Society for the Social Study of Mobile Communications


The Society for the Social Study of Mobile Communication (SSSMC) is intended to facilitate the international advancement of cross-disciplinary mobile communication studies. It is intended to serve as a resource and to support a network of scholarly research as to the social consequences of mobile communication.




Sunday, February 28, 2016

CFP: Space and Place – 7th Global Meeting

Call for Presentations

Space and Place
The Space and Place Project: 7th Global Meeting
Thursday 1st September – Saturday 3rd September 2016
Mansfield College, Oxford, United Kingdom


Space and place affect the very way in which we experience, understand, navigate and recreate the world. Wars are fought over both real and imagined spaces; boundaries are erected against marginalised individuals, groups and populations, constructing a lived landscape of inclusion and exclusion. Space and place are also the focus of the creation and contestation of uncontainable mobilities — be they human, identities, cultures, meanings, information, finances and objects — that are causing geographies to shift and change. Moreover, the existence of space and place are (is?) irrevocably intertwined with, and created by, technologies, communication and culture, knowledge, politics, economics, power and lived experience. Understanding spatial relationships and the tensions and dynamics that inform them enables us to gain important insights into the processes that configure the spaces and places that we move through, inhabit and live in, as well as the nature of our existence.

Now in its seventh year, Space and Place: Exploring Critical Issues is an established annual interdisciplinary conference project that encourages critical and collegial dialogue. Recognising that different disciplines and practices express themselves through different modes, media and formats we strongly encourage the submission of proposals from creative practitioners – artists, architects, writers, photographers, painters, film-makers, performers, urban planners – as well as people from related professions, industries and activities and alternative forms of performance. Critical accounts and descriptions of problem-solving activities from ongoing projects that function to alter the nature space and place as well as from projects that are in development are also most welcome. We also strongly encourage traditional papers, panels and workshop proposals.

We seek to create a dialogue amongst individuals and groups who are concerned about the complex nature of space and place. Performances, presentations, reports, works-in-progress, papers and workshops are invited on issues related to any of the following themes:

1. Theorising space and place:
How do space and place exist? What aspects of human, and non-human behaviour act upon and constitute space and place? From Deleuze to Latour to Hayles; from theories of becoming to Actor-Network Theory to New Materialism, space and place have become increasingly important dimensions to social and political thought.

2. The situation and location of identities in space and place:
How is our sense of self and our relationship to others constituted through our existence in space and place? How do space and place interpellate the subject? How do human endeavours affect the constitution of space and place and in so doing affect the nature of our sense of self? How have the gradual decline of the nation-state and the ascendance of the network state (Castells) affected the relationship between the national identities of subjects and the state within which they were born?

3. The space and place of the networked home:
The concept and structure of the home has, and continues, to occupy a privileged position in human existence. How do the Internet, new media and the build out of connected devices, appliances and other technologies increasingly found in the home change the nature of the home as a space and our place within it.

4. The creation and contestation of existing spaces and places:
How have existing spaces and places been created in the past, and how are they lived in at present. Can we say that our existence in a given space or place is ever and always without some form of contestation? If not, then how is our living in an existing space or place contested in the present? What does this mean for our existence as individuals, groups and communities in terms of the spaces and places that we inhabit? How is the distinction between the public and private ownership of space affected by this ongoing contestation?

5. The repurposing of existing spaces and places:
What are the processes- local, national, global – that lead to the repurposing of existing spaces and places? How do these processes, and the restructuring that they lead to, affect the existence of individuals and groups who have made use of these spaces and places prior to their repurposing? What do they foretell for future acts of repurposing? What is the relationship between the repurposing of spaces and places and their reclamation?

6. Representations of space and place in the media, film, literature, TV, theatre, the fine arts and performance:
Space and place have long been privileged, if unspoken subjects for the fine arts, literature and film. We seek presentations by artists, authors, photographers and filmmakers who wish to share their completed or on-going visions of space and place. We also welcome critical readings of these modes of expression and depiction of both space and place.

7. The spaces and places of social media:
How do social media exist as social space and places of congregation? Are these spaces and places disrupting the fabric of our offline existence, or do they merely supplement it? How do these new places and spaces of sociability affect our sense of self and our relationship to others?

8. The nature and production of virtual space:
William Gibson coined the term cyberspace in 1984, and described it as a “consensual hallucination.” Can we not, however, think of cyberspace literally, as a space or place? If so, then how, and how does this new spatial construct affect the lives of those who have come to inhabit cyberspace?

