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(08/18/2007)
Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) is an interdisciplinary field that has attracted researchers, educators, and practitioners from different disciplines. HCI has gained attention during recent years due to the rapid development and advancement in information and computer technology. To better use advanced technology, we need to better understand users, their tasks within different contexts, and the interplay among users, tasks, and contexts/environments.
In the MIS field, broad HCI issues and research questions have been investigated over a long period of time. Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) or Human Factors studies in MIS are concerned with the ways humans interact with information, technologies, and tasks, especially in business, managerial, organizational, and cultural contexts. MIS researchers study these issues in organizational, business, and personal contexts or take these contexts into consideration in their studies.
The potential interest in an HCI track at AMCIS 2008 is demonstrated by:
The high level of participation in AIS SIGHCI-sponsored conference tracks. SIGHCI currently sponsors/supports HCI tracks/mini-tracks at AMCIS, ECIS, PACIS, ICIS, HCII, and HICSS.
The high level of participation in the HCI tracks/mini-tracks at AMCIS 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2007. The last few HCI tracks at AMCIS have each included around 40 papers presented in 13-14 well-attended sessions.
There are approximately 500 current members in AIS SIGHCI.
This increasing trend of interest and enthusiasm was exhibited by the large number of submissions and the high level of participation during the last few years. A meta/mega track is necessary so that (1) it is possible to attend to specific research areas within HCI in MIS, (2) more HCI researchers can be involved, play important organizing roles, and make an impact in this area, and (3) the overall reviewing process for submissions in this area can be more efficiently and better managed.
The aim of this track is consistent with the HCI in MIS track/mini-track in previous years at AMCIS. We want to provide a forum for AIS members to acknowledge each other's work, and to discuss, develop, and promote a range of issues related to HCI in MIS, including the history, reference disciplines, theories, practice, methodologies and techniques, new development, and applications of the interaction between humans, information and information technology. In an effort to bridge academic research and industry practice, both research articles and experience reports are welcome. The track is open to all types of research methodologies (e.g., conceptualization, theorization, case study, action research, experimentation, survey, simulation). We also welcome visionary articles and research in progress papers.

(5/21/2008)
We are pleased to announce that the International Journal on Human-Computer Studies (IJHCS) has agreed to publish expansions of the best, completed papers from participating minitracks at the HCI track at AMCIS 2008. Our special thanks go to the Editors-in-Chief of IJHCS, Dr. Enrico Motta and Dr. Susan Wiedenbeck, for their support of HCI research and AIS SIGHCI. Continuing the AIS SIGHCI tradition, we believe that this fast-tracking opportunity with a high-quality refereed academic journal will promote HCI research in the MIS community. The guest editors for this special issue will be Matt Germonprez, Chuck Kacmar, and Gabe Lee.
HCI researchers wishing to participate in this fast-tracking opportunity through the AMCIS HCI track should submit their papers to the participating HCI mini-tracks listed below. SIGHCI’s policies regarding fast-tracking with SIGHCI sponsored special journal issues and best paper awards at conferences are available at http://sigs.aisnet.org/sighci/sig_policies/.
| Tentative Timetable: |
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[1. Hedonic Information Technologies: Online Games, Interactive Entertainment, and Lifestyle Computing ] [2. Emerging Computer-Mediated Communication Tools/Technologies for Web-based Services]
[3. Personalization Systems] [4. Emergency Response Information Systems] [5. HCI Issues in Healthcare IT] [6. Information Visualization and Decision Support]
[7. HCI and Competitive Advantage] [8. Trust in Information Technology] [9. Interface Design, Evaluation, and Impact]
(11/19/2007)
As a meta/mega track for the HCI in MIS area, we will help coordinate the efforts of organizing the various mini-tracks and channel any misfit in submissions to an appropriate mini-track. To continue the SIGHCI tradition, a high quality refereed academic journal is being planned for a possible special issue based on the expansions of the best papers from the meta/mega track. All HCI mini-tracks are welcome to jointly participate in this special issue. Of course, if an HCI mini-track has its own plans for working with a different journal, we respect that and will help out in any way we can.
Guidelines for Submission
Final papers should be submitted via the Scholar OneTM Paper submission system, deadline TBA.
