[Surveillance-Studies-l] Fwd: Call for papers: Privacy, Trust and Identity Issues for Ambient Intelligence (fwd)

Nils Zurawski nilszurawski at alice-dsl.de
Die Okt 17 10:31:45 CEST 2006


und auch für diese liste ist das vielleicht interessant.

grüße

nilz


>The following CFP may be of interest to list members.
>Kirstie
>
>
>Call for Papers
>Privacy, Trust and Identity Issues for Ambient Intelligence
>Special Issue of Social Science Computer Review
>
>Call for papers: Privacy, Trust and Identity Issues for Ambient
>Intelligence
>
>This special issue of Social Science Computer Review will bring
>together a collection of high quality academic work that extends,
>refines and challenges our understanding of privacy, trust and
>identity issues related to ambient intelligence. Ambient intelligence
>(AmI) evokes a near future in which humans will be surrounded by
>'always-on', unobtrusive, interconnected intelligent objects few of
>which will bear any resemblance to the computing devices of today.
>Devices embedded in the environment will communicate seamlessly about
>any number of different topics e.g. your present state of health,
>when you last ate. Interactions with devices and at the same time
>other people will become anywhere, anytime.  This seamless exchange
>of information implicates, trust, privacy and identity issues as core
>variables that need to be fully understood if we are to adopt and use
>AmI systems. This special issue will bring together papers that
>investigate trust and privacy issues, theoretical and methodological
>approaches, policy and legal implications related to information
>exchange in an AmI world. Papers from a broad range of social science
>perspectives are encouraged. Submissions can be in the form of full
>papers (maximum 35 double-spaced manuscript pages including figures,
>tables, and references) or in the form of short reports (5 - 12
>double-spaced pages).
>
>Indicative Themes
>Ambient intelligence, pervasive, ubiquitous computing
>Privacy
>Trust
>Personal identity
>Fraud including: hacking, data mining, storage and access related to
>information exchange
>Surveillance
>Theoretical and methodological approaches for studying AmI
>Policy and legal implications
>Information exchange
>Motivation
>Social implication
>Types of information exchange e.g. health, financial, workplace,
>family
>
>Submission information:
>Key dates:
>Submission of papers: 19th January 2007
>Review feedback: 16th March 2007
>Submission of final papers: 1st May 2007
>Publication in SSCORE: Winter 2007
>
>Procedure:
>Send an electronic copy of the paper, along with a cover letter, to
>Linda Little (l.little at unn.ac.uk)
>Word or pdf format, figures must be supplied in original file format
>(ex., .jpg, .eps, .tif, .png, etc.).
>Formatting
>1. Electronic submission only
>2. We must have all these elements in this order: title, authors with
>institutional affiliations, abstract, keyword list, body, short
>author bios with email contact info, references, and endnotes (if
>any).
>3. APA style references (see the guide, above)
>4. Endnotes for comments only, not citations. No footnotes at all.
>5. All tables and figures must be on separate pages at the end,
>numbered and with captions. In the text, all tables and figures must
>be referred to and all must have call-outs ("[Figure 1 about here]").
>6. All figures must also be supplied in original file format (ex.,
>.jpg, .eps, .tif, etc.).
>7. All documents must be labelled with the name of the lead author.
>8. Everything must be double-spaced, even references, except tables
>are not double-spaced.
>Information about Social Science Computer Review (SSCORE)
>
>The Social Science Computer Review is an interdisciplinary journal
>covering both social science instructional and research applications
>of computing as well as social science research on societal impacts
>of information technology. Among topics within the scope of the
>journal are artificial intelligence, computational social science
>theory, computer-assisted survey research, computer-based qualitative
>analysis, computer simulation, critical social theory, economic
>modelling, geographic information systems, instructional multimedia,
>instrumentation and research tools, social impacts of computing and
>telecommunications, software evaluation, web-based survey research,
>and world-wide web resources for social scientists.
>SSCORE is a peer-reviewed publication of Sage Publications, Inc. Now
>in its 24th year of publication, it features frequent symposia issues
>on social science disciplines, on new computer-intensive
>methodologies, and on the political and social impacts of computing.
>
>A World Wide Web site for SSCORE is found at the URL:
>http://hcl.chass.ncsu.edu/sscore/sscore.htm.
>
>
>Send inquiries and proposals related to this special issue to:
>L Little <l.little at unn.ac.uk>


-- 
Dr. Nils Zurawski
Universität Hamburg
Inst. für kriminologische Sozialforschung
Allende-Platz 1
20146 Hamburg
Germany
tel. +49 (0) 40 42838 6185
fax. +49 (0) 40 42838 2328

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