9. Mobile communication technologies and new urban spaces and places:
Have the mobile phone and the tablet compressed space, or have they extended our presence amongst others across space? Do the mobile phone and the tablet enable us to inhabit new places? If so, then how are these places constituted, and how are they inhabited?

10. Knowledge clusters, new industries and the globally networked city:
What are the processes through which this is occurring in the early 21st century? How are space and place rearticulated through these processes? What are the strategies and tactics that are being deployed to resist the dislocation that accompanies the build out of these industrial networks?

11. Networks of mobility and their relationship to movement, space and place:
The twentieth and early twenty-first centuries have often been characterised by the by the increasing movement and mobility of people, objects, information, cultural meanings and financial instruments through increasingly complex and extensive networks of mobility – both physical and digital. How do these networks change the nature of space and place in the early 21st century? What types of spaces and places exist within these networks? Are we fated to solely inhabit spaces within these networks? Do localised places exist as counterpoints to these networks, or will networks of mobility eventually envelope all forms of the local? How does our sense of self and our relationship to others change as a result of our increased mobility and movement through these networks and across space?

12. The spaces and places of global tourism:
Tourism not only participates as a key industry in the networks of mobility, but in so doing radically reconfigures the existing spaces and places of the destinations that people go to – politically, economically and industrially to name but three dimensions of these effects. How does global tourism recreate the spaces and places of the destinations that it profits from?

13. Practice based proposals, research and reports on space and place:
As noted, above, critical accounts and descriptions of problem-solving activities from ongoing projects that function to alter the landscape of space and place – urban renewal, housing development, the development of new forms of mobility, to name just three – as well as from projects that are in development, are also most welcome.


Please note: These criteria are by no means definitive. Presentations on any other topic related to the general theme are welcome and will most certainly be considered.
Supporting the conference’s interdisciplinary character, the organizers propose to establish a dialogue between the parallel meetings running during this event. Delegates are welcome to attend up to two sessions in each of the concurrent conferences.

Call for Cross-Over Presentations:
The Space and Place project will be meeting at the same time as a project on Food and another project on Videogames. We welcome submissions which cross the divide between both project areas. If you would like to be considered for a cross project session, please mark your submission “Crossover Submission”.

What to Send:
300 word abstracts, proposals and other forms of contribution should be submitted by Friday 1st April 2016. All submissions be minimally double reviewed, under anonymous (blind) conditions, by a global panel drawn from members of the Project Team and the Advisory Board. In practice our procedures usually entail that by the time a proposal is accepted, it will have been triple and quadruple reviewed.

You will be notified of the panel’s decision by Friday 15th April 2016.
If your submission is accepted for the conference, a full draft of your contribution should be submitted by Friday 27th May 2016.

Abstracts may be in Word, RTF or Notepad formats with the following information and in this order:
a) author(s), b) affiliation as you would like it to appear in programme, c) email address, d) title of proposal, e) body of proposal, f) up to 10 keywords.
E-mails should be entitled: Space and Place Abstract Submission

Organising Chairs:

This event is an inclusive interdisciplinary research and publishing project. It aims to bring together people from different areas and interests to share ideas and explore various discussions which are innovative and exciting.

A number of eBooks and paperback books have been published or are in press as a result of the work of this project. All papers accepted for and presented at the conference must be in English and will be eligible for publication in an ISBN eBook. Selected papers may be developed for publication in a themed hard copy volume(s). All publications from the conference will require editors, to be chosen from interested delegates from the conference.

Ethos:
Inter-Disciplinary.Net believes it is a mark of personal courtesy and professional respect to your colleagues that all delegates should attend for the full duration of the meeting. If you are unable to make this commitment, please do not submit an abstract for presentation. Please note: Inter-Disciplinary.Net is a not-for-profit network and we are not in a position to be able to assist with conference travel or subsistence.


Friday, November 20, 2015

CFP: Information and Communication Technologies and Development (ICTD2016)

CFP: Information and Communication Technologies and Development (ICTD2016)

June 3-6, 2016
University of Michigan
http://ictd2016.info/cfp/

Call for Papers and Notes
The Eighth International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies and Development (ICTD2016), to be hosted at the University of Michigan from June 3-6, 2016, cordially invites you to submit Full Papers and Notes. Held in cooperation with ACM SIGCHI and ACM SIGCAS, ICTD2016 will provide an international forum for scholarly researchers to explore the role of information and communication technologies (ICTs) in social, political, and economic development. The ICTD conferences have been taking place approximately every 18 months since 2006; 2016 marks the first time that the conference will go to an annual cycle.

