Last modified: 05/21/2008
Workshop Objective:
The objective of the workshop is to provide an open and constructive discussion forum of important HCI research in Information Systems that addresses the ways humans interact with information, technologies, and tasks – especially in the business, managerial, organizational, social and/or cultural contexts. HCI in MIS is concerned with the macro level (versus the micro level) of Human-Computer Interaction analysis. The purpose of the workshop is to identify important HCI/MIS problems and innovative research approaches.
The organizing committee is looking for interesting and novel research ideas as well as studies that address important HCI problems in today's organizations by drawing upon theories and/or methodologies from all relevant reference disciplines.
Keynote on Publishing HCI Research:
This year's workshop will include a keynote address by Dennis Galletta, Professor of IS at the Katz Graduate School of Business, University of Pittsburgh. This keynote will focus on publishing HCI research from the perspective of an author. This keynote builds on last year's panel of editors-in-chief from premier MIS journals, who discussed the unique issues associated with publishing HCI research.
Topics:
The perceptual, behavioral, cognitive, motivational, and affective/emotional aspects of human and their interaction with IT
User task analysis and modeling
Digital documents/genres and human information seeking behavior
Informed user interface design and evaluation for all types of business and organizational applications such as:
B2B, B2C, C2C E-Commerce
E-marketplace and supply chain management
Group collaboration
Negotiation and auction
Enterprise systems
Intranets
Extranets
Small-screen mobile devices and pervasive computing
Multi-dimensional information visualizations
Integrated or innovative approaches and guidelines for analysis, design, and development of interactive devices and systems
Usability engineering, metrics, and methods for user interface assessment
Evaluation of end-user computing in a work or non-work environment
Information technology acceptance and diffusion issues from cognitive, behavioral, affective, motivational, cultural, and user interface design perspectives
The impact of interfaces/information technology on attitudes, behavior, performance, perception, and productivity
Issues in software learning and training
Gender and technology
Issues related to the elderly, the young and special needs populations
Other human factors issues related to human interaction with technologies
Submissions:
Authors are encouraged to submit high quality research papers (completed or research in progress papers) that are original. The submissions should not be currently under review elsewhere and the papers should have not appeared elsewhere.
Formatting
All submissions must be:
Formatted for 8½ x 11 inch paper (1 inch = 2.54 cm).
Have 1 inch margins all around (1 inch = 72 points).
Use Times New Roman 12 font.
Use 1.5 or greater line spacing.
File formats:
Only Word file formats will be accepted.
Maximum Length:
Completed research papers, 20 pages (excluding the title and abstract page, but including all figures, tables, and references) formatted as described above.
Research in Progress, 10 pages (excluding the title and abstract page, but including all figures, tables, and references) formatted as described above.
Submissions will undergo a double-blind review process. Authors should agree to provide timely reviews of at most two other submissions, if requested. Manuscripts should be in MS Word format and be submitted as email attachments to the workshop program co-chairs: Mun Yi (myi@moore.sc.edu) and Andrea Houston (ahoust2@lsu.edu), with the subject heading "HCI/MIS workshop submission." Authors can use the body of the email as the cover letter for the submission and should ensure that their identities do not appear in any part of the manuscript.
The first page of the manuscript should have a title, the type of the submission (complete research or research in progress), total word count of the submission, an abstract of less than 300 words, and a list of 5-6 keywords.
Publication:
Extended abstracts of all accepted papers will be published in the workshop proceedings. This inclusion should not affect full versions of the papers to be published later in journals. Please follow the format and requirements of the camera-ready version.
Proceedings Submission Guidelines:
Authors of accepted papers should make sure that their final camera-ready versions follow the proceedings guidelines that can be downloaded in Word Format. Each final paper is no more than 5 proceedings pages with an abstract of no longer than 150 words.
Authors of accepted papers should make sure the following steps are taken:
At least one author has to register for the workshop by 10/21/2005. Otherwise, the paper will be withdrawn from presentation at the workshop and the workshop proceedings.
The final camera-ready versions of the papers should be submitted by 11/05/2005 as a Word document to Mun Yi (myi@moore.sc.edu), Andrea Houston (ahoust2@lsu.edu), and Paul Benjamin Lowry (Paul.Lowry.PhD@gmail.com) via email with the subject "HCI workshop final submission".