A paper must be submitted only to one mini-track. However, you may submit multiple papers to (m)any mini-track(s).
Copyright Information: Submission of a paper to AMCIS 2008 represents the author's agreement to allow AIS to publish the paper in any written or electronic format for distribution to all interested parties in perpetuity with or without compensation to AIS and without compensation to the author. The parties understand that the author is granting a nonexclusive license and all copyrights remain the property of the author.
Important Dates
February 5, 2008 - Abstract submission deadline to mini-track chairs (optional)
March 3, 2008 - Paper submission deadline (submit via http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/amcis2008)
April 14, 2008 - Notification of acceptance
April 28, 2008 - Camera ready copy due
| CFP of HCI Mini-Track 1 |
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| CFP of HCI Mini-Track 2 |
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| CFP of HCI Mini-Track 3 |
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| CFP of HCI Mini-Track 4 |
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| CFP of HCI Mini-Track 5 |
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| CFP of HCI Mini-Track 6 |
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| CFP of HCI Mini-Track 7 |
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| CFP of HCI Mini-Track 8 |
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| CFP of HCI Mini-Track 9 |
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Conference F Friday, Aug 15 8:30 am - 10:00 am |
Interface Design, Evaluation,
and Impact I (Sponsored by SIGHCI) Chair: Yi Guo The importance of 'Who' and 'What' in Interruption Management: Empirical Evidence from a Cell Phone Use Study S. Grandhi - New Jersey Institute of Technology N. Laws - New Jersey Institute of Technology B. Amento - AT&T Labs Q. Jones - New Jersey Institute of Technology A Location-based Approach for Distributed Kiosk Deign A. Luse - Iowa State University S. Vidrio-Baron - Iowa State University B. Mennecke - Iowa State University A.Townsend - Iowa State University Generation Y & Web Design: Usability through Eye Tracking S. Djamasbi - Worcester Polytechnic Institute T. Tullis, Fidelity Investments M. Siegel - Worcester Polytechnic Institute D. Capozzo - Worcester Polytechnic Institute R. Groezinger - Worcester Polytechnic Institute F. Ng - Worcester Polytechnic Institute |
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Sheraton Hall B Friday, Aug 15 1:30 pm - 3:00 pm |
Emergency Response Information
Systems (Co-sponsored by SIGHCI and SIGDSS) Chair: Tung Bui Application of Domain Ontology for Decision Support in Medical Emergency Coordination F. Sujanto - Monash University F. Burstein - Monash University A. Ceglowski - Monash University L. Churilov – University of Melbourne Information Theoretic Approach to Design of Emergency Response Systems R. Chen - State University of New York, Buffalo R. Sharman - State University of New York, Buffalo H. Rao - State University of New York, Buffalo S. Upadhyaya - State University of New York, Buffalo |
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Conference F Friday, Aug 15 1:30 pm - 3:00 pm |
Emerging Computer-Mediated
Communication Tools/Technologies for Web-based Services
(Sponsored by SIGHCI) Chair: Mauricio Featherman B2C Advice on Complex Service Products via Video Calls Explanations from Social Presence and Adaptive Structuration Theory M. Schmidt - Maastricht University R. Walczuch - Maastricht University K. de Ruyter - Maastricht University Being Interrupted by Instant Messaging: Does it Matter Who is Interrupting - the Boss or the Coworker? A. Gupta - Minnesota State University H. Li - Virginia State University Collaborative Worlds and Avatar-Based Communication: A Comparison of Virtual Worlds With Traditional and Computer-Mediated Communications Media S. Goh - Florida State University D. Paradice - Florida State University |
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Conference F Friday, Aug 15 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm |
HCI and Competitive Advantage
(Sponsored by SIGHCI) Chair: Chuck Kacmar Measuring the Value of User Participation in Change Projects: Results from Case Studies in the Mobile IT-Service Sector. B. Thurnher - Hochschule Liechtenstein J. vom Brocke - Hochschule Liechtenstein Will Flow Experience Lead to Better Outcomes in Online Shopping? Y. Guo – University of Michigan, Dearborn M. Poole – University at Urbana-Champaign Making the Web Accessible to the Visually Impaired Persons S. Leal Ferreira – Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro D. Silveira – Faculdades IBMEC M. Chauvel – IAG PUC M. Leal Ferreira - Holden Comunicação Ltda |