Important dates
November 20, 2015: Deadline for submission of Full Papers
January 15, 2016: Notification of acceptances for Full Papers
January 29, 2016: Deadline for submission of Notes
February 26, 2016: Notification of acceptances for Notes
March 25, 2016:  Camera-ready Full Papers and Notes due

All submission are due 11:59 pm UTC. 

Over the past several decades, as radio and television have been joined by computers, the Internet, and mobile devices, information and communication technologies (ICTs) have become more pervasive, more accessible, and more relevant in the lives of people around the world. Virtually no sphere of human activity remains apart from ICTs, from markets to health care, education to governance, family life to artistic expression. Diverse groups across the world interact with, are affected by, and can shape the design of these technologies. The ICTD conference is a place to understand these interactions, and to examine, critique, and refine the persistent, pervasive hope that ICTs can be enlisted by individuals and communities in the service of human development. There are multidisciplinary challenges associated with the engineering, application and adoption of ICTs in developing regions and/or for development, with implications for design, policy, and practice.

For the purposes of this conference, the term “ICT” comprises electronic technologies for information processing and communication, as well as systems, interventions, and platforms that are built on such technologies. “Development” includes, but is not restricted to, poverty alleviation, education, agriculture, healthcare, general communication, gender equality, governance, infrastructure, environment and sustainable livelihoods. The conference program will reflect the multidisciplinary nature of ICTD research, with anticipated contributions from fields including (but not limited to) anthropology, computer science, communication, design, economics, electrical engineering, geography, human-computer interaction, information science, information systems, political science, public health, and sociology.


Saturday, October 17, 2015

CFP: 13th ICA Mobile Pre-Conference: The All-Powerful Mobile


CALL FOR WORKSHOPS
13th ICA Mobile Pre-Conference:
The All-Powerful Mobile
June 8, 2016, Fukuoka Art Museum, Japan

Deadline for Workshop Proposals: December 15, 2015.

Two decades of research on the social implications of mobile-mediated communication have passed, during which the repertoire of mobile devices and mobile contents, functions and usage contexts have tremendously expanded. As we stand at the threshold of the third decade of mobile media research, we can look back at how powerful the influence of mobile media has been in several aspects of people’s everyday life, and use these insights to speculate about what the future of mobile media and mobile research may bring.

The 13th annual ICA Mobile pre-conference aims to reflect upon the influence of mobile technologies on everyday practices through the theme “The All-Powerful Mobile.” The pre-conference will be organized into Blue Sky Workshops. These workshops will provide a forum where graduate students, new faculty, and more experienced scholars can discuss their research, thus creating an opportunity to cultivate a supportive and integrated community of thinkers. The preconference will also feature an opening keynote speaker and other engaging informal, more social, activities.

We invite workshop proposals covering a broad range of topics related to the social implications of mobile media. Topics may include mobile media and civic engagement, mobile activism and social movements, mobile social media, mobile learning and education, mobile media research methods, mobile media and youth, mobile media in international contexts, mobile health, mobile cultures and art, mobile media and place, mobile journalism, mobile media usability and UX issues, mobile language, sociology/anthropology/psychology of mobile communication and mobile media histories.
Workshop proposals are welcome from scholars at all stages of their careers and across multiple disciplines related to mobile communication. We particularly encourage mobile scholars from the Asian region to submit a proposal. Each workshop will be allotted a timeslot of approximately 2 hours. Workshops should focus on the dissemination and discussion of new ideas, theory and empirical results, but can also be more practically or industry oriented. A workshop is typically organized around a consortium of 4-5 proposers who present and discuss their work, but should be open to the active partcipation of other preconference attendees. Preconference attendees can attend multiple workshops.

Submissions should include a workshop summary of 500-800 words (excluding title and references). This summary should describe:
(1) the topic and its relation to the preconference theme,
(2) the goal of the workshop
(3) the scheduled activity, detailing how participants and the audience may be involved, and
(4) the proposers and their contribution to the workshop.