Each author should provide a short bio of up to 60 words by 11/05/2005 to Mun Yi (myi@moore.sc.edu), Andrea Houston (ahoust2@lsu.edu), and Paul Benjamin Lowry (Paul.Lowry.PhD@gmail.com) by email. This bio will be listed in the workshop program.
Special Theme Papers of JAIS
Kalle Lyytinen, editor-in-chief of the Journal of the Association for Information Systems (JAIS), has agreed again to fast track successful expansions of the best, completed research papers from the workshop for publication consideration at JAIS. The guest senior editors will be Ping Zhang, Dennis Galletta, and Izak Benbasat.
Key Dates:
Submission due: August 26, 2005
Acceptance notification: October 12, 2005
Extended abstracts due for proceedings: November 5, 2005
Workshop: Saturday, December 10, 2005
Workshop Co-Chairs:
Scott McCoy, College of William and Mary (scott.mccoy@business.wm.edu)
Traci Hess, Washington State University (thess@wsu.edu)
Program Co-Chairs:
Mun
Yi, University of South Carolina (myi@moore.sc.edu)
Andrea Houston, Louisiana State University (ahoust2@lsu.edu)
Paul Benjamin Lowry, Brigham Young University (Paul.Lowry.PhD@gmail.com)
Local Organizing Committee:
Brian Jones, Tennessee Technological University (bjones@tntech.edu)
Weiyin Hong, University of
Nevada, Las Vegas (whong@unlv.nevada.edu)
Advising Committee:
Izak
Benbasat, University of British Columbia
Jane Carey, Arizona State University West
Dennis Galletta, University of Pittsburgh
Sirkka Jarvenpaa, The University of Texas at Austin
Fiona Nah, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Ping Zhang, Syracuse University
Vladimir Zwass, Fairleigh Dickinson University
Program Committee
Margherita Antona, University of Crete
Shirley (Annie) Becker, Florida Institute of Tech.
Steve Bellman, University of Western Australia
Paul L. Bowen, University of Queensland
Hock Chuan Chan, National University of Singapore
Susy Chan, DePaul University
Patrick Chau, University of Hong Kong
Hsinchen Chen, University of Arizona
Gilbert Cockton, University of Sunderland, UK
Mary Czerwinski, Microsoft Research
Sidney Davis, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Anthony Faiola, Indiana University at Indianapolis
Xiaowen Fang, DePaul University
Kirk Fiedler, University of South Carolina
Christina Finneran, Syracuse University
Jerry Fjermestad, NJIT
Terry Fox, Baylor University
Mark Fuller, Washington State University
John Galvin, Indiana University
Andrew Gemino, Simon Fraser University
Matt Germonprez, Univ. of Wisconsin-Eau Claire
Jane Gravil, University of Western Ontario
David Green, Morehead State University
Gary Hackbarth, Iowa State University
Milena Head, McMaster University
Stefan Holmlid, Santa Anna IT Research Institute
Weiyin Hong, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Geoffrey Hubona, Georgia State University
Yujong Hwang, DePaul University
Gretchen Irwin, Colorado State University
Bernard Jansen, Penn State University
Richard Johnson, University of Central Florida
Chuck Kacmar, University of Alabama
Arnold Kamis, Bentley College
Jinwoo Kim, Yonsei University
Nancy Lightner, South University
John Lim, National University of Singapore
Kai Lim, University of Hong Kong
Moez Limayem, City University of Hong Kong
Susan Lippert, Drexel University
Liping Liu, University of Akron
Eleanor Loiacono, Worcester Polytechnic Institute
Jiye Mao, Remin University of China
Nelson Massad, Florida Atlantic University
Robbie Nakatsu, Loyola Marymount University
Ant Ozok, Univ. of Maryland, Baltimore Campus
Jonathan Palmer, College of William and Mary
Souren Paul, Southern Illinois Univ., Carbondale
Robin Poston, University of Memphis
Srinivasan Rao, Univ. of Texas at San Antonio
Tom Roberts, University of Kansas
Fiona H. Rohde, University of Queensland
Howard Rosenbaum, Indiana University
Khawaja Saeed, Wichita State University
Larry Seligman, University of Georgia
Hong Sheng, University of Nebraska
Peter Tarasewich, Northeastern University
Josie Taylor, Open University, UK
Nolan Taylor, Indiana U. Purdue U. Indianapolis
Dov Te-eni, Tel Avis University
David Tegarden, Virginia Tech
Horst Treiblmaier, Vienna Univ. of Bus. Admin.