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Conference F Saturday, Aug 16 8:30 am - 10:00 am |
Interface Design, Evaluation, and
Impact II (Sponsored by SIGHCI) Chair: Andrew Luse Online Form Complexity Assessment for Developing Assistive Technologies T. Elliman - Brunel University A. Money - Brunel University L. Lines - Brunel University S. Fernando - Brunel University Understanding and Managing Website Information Content: The WICS Method. J. Hasley - University of Colorado, Denver D. Gregg - University of Colorado, Denver Work Flow and Performance under Computer Mediated Interruptions. A. Basoglu - Washington State University M. Fuller - Washington State University |
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Conference F Saturday, Aug 16 1:30 pm - 3:00 pm |
Trust in Information Technology
I (Sponsored by SIGHCI) Chair: Sherrie Komiak Font personality and B2C e-commerce trust S. Sasidharan - Marshall University G. Dhanesh - National University of Singapore Trust and Satisfaction as the Relational Outcomes of Perceived Usefulness in B2C Online Service Context M. Mäntymäki - Turku School of Economics R. Raitoharju - Turku School of Economics The Role of Trust in the Intention to Use Feedback from Reputation Systems S. Vannoy – University of North Carolina, Greensboro A. Nath – University of North Carolina, Greensboro L. Iyer – University of North Carolina, Greensboro |
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Conference F Saturday, Aug 16 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm |
Interface Design, Evaluation,
and Impact III (Sponsored by SIGHCI) Chair: Peter Tarasewich A Meta-analytic Review of More than a Decade of Research on General Computer Self-Efficacy: Research in Progress C. Posey - Louisiana Tech University Y. Liu - Louisiana Tech University J. Fuller - Louisiana Tech University The Effect of Background Music-induced Arousal on Online Consumer Search Behavior: Evaluating Search Performance and Experience L. Xu - National University of Singapore C. Koh - National University of Singapore H. Chan - National University of Singapore Why and When Will Banner Blindness Occur? An Analysis Based on the Dual Processing Theory Y. Sun - University of Science and Technology of China K. Lim - City University of Hong Kong Z. Peng - University of Science and Technology of China C. Jiang - City University of Hong Kong X. Chen - University of Science and Technology of China |
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Conference F Sunday, Aug 17 8:30 am - 10:00 am |
Hedonic Information
Technologies: Online Games, Interactive Entertainment, and
Lifestyle Com (Sponsored by SIGHCI)
Chairs: Paul Benjamin Lowry, Ian MacInnes Measuring Enjoyment of Computer Game Play X. Fang - DePaul University S. Chan - DePaul University J. Brzezinski - DePaul University C. Nair - DePaul University Design Criteria for Transparent Mobile Event Recommendations M. Radmacher – University of Frankfurt Online Gaming Adoption in Competitive Social Networks: Combining the Theory of Planned Behavior and Social Network Theory Claudia Loebbecke - University of Cologne |
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Conference F Sunday, Aug 17 10:30 am - 12:00 pm |
Trust in Information Technology
II (Sponsored by SIGHCI) Chair: Radhika Santhanam Do People Trust Facebook as a Technology or as a 'Person?' Distinguishing Technology Trust from Interpersonal Trust N. Lankton - Michigan State University H. McKnight - Michigan State University Privacy Statements, Information Sharing, and Web Purchasing S. Dasgupta - George Washington University A. Amey - George Washington University |

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Dr. Matt Germonprez College of Business University of Wisconsin - Eau Claire Eau Claire, WI 54702-4004 Phone: (715) 836-5968 germonr@uwec.edu |
Dr. Chuck Kacmar Culverhouse College of Commerce and Business Administration University of Alabama Tuscaloosa, AL 35487-0226 Phone: (205) 346-6521 ckacmar@ua.edu |
Dr. Traci Hess College of Business Washington State University Pullman, WA 99164-4743 Phone: (509) 335-6353 thess@wsu.edu |
Dr. Peter Tarasewich Human-Computer Interaction Laboratory College of Computer & Information Science Northeastern University 360 Huntington Avenue, 202WVH Boston, MA 02115 USA Phone: (617) 373-2078 tarase@ccs.neu.edu |