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AMCIS 2009 : 15th Americas Conference on Information SystemsConference Series : Americas Conference on Information Systems | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://amcis2009.aisnet.org/ | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
AMCIS 2009: a Quality IS Conference with Innovations Print E-mail
AMCIS 2009The AMCIS 2009 program will include state-of-the-art research and broad-interest tutorials, tracks and mini-tracks offering high-quality research papers, panels from experts in academia and industry, and highly skill-oriented workshops. AMCIS 2009 in San Francisco will feature tracks directly dealing with practitioners’ issues (outsourcing, IS training, and emerging information technologies) as well as CIO panels discussing issues such as evolution of IT communities of practice, and collaboration between academics and practitioners. Papers are peer-reviewed using a double-blind system and will be considered for Best Paper Awards. In 2009, a Best Paper Award for a practitioner-oriented paper will be selected with input from CIOs. To strengthen both the quality and the inter-disciplinary nature of the conference, papers that deal with both technology and management issues will be reviewed by at least one specialist in each area. One innovation will include special poster sessions for those research papers that may be more appropriate for informal presentation. In addition, there will be presentations in languages other than English. In 2009, the AMCIS program will also initiate an AIS Fellows track. Important Deadlines Print E-mail October 2, 2008: Mini-Track Proposals Due October 15, 2008: Notification of Mini-Track Proposal Acceptance January 2, 2009: General Call for Papers February 20, 2009: Complete Papers Due April 2, 2009: Notification of Paper Acceptance April 20, 2009: Camera Ready Copy Due Minitrack Virtual Communities & Virtual Worlds 15th Americas Conference on Information Systems August 06-09 2009, San Francisco, California, USA Abstract Virtual communities based on message boards, chat rooms, user groups and blogs have emerged as high activity domains on the Internet. Virtual communities are designed for a variety of purposes, ranging from Communities of Interest, Communities of Relationship (Facebook, etc.), Gaming Communities (e.g. in Wolrd of Warcraft, Second Life, etc.), and Communities of Transaction to Peer-to-Peer Communities or Mobile Communities. Web 2.0 Mechanisms are also boosting the development of Virtual Communities and the role of user-generated content within Virtual Communities. The significance of these communities is evident by the impact they have on information generation and transmission, and socialization. For example, today, blogs are quickly becoming a primary source of information in a variety of domains. The dynamic and interactive nature of these forums makes them very attractive for users and operators. An additional value offered by many of these communities is their ability to support socialization and offer an identity for the participants. While most virtual communities share these characteristics, it is also important to recognize that virtual communities are not homogeneous; they differ significantly based on the domain, purpose and benefits. Well-organized communities even expand their power across various channels and into the Offline world. Within the field of information systems researchers are interested in studying interaction patterns, social structures, transaction processes, management aspects, business models, and design aspects of information systems and services for virtual communities. Community members interact via digital media and contribute value in the form of content, reviews, and recommendations. Related issues are trust, network effects, transaction costs and the design of services as well as the generation of innovations. "Wisdom of Crowds", "Collective Intelligence" and "Crowdsourcing" are important concepts or buzzwords describing mechanisms around user-generated content in Virtual Communities. This minitracks welcomes empirical, conceptual and theoretical work. Despite the increasing popularity of virtual communities, several questions relating to virtual communities remain largely unexplored. [edit] Possible Topics We call for papers on all aspects of Virtual Communities. Possible topics include (but are not limited to): * Social, political and economic impact of Virtual Communities * Community models, platforms, services, and interactions, multi-channel communities * Management and organizational behaviour of communities * Community-related business models * Innovation generation and Virtual Communities (e.g. case studies on "wisdom of crowds", "collective intelligence", etc.) * User-generated content and customer collaboration in Virtual Communities * Peer-to-Peer or mobile services for Virtual Communities * Case studies and empirical studies, best practices and lessons learned * Motivation of participants in virtual communities * Benefits of participation in and competition among virtual communities * Information dispersion in virtual communities * Typologies and taxonomies of virtual communities * Evolution of and innovation in virtual communities * Gaming Communities This Mini-Track builds on the success of the preceding AMCIS Mini-Track on Virtual Communities. During the last eight years we have been gathering a community of researchers who are interested in the field of Virtual communities and related issues. Please visit the Mini-Track website at http://www.virtual-community.org. [edit] Important Dates * February 20, 2009 (11:59 PM Pacific time zone): Deadline for paper submissions * April 2, 2009: Authors will be notified of acceptances on or about this date * April 20, 2009 (11:59 PM Pacific time zone): For accepted papers, camera ready copy due Mini-track Chair Information Please use the following email-address for all inquiries: AMCISMT0862008@gmail.com Sebastian Richter (contact) Prof. Dr. Jan Marco Leimeister Prof. Balaji Rajagopalan, PhD |
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