Lai Lai Tung, Nanyang Technological University
Ozgur Turetken, Temple University
Viswanath Venkatesh, University of Arkansas
John Wells, Washington State University
Susan Wiedenbeck, Drexel University
Fons Wijnhoven, University of Twente
Vance Wilson, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Fatemeh Zahedi, Univ. of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Dongsong Zhang, U. of Maryland, Baltimore County
Wei Zhang, University of Massachusetts at Boston
You can now download a copy of the program and proceedings (one large file). Alternatively, you can download a copy of these files individually (program or proceedings).
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Saturday, December 10, 2005 in the Venetian Hotel, Murano Room 3304/3305 |
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Time |
Session |
Presentation |
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7:30-8:00 |
Continental Breakfast |
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8:00-9:30 |
1. Culture and Mobile Design
Chair: Richard Johnson |
1. Website Design and Mobility: Culture, Gender, and Age Comparisons, Dianne Cyr, Milena Head, and Alex Ivanov 2. The Cultural Implications of Nomadic Computing in Organizations, Lei-da Chen and Cynthia L. Corritore 3. Investigating the Usability of the Stylus Pen on Handheld Devices, Xiangshi Ren and Sachi Mizobuchi |
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9:30-9:45 |
Coffee Break |
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9:45-11:15 |
2. Conceptual Modeling and Technology Awareness
Chair: Radhika Santhanam |
4. Measuring User Beliefs and Attitudes towards Conceptual Schemas: Tentative Factor and Structural Equation Model, Geert Poels, Ann Maes, Frederik Gailly, and Roland Paemeleire 5. The Centrality of Awareness in the Formation of User Behavioral Intention Toward Preventive Technologies in the Context of Voluntary Use, Tamara Dinev and Qing Hu 6. Evaluating Supply Chain Context-Specific Antecedents of Post-Adoption Technology Performance, Susan K. Lippert |
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11:15-11:45 |
3. Keynote Speaker |
Dennis Galletta, Publishing HCI Research in MIS Journals |
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11:45-1:15 |
Lunch Break (off-site) |
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1:15-2:45 |
4. Technology Acceptance Enablers
Chair: Sidney Davis |
7. The Role of Similarity in e-Commerce Interactions: The Case of Online Shopping Assistants, Sameh Al-Natour, Izak Benbasat, and Ronald T. Cenfetelli 8. It is that Dreaded Error Report: An Empirical Assessment of Error Reporting Behavior, Khawaja Saeed and Achita (Mi) Muthitacharoen 9. Building Relationships Between Consumers and Online Vendors: Empirical Findings from Austria, Horst Treiblmaier |
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2:45-3:00 |
Coffee Break |
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3:00-4:30 |
5. Online Decision Making
Chair: Weiyin Hong |
10. Online Advice Taking: Examining the Effects of Self-Efficacy, Computerized Sources, and Perceived Credibility, Robin S. Poston, Asli Y. Akbulut, and Clayton A. Looney 11. An Empirical Study on Causal Relationships between Perceived Enjoyment and Perceived Ease of Use, Heshan Sun and Ping Zhang 12. Information Search Patterns in E-Commerce Product Comparison Services, Fiona Fui-Hoon Nah, Hong-Hee Lee, and Liqiang Chen |
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4:30-4:45 |
Coffee Break |
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4:45-5:45 |
6. Multitasking and Ubiquitous Computing
Chair: Milena Head |
13. Understanding the Social Implications of Technological Multitasking: A Conceptual Model, Caroline S. Bell, Deborah R. Compeau, and Fernando Olivera 14. Contributing to Quality of Life: A New Outcome Variable for Information Technology in Ubiquitous Computing Environments, Minkyung Lee, Jinwoo Kim, Hun Choi, Dongjin Lee, and Kun Shin Im |
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5:45-6:15 |
Workshop Conclusion |
Best Paper Award and Best Reviewer Award Closing Remarks |
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6:15-7:00 |
Reception |
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Early Registration: Through October 21, 2005
Academic (Faculty): $125
Academic (Faculty) w/CORE discount: $110
Student: $90
Late Registration: October 22, 2005 through November 28, 2005
Academic (Faculty): $150
Academic (Faculty) w/CORE discount: $135
Student: $100
On-Site Registration: After November 28, 2005
Academic (Faculty): $175
Academic (Faculty) w/CORE discount: $160
Student: $100
Please visit the ICIS'05 website to register for ICIS and the workshop.