Proposals can be submitted via email to icamobile16@gmail.com. The workshop summaries will be published online and in the printed program. Submissions will be reviewed by a review committee of mobile scholars, and selected based on criteria of relevance, originality, theoretical/practical contribution, clarity of presentation, as well as fit with the conference theme. Review will be non-blind due to the workshop nature. Notifications of acceptance will be emailed to contributors by January 2016.

Mobile scholars who wish to submit a workshop proposal but are still looking for additional participants to form a consortium, are advised to use the twitter hashtag #icamobile16 or to add a post on the ICA Mobile Facebook page.

Thursday, September 24, 2015

MobileMe&You

MobileMe&You: A Mobile-First Conference

October 28-30

COLLEGE OF JOURNALISM AND MASS COMMUNICATIONS UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN

For more information contact Gary Kebbel at garykebbel@UNL.EDU 
or call 703.582.6758


Mobile media are here.
The future is how you use them. 
Learn the best mobile media practices for informing, discussing and solving. Come to Mobile Me & You at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln College of Journalism and Mass Communications, Oct. 28-30.

WHAT: A conference discussing the power of mobile media to improve our daily lives
WHO: Anyone - professionals, faculty or students - who wants to reach the audience of the future
WHY: Discover how mobile media apply to your discipline, your issues, your audience





Thursday, September 10, 2015

CFP: Media Ecology Association Affiliate


ECA 2016 Convention: Call for Papers, Media Ecology Association Affiliate

June 23-26, 2016
Bologna, Italy


ECA's Media Ecology Association Affiliate invites submissions for the 107th Annual ECA Convention. We invite competitive papers, thematic panels, roundtables, etc., relevant to the field of media ecology. Of particular interest would be papers and sessions related to the theme of the MEA's annual meeting, to be held in Bologna, Italy, on June 23-26, 2016, hosted by the University of Bologna ("Interfaces of Play and Game: Engaging Media Ecosystems"). For more information on media ecology and the MEA, see <http://www.media-ecology.org/>.

We are also interested in submissions based on the ECA convention theme, which is [R]evolution.  Media ecology scholarship has long been interested in the various revolutions associated with the introduction of new communication technologies, from the first writing systems, the alphabet, and the printing press, to the communications revolution of the 19th century, and and the social and cultural revolutions related to the electronic media, television, computers, the internet, web, social media, and mobile technology. At the same time, we recognize the process of media evolution, and the continuity that exists from orality to literacy to electricity and digitality. We welcome submissions from students, junior and senior scholars alike, and we encourage co-sponsored submissions that promote interdisciplinary collaboration.

All submissions, which should fall into one of the two categories listed below, must be received by 11:59 PDT October 15, 2015 in order to be considered.

I. Competitive Papers

A. Competitive papers should not have been presented previously at another conference, (with the exception of a student-only conference), be accepted for publication, or have been published.

B. Individual submissions of complete competitive papers should include two separate attachments:

  1. Title page, which includes the title of the paper, the names of all authors, and each author’s address, phone number, email address, and affiliation. Please use an asterisk to note which author will be the presenter.
  • Please label all debut papers with the phrase “DEBUT PAPER” in the upper right-hand corner of the title page. To qualify as a debut paper, the author or co-authors must not have presented a paper at a state, regional, national or international convention. All authors of a co-authored paper must meet these eligibility requirements for a paper to be considered a Debut Paper.
  • Where appropriate, label “STUDENT” in the upper right-hand corner of the title page. All authors must be students to be considered a student paper.
  • Audio-visual requests should be listed on the detachable title page. Please note that equipment availability is limited.
  • The following statement MUST be included with every submission in order for it to be eligible for review:

    In submitting the attached paper or proposal, I/We recognize that this submission is considered a professional responsibility. I/We agree to present this panel or paper if it is accepted and programmed. I/We further recognize that all who attend and present at ECA’s annual meeting must register and pay required fees.
  1. A manuscript that includes: (a) a 250-500 word abstract of the paper (with title appearing on this page) and (b) a maximum of 25-pages of text, excluding references and tables. No information in the paper that identifies the author(s) (beyond that which appears on the title page). Please remove any identifiers, such as the author’s name, from the paper and electronic file from the header or on the file label. Please follow APA format guidelines.


