics, China, xiaolin@nuaa.edu.cn
* Xiao-Liang Shen, Wuhan University, China, xlshen@whu.edu.cn
* Xusen Cheng, Renmin University of China,
China, xusen.cheng@ruc.edu.cn
* Jian Mou, Xidian University & University
of Ottawa, China, jian.mou@xidian.edu.cn
* Alex Zarifis, Loughborough University, UK, a.zarifis@lboro.ac.uk
Theme
Artificial intelligent (AI) is believed to
bring about significant changes to networked digital
business, and it facilitates smart services and digital
transformation. In particular, AI is regarded among the
current top five emerging technologies when organizations
execute the digital first strategy. The Gartner survey
showed that 59% of organizations are gathering information
to build their AI strategies, while the remainder have
already made progress in piloting or adopting AI solutions
(Panetta, 2018), indicating that we are facing a new era of
AI, which brings both unprecedented opportunities and
emerging challenges. Academically, AI has attracted some
initial attention in business research with respect to its
possible applications in the field of information systems
(e.g., Gursoy et al., 2019), tourism and hospitality (e.g.,
Li et al., 2019), marketing (e.g., Syam and Sharma, 2018),
and financial management (e.g., Culkin and Das, 2017), to
change the interaction between organizations and customers,
gain new insights and obtain greater business values (e.g.,
increasing efficiency and effectiveness).
Regardless of the numerous opportunities that
AI offers, there are undoubtedly plentiful dark sides of AI
that present enormous risks for individuals, organizations
and society, which are considered as three most important
dimensions for digitalization (Alt, 2018). From an
individual perspective, the issues of AI discrimination have
been reported by consumers in content recommendation and
product recommendation in electronic markets. From an
organizational perspective, the introduction of AI based
technologies is likely to influence the profitability of
companies, but in electronic markets the negative side of
high-frequency trading has also been reported on.
Organizations also face significant issues where the lack of
a strategy relating to implications of AI could affect
critical business areas and fail to address concerns from
human workforce. From a societal perspective, AI could
potentially widen the gap amongst emerging and developed
markets as well as the rich and poor. The issue of potential
job losses due to AI technologies has also received
widespread attention.
Therefore, considering the ubiquitous use of AI
in digital business today, the significant negative or
detrimental consequences of AI to individuals, organizations
and society remain to be examined and are worthy of further
research attention. We thus organize this special issue and
encourage the potential authors to address this important
but so far largely neglected topic – the dark sides of AI in
the electronic markets contexts, including social networks,
electronic commerce, digital platforms, customer
relationship management, etc.
Central issues and themes
The goal of this special issue is to create a
platform to address the “dark sides of AI” in digital
networked business. Submissions adopting qualitative or
quantitative research approaches, and from individual,
organizational, and/or societal perspective are welcome.
Possible contributions may include, but are not limited to,
the following topics:
·
The
potential harms resulted from the widespread use of AI in
electronic markets
·
The
detrimental effect of benefits and the costs of using AI in
electronic markets
·
Understanding
how individuals, organizations and societies can minimize,
prevent or respond to the dark side of AI in the digital
business worlds
·
Examining
dark side outcomes, behaviors and practices that accidently
or unintentionally emerge by using AI in electronic markets
·
The
ethics of using AI in electronic markets
·
Approaches
to lobbying, regulating and controlling dark side behaviors
and practices associated with AI usage in electronic markets
·
The
trust, security and privacy issues in using AI in electronic
markets
·
The
antecedents and consequences of dark side using AI in
electronic markets
·
Case
studies of dark side of AI in electronic markets
·
Behavioral,
psychological, ethical, social and cultural issues related
to the dark sides of AI in electronic markets
Submission
Electronic Markets is a Social Science Citation
Index (SSCI)-listed journal (IF 3.553 in 2018) in the area
of information systems. We encourage original contributions
with a broad range of methodological approaches, including
conceptual, qualitative and quantitative research. Please
also consider position papers and case studies for this
special issue. All papers should fit the journal scope (for
more information, see www.electronicmarkets.org/about-em/scope/)
and will undergo a double-blind peer-review process.
Submissions must be made via the journal’s submission system
and comply with the journal's formatting standards. The
preferred average article length is approximately 8,000
words, excluding references. If you would like to discuss
any aspect of this special issue, you may either contact the
guest editors or the Editorial Office.
Important deadline
* Submission Deadline: October 31, 2020
Special Note – AMCIS 2020
The guest-editors organized a conference
mini-track “The dark sides of AI” in Americas Conference on
Information Systems (AMCIS) 2020 (https://amcis2020.aisconferences.org/track-descriptions/#toggle-id-4).
Authors interested in this special issue are encouraged to
submit papers to this mini-track first, and this provides
the potential authors an opportunity to receive
developmental feedback and suggestions. However, authors who
are unable to attend AMCIS will not be disadvantaged, and
all papers will go through a full peer review process to
decide which papers to include in this special issue.
References
Alt, R. (2018). Electronic Markets and current
general research. Electronic Markets, 28 (2), 123-128.
Culkin, R. & Das, S. R. (2017). Machine
learning in finance: The case of deep learning for option
pricing. Journal of Investment Management, 15 (4), 92-100.
Gursoy, D., Chi, O. H., Lu, L., & Nunkoo,
R. (2019). Consumers acceptance of artificially intelligent
(AI) device use in service delivery. International Journal of
Information Management, 49, 157-169.
Li, J.,
Bonn, M. A. & Ye, B. H. (2019). Hotel employee's
artificial intelligence and robotics awareness and its
impact on turnover intention: The moderating roles of
perceived organizational support and competitive
psychological climate. Tourism Management, 73, 172-181.
Panetta, K. (2018). Gartner top 10 strategic
technology trends for 2018. Accessed September 2019.
Retrieved from: https://www.gartner.com/smarterwithgartner/gartner-top-10-strategic-technology-trends-for-2018/.
Syam, N. & Sharma, A. (2018). Waiting for a
sales renaissance in the fourth industrial revolution:
Machine learning and artificial intelligence in sales
research and practice. Industrial Marketing Management, 69,
135-146.
Best regards,
Rainer Alt, Hans-Dieter Zimmermann
Editors-in-Chief
====================================================================
Electronic Markets - The International Journal
on Networked Business
====================================================================
Editors-in-Chief: Rainer Alt, Leipzig
University and Hans-Dieter Zimmermann, FHS St.Gallen,
University of Applied Sciences
Executive Editors: Maxi Herzog, Dorothee
Ulrich, Leipzig University
Editorial Office:
c/o Information Systems Institute
Leipzig University
04109 Leipzig, Germany
Mail: editors@electronicmarkets.org
Phone: +49-341-9733600
facebook.com/ElectronicMarkets
https://link.springer.com/journal/12525
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