Asli Akbulut, Grand Valley State
University
Elizabeth Avery Gomez, NJIT
Caroline (Carlie) Bell, The Univ. of Western Ontario
Izak Benbasat, University of British Columbia
Paul Bowen, University of Queensland
Glenn Browne, Texas Tech University
Andrew Burton-Jones, University of British Columbia
Damon Campbell, Washington State University
Cindy Corritore, Creighton University
Constantinos Coursaris, Michigan State University
Dianne Cyr, Simon Fraser University
Sidney Davis, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Tamara Dinev, Florida Atlantic University
William Dixon, Walden University
Dennis Galletta, University of Pittsburgh
Matt Germonprez, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire
Harrison Green, Eastern Illinois University
Chris Griffin, University of Southern Illinois Carbondale
Khaled Hassanein, McMaster University
Milena Head, McMaster University
Sun Heshan, Syracuse University
Traci Hess, Washington State University
Weiyin Hong, University of Nevada Las Vegas
Geoffrey Hubona, Georgia State University
Richard Johnson, University of Central Florida
Brian Jones, Tennessee Tech University
Dongmin Kim, Univ. of New Brunswick in Saint John
Kevin Kuan, City University of Hong Kong
William Kuechler, University of Nevada at Reno
Minkyung Lee, Yonsei University
Susan Lippert, Drexel University
Eleanor Loiacono, WPI
Clayton Looney, University of Virginia
Paul Lowry, Brigham Young University
Scott McCoy, The College of William and Mary
Anna McNab, Washington State University
Audrey Moran-Murphy, Fielding Graduate University
Fiona Fui-Hoon Nah, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Veena Parboteeah, Washington State University
Geert Poels, Ghent University
Robin Poston, University of Memphis
Xiangshi Ren, Kochi University of Technology
Julie Rennecker, Weatherhead School of Management
Tom Roberts, Washington State University
Khawaja Saeed, Wichita State University
Radhika Santhanam, University of Kentucky
Gregory Schechtman, Washington State University
Hong Sheng, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Keng Siau, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Jun Sun, Information & Operation Management Dept.
Horst Treiblmaier, Vienna Univ. of Econ. & Bus. Admin.
Ozgur Turetken, Temple University
Joe Valacich, Washington State University
Hans Van der Heijden, University of Surrey
Ryan Wright, Washington State University
Dezhi Wu, Southern Utah University
Mun Yi, University of South Carolina
Fatemeh Mariam Zahedi, Univ. of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Ping Zhang, Syracuse University
Shu Zou, Temple University
Please visit the ICIS'05 website for accommodation information including conference hotels and rates.
Gold:
College of Information Science and Technology, Drexel University
School of Information Studies, Syracuse University
Accounting and Information Systems, University of Kansas
School of Information, University of Michigan
Department of Information Systems, Washington State University
Silver:
Information Systems Department, University of Arkansas
Management Information Systems Department, University of Central Florida
College of Business and Administration, Southern Illinois University Carbondale
The Information School, University of Washington
School of Business, College of William & Mary
Bronze:
Moore School of Business, University of South Carolina
“The Role of Similarity in e-Commerce Interactions: The Case of Online Shopping Assistants”, by Sameh Al-Natour, Izak Benbasat, and Ronald T. Cenfetelli, University of British Columbia.
Khawaja Saeed, Wichita State University.
Enjoy the photos here.
Download the presentation here.
The Fourth Annual Workshop on HCI Research in MIS showcased high quality HCI research and attracted a large number of participants. Over 70 people participated in the one day workshop, held in Las Vegas, Nevada. The workshop attracted 42 submissions: 32 completed research papers and 10 research-in-progress papers. After a rigorous review process, 14 papers were accepted for presentation at the workshop. The 33% acceptance rate represents the lowest number in the history of the workshop..