II. Panel and Roundtable Proposals
A. Panel, roundtable, and innovative presentation proposals should focus on some unifying theme or concept relevant to research, theory, or instruction related to the field of media ecology.
  1. Programs may consist of a chair, individual presenters, and a respondent; however, roundtable discussions, performance venues, or other unique formats are encouraged.
  2. We request that any person serving as chair and/or respondent not be a participant in the panel or roundtable.
  3. Innovative program proposals, especially those that provide opportunities for engaged interaction among participants and attendees, are encouraged.
  4. Programs co-sponsored with other interest groups are also welcome. Programs that relate to the convention theme, “[R]evolution,” are encouraged.
  5. The panel organizer is expected to take responsibility for communication with the Interest Chair, alert her to any changes or problems and to ensure that panelists register for the conference and deliver their papers.

B. Panel proposals should include the following:
  1. Thematic title of the panel/roundtable.
  2. One-page rationale for the panel/roundtable and explanation of how the papers are thematically linked.
  3. Names of the chair and respondents (if any). Chairs should not also be designated as respondents.
  4. Names, mailing addresses, telephone numbers, email addresses, and institutional affiliations of all participants.
  5. Title and brief (1-2 paragraph/s) description of each presentation.
  6. A program copy (no more than a 75-word description) as it should appear in the final program.
  7. Equipment needed for the program. Please note that equipment availability is limited.
  8. The following statement MUST be included with every submission in order for it to be eligible for review:

    In submitting the attached paper or proposal, I/We recognize that this submission is considered a professional responsibility. I/We agree to present this panel or paper if it is accepted and programmed. I/We further recognize that all who attend and present at ECA’s annual meeting must register and pay required fees.

Please send your submissions and/or inquiries to the MEA affiliate planner, Lance Strate, at strate@fordham.edu. All submissions should be submitted as either a .doc/.docx, .odt, or .pdf file. Remember, the deadline for submissions is 11:59 PDT October 15, 2015.

Please note that acceptance of a paper or panel proposal obligates authors to attend the conference and present the paper.

CFP: Ubiquitous Media Systems

Call for Papers: Ubiquitous Media Systems 

Special issue of the Journal of Theoretical and Applied Electronic Commerce Research

Guest Editors: Eusebio Scornavacca, Stefano Za, Kevin Carillo


The Journal of Theoretical and Applied Electronic Commerce Research is planning a special issue on Ubiquitous Media Systems.

As of 2014, the total number of all types of mobile-connected devices has exceeded the world’s population and is forecasted to reach 1.5 devices per human being in 2019 [1]. The pace of the emergence and mainstream adoption of new forms of ubiquitous computing devices such as smartphones, tablets and ‘phablets’ has not ceased gaining momentum - demarking an evolutionary step in the ubiquitous computing trend [2]. The extinction of mobile phones and the proliferation of fluid multi-device platforms such as iOS, Android and Windows 8 have blurred the traditional boundaries between stationary and mobile information systems [3], [4].

This dissolution of the traditional segmentation of computing contexts represents a remarkable shift in the fundamental temporospatial nature of IT artifacts [5], [6]. Indeed, individuals are gradually ceasing to perceive their mobile and non-mobile devices as independent ecosystems, but rather as an evolving collection of interconnected devices that are progressively playing a major role in their daily lives [7], [8]. This significant technological evolution has given birth to a new and complex form of connected IT artifact, Ubiquitous Media Systems (UMS),  that encapsulates various functions and provides fluid information access across a variety of channels; allowing users to accomplish a multitude of tasks and interact fluidly in a ubiquitous ecosystem [4].

As information access becomes fully ubiquitous and the utilitarian, as well as hedonic functionalities of those devices increase, the emergence of fluid and evolving techno-ecosystems poses important challenges and opportunities for ecommerce theory and practice. By gradually blurring physical, social and temporal boundaries ubiquitous media systems allow to deliver new as well as existing online products and services through a multitude of interconnected channels, but also engender radically novel and unthought-of opportunities for e-commerce [9]–[11].

Ubiquitous access to the Internet of things also represents new marketing opportunities for businesses as well as the challenge to deeply understand users’ behavior in this fluid digital ecosystem [12]. Apprehending ubiquitous media systems user behavior is a difficult challenge as the rules that govern its functioning keep being redefined each time a new form of connected device appears on the market [13], [14].

Unfortunately, the understanding of the specificities that surround ubiquitous media systems in the electronic and mobile commerce contexts is also limited in information systems research [15], [16]. There is a general tendency to focus on individual or subsets of devices, functionalities, or sub-phenomena, which leads to a fragmented and distorted understanding of the ubiquitous media systems reality [17], [18]. This new, complex, interconnected and amalgamated form of IT artifact requires a more holistic and encompassing research approach that is capable of capturing the specificities and pervasiveness of ubiquitous media systems.


