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All CFPs on WikiCFP | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Present CFP : 2014 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Services Science is not a cosmetic change of existing things. Introduced by IBM in 2002, it has now emerged and matured in a true trans-disciplinary atmosphere. Encompassing disciplines not only in management and engineering, it also draws from disciplines such as social and cognitive sciences, law, ethics, economics etc. to address the theoretical and practical aspects of the challenging services industry and its economy.
Services Science leverages methods, results and knowledge stemming from these disciplines towards the development of its own concepts, methods, techniques and approaches thus creating the basis for true trans-disciplinary gatherings and the production of trans-disciplinary results. Services Science is building a concrete framework for trans-disciplinary purposes. Thus “service” must be considered in this conference with its multiple facets: economic, organizational, social, collective, ontological, regulatory, secure, etc. and also, of course, implemented by means of informatics. Sometimes it is referred to as information services to distinguish its restricted meanings in various disciplines like Economy or Informatics. After three successfull editions of IESS,The goal of the 5th conference is to build upon this growing community to further study and understand this emerging discipline. Academics, researchers and practitioners of all disciplines are expected to contribute their results and approaches to Services Science in a trans-disciplinary setting. In order to achieve the best possible mix of disciplines and their representation, the conference is structured around Service research topics, which are trans-disciplinary and around Service contexts, which are more disciplinary oriented. The contributions should address one or several topics, be grounded in one or several contexts and be open to trans-disciplinary approaches. Research topics Research Topics are directly extracted from the Services. Contributions addressing more than one topic are encouraged. Here is a (not limited to) list of subtopics for each : Service innovation Value models Innovation/Creation process Business trends Technological trends People trends Service innovation and strategy Service exploration Consumer service needs modelling. Supplier service modelling. Business services requirements modelling. Service information & process modelling. Service exploration process. Service design Service design methodologies and patterns Service and re-design of organization of activities Service co-design environments, tools Requirements oriented towards services Design of complex services Service compliance with laws and regulations Service engineering Ontologies and interoperability Web-services, Service-oriented architectures Ubiquitous & mobile computing Service orchestration, choreography, composition. COTS, Enterprise architectures… Service security and safety engineering Service sustainability - IT service management: - IS service management: - Service management: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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