The workshop included a key note speech by Dr. Dennis Galletta, AIS Fellow and Professor of Business Administration at the Joseph M. Katz Graduate School of Business, at the University of Pittsburgh, on publishing HCI research in top IS journals and managing an academic career. In addition to the paper presentations and key note speech, workshop participants also enjoyed continental breakfast, lunch at Valentino’s restaurant, an award presentation (best paper, best reviewer, and outstanding service), and a reception at the conclusion of the workshop.
The program committee, which consisted of 72 experts in HCI/MIS, made outstanding contributions to the success of the workshop by providing high quality feedback on the submissions. The five paper sessions covered a range of interesting HCI topics including cultural issues in interface design, mobile commerce, technology acceptance, online decision-making, and multitasking. Extensions of select papers from the workshop will be invited to participate in a fast-tracking opportunity with the Journal of the Association for Information Systems.
This year’s best paper award winner was determined through a rigorous review process. Of the 14 accepted submissions, four papers were selected as best paper candidates based on overall review scores, best paper nominations, and input from each of the Program Co-Chairs. A best paper award committee was then formed and each member was asked to independently rank the four best paper candidates. The committee included Andrew Gemino, David Green, Srinivasan (Chino) Rao, Fiona H. Rohde, and Khawaja Saeed. The best paper award went to “The Role of Similarity in e-Commerce Interactions: The Case of Online Shopping Assistants”, by Sameh Al-Natour, Izak Benbasat, and Ronald T. Cenfetelli, University of British Columbia.
The best reviewer award was determined by the Program Co-Chairs based on the following criteria: thoroughness of the reviews, helpfulness of the suggestions and feedback, clarity and organization of reviews, timeliness in returning the reviews. The best reviewer award went to Khawaja Saeed.
Fiona Fui-Hoon Nah received an outstanding service award for her efforts with SIGHCI. She was a co-founder of SIGHCI in 2001 and served in the following positions: executive vice-chair 2001-2004, chair 2004-2005, program co-chair of HCI/MIS workshop 2002-2004, organizer of first SIGHCI sessions at HCII (2005), and co-editor of numerous SIGHCI sponsored special issues.
We would like to thank the following individuals and parties who greatly contributed to the success of the workshop:
Our sponsors:
Information Systems Department, University of Arkansas
Management Information Systems Department, University of Central Florida
College of Information Science and Technology, Drexel University
Accounting and Information Systems, University of Kansas
School of Information, University of Michigan
Moore School of Business, University of South Carolina
College of Business and Administration, Southern Illinois University Carbondale
School of Information Studies, Syracuse University
Department of Information Systems, Washington State University
The Information School, University of Washington
School of Business, College of William & Mary
Members of the Workshop Advisory Committee: Izak Benbasat, Jane Carey, Dennis Galletta, Sirkka Jarvenpaa, Fiona Nah, Ping Zhang, and Vladimir Zwass, who provided support and suggestions for the workshop.
Kalle Lyytinen, editor-in-chief of the Journal of the Association for Information Systems (JAIS), provided his support by fast-tracking the best papers from the workshop.
Dennis Galletta for providing an informative and interesting keynote speech.
The 72 program committee members played an important role in shaping the content of the workshop and greatly aided the advancement of HCI research in Information systems by providing high quality feedback on the submissions.
The local organizing committee
members, Brian Jones and Weiyin Hong, managed the lunch arrangements,
student volunteers, and on-site logistics for the workshop.
The best paper selection committee, Andrew Gemino, David Green, Srinivasan (Chino) Rao, Fiona H. Rohde, and Khawaja Saeed worked diligently to evaluate the best papers submitted to the workshop.
The doctoral student volunteers, Damon Campbell, Na Li, Hong Sheng, Heshan Sun, and Shu Zou, helped out with various aspects of the workshop onsite.
The AIS headquarters office handled the registration for the workshop, workshop reimbursements, and provided timely information on registrations. Special thanks go to Pete Tinsley, Rhonda Williams, and A. Kantasuk.
The AIS meeting management consultant, Kim Forbes, worked diligently and efficiently to take care of the facility needs and arrangements.
And, finally, the participants who demonstrated their confidence and support for the workshop and SIGHCI, and their tremendous interest and enthusiasm in HCI research in MIS.