Subject Coverage

The objective of this Special Issue is to present the current state of research and practical experiences on ubiquitous media systems from the perspective of electronic commerce research. Particularly we welcome interdisciplinary research that is able to connect theory and practice; aiming to break the traditional conceptual research boundaries dividing stationary and mobile systems. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following:
  
Usability of ubiquitous media systems
System fluidity – seamless access across multiple devices
The impact of ubiquitous environments on productivity
Legal, social ethical issues regarding ubiquitous media systems
Multi-channel ecommerce applications and strategy
Trust, loyalty, and privacy issues in ubiquitous media systems
Security in ubiquitous media systems
Ubiquitous media systems and new business models
Challenges and specificities for payment systems
Big data and ubiquitous media systems


Notes for Intending Authors

We are seeking original, innovative, and scientifically rigorous papers presenting practical experiences, methodological challenges, or impacts of ubiquitous media systems. Especially empirical research, case studies or theory based qualitative and quantitative studies, are welcome.

Submitted papers should not have been previously published nor be currently under consideration for publication elsewhere.

Author guidelines can be found at http://www.jtaer.com/author_guidelines.doc . All submissions will be refereed by at least three reviewers. Submissions should be directed by email to jtaer.ums@utalca.cl.

For more information, please visit the following web site: http://www.jtaer.com.


Important dates

Full paper submission: 15 December 2015
Notification of acceptance: 15 February 2016
Revised submission: 15 March 2016
Final acceptance notification: 15 April 2016
Camera ready version of paper: 15 May 2016
Publication: May – September 2016


Guest Editors

Eusebio Scornavacca
Merrick School of Business
University of Baltimore
1420 N. Charles St.
Baltimore, MD 21201 – USA

Stefano Za,
eCampus University
Via Isimbardi, 10
22060 Novedrate (CO) – ITALY
Phone: +39 06 85225 553

Kevin Carillo
Toulouse Business School
20 Boulevard Lascrosses,
31068 Toulouse – FRANCE


References
[1] Cisco, “Cisco Visual Networking Index: Global Mobile Data Traffic Forecast Update 2014–2019,” 2015.

[2] K. Lyytinen, Y. Yoo, U. Varshney, M. Ackerman, G. Davis, M. Avital, D. Robey, S. Sawyer, and C. Sorensen, “Surfing the next wave: design and implementation challenges of ubiquitous computing,” Commun. Assoc. Inf. Syst., vol. 13, no. 1, pp. 697–716, 2004.

[3] S. Vodanovich, D. Sundaram, and M. Myers, “Research Commentary —Digital Natives and Ubiquitous Information Systems,” Inf. Syst. Res., vol. 21, no. 4, pp. 711–723, Dec. 2010.

[4] K. Carillo, E. Scornavacca, and S. Za, “An investigation of the role of dependency in predicting continuance intention to use ubiquitous media systems: combining a media sytem perspective with expectation-confirmation theorie,” in Twenty Second European Conference on Information Systems (ECIS2014), 2014, pp. 1–17.

[5] M. H. Jackson, “Fluidity, Promiscuity, and Mash-Ups: New Concepts for the Study of Mobility and Communication,” Commun. Monogr., vol. 74, no. 3, pp. 408–413, Sep. 2007.

[6] E. Scornavacca, “Incorporating System Portablity into Technology Acceptance Models,” in International Conference on Mobile Business, 2014.

[7] C. Sørensen and D. Gibson, “Ubiquitous visions and opaque realities: professionals talking about mobile technologies,” info, vol. 6, no. 3, pp. 188–196, 2004.

[8] R. Scheepers and C. Middleton, “Personal ICT Ensembles and Ubiquitous Information Systems Environments: Key Issues and Research Implications,” Commun. Assoc. Inf. Syst., vol. 33, no. 1, pp. 381–392, 2013.

[9] K. Lyytinen and Y. Yoo, “Research Commentary: The Next Ware of Nomadic Computing,” Inf. Syst. Res., vol. 13, no. 4, pp. 377–388, 2002.

[10] O. Henfridsson and R. Lindgren, “Multi-contextuality in ubiquitous computing: Investigating the car case through action research,” Inf. Organ., vol. 15, no. 2, pp. 95–124, 2005.

