HCII 2007: HCI in MIS Session

HCI in MIS Sessions at HCI International 2007

July 22 – 27, 2007 in Beijing, China


General Description

AIS SIGHCI sponsors ‘HCI in MIS’ sessions at HCII’07. The objective is to promote research related to HCI within business, managerial, and organizational contexts among AIS members and to the larger community of practitioners and scholars. Research papers and papers that help to bridge academic research and industry practice are welcome.

Topics for papers include, but are not limited to:

  • The perceptual, behavioral, cognitive, motivational, and affective/emotional aspects of human and their interaction with information technology

  • User task analysis and modeling

  • Digital documents/genres and human information seeking behavior

  • Informed user interface design and evaluation for business and organizational applications including:

    • B2B, B2C, C2C e-commerce, m-commerce and u-commerce

    • E-marketplace and supply chain management

    • Group collaboration

    • Negotiation and auction

    • Enterprise systems

    • Customer relationship management

    • Pervasive computing using small-screen mobile devices

    • 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

  • Usability studies for end-user computing in work and non-work environments

  • 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

Submission Guidelines

Submissions should not be currently under review elsewhere.

Formatting: Use Times New Roman 12-point font with double-spacing.

Maximum length: 20 pages (double-spaced) excluding the abstract and references.

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: Fiona Nah () Ping Zhang (), and Scott McCoy () with the subject heading “HCII’07 submission” by October 16, 2006. 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.


Important Dates

  • Deadline for paper submission: October 16, 2006

  • Notification of review outcome: December 1, 2006

  • Deadline for receipt of final papers: February 1, 2007


Special Issue of International Journal of Human-Computer Interaction

Julie Jacko and Gavriel Salvendy, editors-in-chief of the International Journal of Human-Computer Interaction (IJHCI), have agreed to fast track successful expansions of the best, completed research papers from the ‘HCI in MIS’ sessions at HCII’07 for publication in a special issue of IJHCI. The guest editors for the special issue will be Fiona Nah, Traci Hess, Weiyin Hong, and Xiaowen Fang.

Tentative Timeline for Special Issue

3/31/07: Invitation sent out to authors

9/3/07: First submission

11/5/07: Notification of first review

2/1/08: Second submission

3/20/08: Notification of second review

5/1/08: Final notification and acceptance decisions

5/15/08: Submission of special issue package to IJHCI


Program

Session

Presentation

HCI in MIS Session I

(Tentative Schedule:

Wednesday, 25 July

2007, 16:00 – 18:00)

1. User Response to Free Trial Restrictions: A Coping Perspective, Xue Yang, Chuan-Hoo Tan, and Hock-Hai Teo

2. Exploring Multi-Dimensional Conceptualization of Social Presence in the Context of Online Communities, Kathy Ning Shen and Mohamed Khalifa

3.  Online Ad Intrusiveness, Scott McCoy, Andrea Everard, Peter Polak, and Dennis Galletta

4.  Perceived Usefulness and Usability of Weblogs for Collaborative Learning, Yin-Leng Theng and Elaine Lew Yee Wan

5.  The Effects of Mobile Service Quality and Technology Compatibility on Users’ Perceived Playfulness, Felix Tan and Jacky PC Chou

6.  What makes Game Players Want to Play More? A Mathematical and Behavioral Understanding of Online Game Design, De Liu, Xun Li, and Radhika Santhanam

HCI in MIS Session II

(Tentative Schedule:

Thursday, 26 July

2007, 10:30 – 12:30)

1.  Designing Product List on E-tailing Websites: The Effect of Sorting on Consumer Decision, Cai Shun and Yunjie Xu

2.  First Impressions with Websites: The Effect of the Familiarity and Credibility of Corporate Logos on Perceived Consumer Swift Trust of Websites, Paul Benjamin Lowry, Tom Roberts, and Trevor Higbee

3.  Influence of Culture on Attitude towards Instant Messaging: Balance between Awareness and Privacy, Jinwei Cao and Andrea Everard

4. Attitudes in ICT Acceptance and Use, Ping Zhang and Shelley Aikman

5. An Investigation of Online Group-Buying Institution and Buyer Behavior, Chuan-Hoo Tan, Khim-Yong Goh, and Hock-Hai Teo

6. The Role of Task Characteristics and Organization Culture in Non-Work Related Computing (NWRC), Gee-Woo Bock, Huei-Huang Kuan, Ping Liu, and Hua Sun

HCI in MIS Session III

(Tentative Schedule:

Friday, 27 July 2007,

08:00 – 10:00)

1.  Skills Matter: A Tale of the Anxious Online Shopper, Yi Maggie Guo and Barbara D. Klein

2.  What Makes Them So Special?: Identifying Attributes of Highly Competent IS Users, Brenda Eschenbrenner and Fiona Fui-Hoon Nah

3.  Group Collaboration and Learning though Online Assessments: Comparison of Collaborative and Participatory Online Exams, Jia Shen, Starr Roxanne Hiltz, and Michael Bieber

4.  ExTreme Programming in Action: A Longitudinal Case Study, Peter Tingling and Akbar M. Saeed


Photo


Session Chairs

Dr. Fiona Fui-Hoon Nah
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
College of Business Administration
Lincoln, NE 68588-0491
Phone: (402) 472-6060
Fax: (402) 472-5855
Dr. Ping Zhang
Syracuse University
School of Information Studies
Syracuse, NY 13244
Phone: (315) 443-5617
Fax: (315) 443-6886
Dr. Scott McCoy
College of William and Mary
School of Business
Williamsburg, VA 23187-8795
Phone: (757) 221-2062
Fax: (757) 221-2937

Project categories: HCII

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