[11] R. Lindgren, M. Andersson, and O. Henfridsson, “Multi-contextuality in boundary-spanning practices,” Inf. Syst. J., vol. 18, no. 6, pp. 641–661, Nov. 2008.

[12] a. Ghose and S. P. Han, “An Empirical Analysis of User Content Generation and Usage Behavior on the Mobile Internet,” Manage. Sci., vol. 57, no. 9, pp. 1671–1691, 2011.

[13] IDC, “A Future Fueled by Phablets – Worldwide Phablet Shipments to Surpass Portable PCs in 2014 and Tablets by 2015, According to IDC,” Framingham, Massachusetts, 2014.

[14] A. Oulasvirta, T. Rattenbury, L. Ma, and E. Raita, “Habits make smartphone use more pervasive,” Pers. Ubiquitous Comput., vol. 16, no. 1, pp. 105–114, 2012.

[15] A. Ghose, S. P. Han, and K. Xu, “Mobile commerce in the new tablet economy,” in Thirty Fourth International conference on Information Systems (ICIS2013), 2013.

[16] A. Ghose, A. Goldfarb, and S. P. Han, “How is the Mobile Internet Different?,” Inf. Syst. Res., vol. 24, no. 3, pp. 613–631, 2012.

[17] Y. Bang, D.-J. Lee, K. Han, M. Hwang, and J.-H. Ahn, “Channel Capabilities, Product Characteristics, and the Impacts of Mobile Channel Introduction,” J. Manag. Inf. Syst., vol. 30, no. 2, pp. 101–126, 2013.

[18] Y. Bang, D. Lee, and K. Han, “Access Affordance of Mobile Technology in e-Commerce: Change of Purchase Time Dispersion,” in Thirty Fifth International Conference on Information Systems (ICIS2014), 2014, pp. 1–15.


Monday, August 31, 2015

CFP: WHAT IS MEDIA?


WHAT IS MEDIA?
Experience • Exploration • Emergence

UNIVERSITY OF OREGON • PORTLAND, OREGON, USA • APRIL 14-16, 2016

What is media today? How is media studies defined? How have media technologies transformed media theory and practice? What are the futures of media and how are they evolving?

With media including a wider and wider range of concepts, products, services, and institutions, the definition of media continues to be in a state of flux. Important questions abound and we will address a sweeping range of issues at the What is Media? event next April in Portland.

The conference will feature a unique coalescing of media scholars, government and community officials, industry professionals, alumni, and students, as well as artists, filmmakers, grassroots community organizations, and the public. The event will feature keynote speakers, roundtables, paper presentations, and special events, in an attempt to answer questions about the ever-evolving nature of media.

Presentations/papers/installations may include the following topics (as well as others):
  • What is a medium? What distinguishes a medium from the media? How are they changing? What are the new emerging media? What are immersive media?
  • What is media studies? What is the relationship between media, communication, and film studies?
  • How does media studies relate to other areas of inquiry and other disciplines?
  • What are current approaches to the study of media effects, media audiences, and media psychology?
  • What can media professionals learn from media studies and vice versa?
  • What is media industry studies? and its relationship to political economy and media economics?
  • What is citizen/civic media? and the roles/responsibilities of the media in contemporary democracy?
  • What are media ecologies? In what ways do they address the environmental crisis?
  • How is media similar/different in various cultures? and the significance of media in a global context?
  • What new economic, cultural, political, and social factors are affecting media?
  • How does media studies highlight gender, race, and/or indigenous concerns?
  • What is the philosophy of media? media ethics? media aesthetics?
  • How does science and technology studies deal with media?
  • What is mediation and/or mediatization?
  • What are the relationships between media technologies and media content?
  • What are the positive/negative consequences of media technologies for the public interest?
  • What are the current trends in media education and media literacy?
  • How have media technologies been embraced by spiritual/contemplative organizations?
  • Where do media, the arts and sciences converge (e.g. intermedia, biomedia, etc.)?
  • What laws, regulations, and/or policies are appropriate for the media today?
  • What are the emerging discourses of media, surveillance and cybersecurity?
  • What is media archaeology? What can media history teach us about the future of media?

Conference Organizers:
Janet Wasko (University of Oregon) and Jeremy Swartz (University of Oregon)

Send 100-150 word abstracts of papers or presentations by November 2, 2015 to:
Janet Wasko • jwasko@uoregon.edu
School of Journalism and Communication
University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon, 97403-1275, USA