[AISWorld] CfP: 28th International Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering (CAiSE 2016)

Marta Indulska m.indulska at business.uq.edu.au
Sun Jul 5 18:47:44 EDT 2015


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CAISE 2016 Call for papers
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The 28th International Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering (CAiSE 2016) will be organized on 13-17 June 2016, in Ljubljana (Slovenia). 

Details can be found at: http://caise2016.si/

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IMPORTANT DATES

Paper submission deadline: 30th November 2015
Notification of acceptance: 16th February 2016
Camera-ready of all papers: 25th March 2016

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Theme: Information systems for connecting people

Information systems are developed by people and for people. The theme “Information systems for connecting people” emphasizes the wish to satisfy the needs and requirements of people, both as individuals and as parts of organizations, which are socio-technical systems.

In particular, this theme emphasizes the role of information systems in communication among individuals, organisational units, and organizations themselves.  It may also imply knowledge building and knowledge sharing, all kinds of decision making, negotiating and reaching agreements, bridging differences and distances among various points-of-view, perspectives, positions and/or cultures.

Information systems that satisfy these are usually communication and cooperation-intensive systems. Examples include, on the individual side, collaborative applications and social networks, and on the organizational side, globalization and interoperability support, inter-organizational processes, enterprise computing, social computing, and more.  The sociality is also a new paradigm when applied to information systems.  Developing such systems requires a good understanding of (i) how an individual operates, (ii) how the intentions and goals of an individual can be aligned with the organizational ones, (ii) how individual capabilities as well as limitations are represented and taken into account or alleviated in system design. Combined with state-of-the-art technology, this understanding will guide the development of next generation information systems.

We believe that those principles will challenge and question research efforts in information systems engineering during the next decade and will also nurture multi-disciplinary research. Research related to this theme can address all life-cycle phases of information systems that connect people, from human and organizational requirements to utilization of data created by such systems.

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Topics for submissions include (but are not limited to):

New Generation IS Engineering
- Context-aware and adaptive management
- Agile enterprise models and architecture
- Distributed, mobile and open architecture
- IS for collaboration
- Social computing
- High volume and complex information management, big data
- Open data management
- Quality of IS models and design
- IS for idea flow
- Visualization in IS
- Intelligent, sustainable and viable IS
- Service science and innovation
- Ergonomic architectures and design

Models, Methods and Techniques in IS Engineering
- Conceptual modeling, languages and design
- Requirements engineering
- Business process modeling, analysis, and engineering
- Models and methods for evolution and reuse
- Domain engineering methods
- Mining, monitoring, and predicting
- Variability and configuration management
- Compliance and alignment handling
- Method engineering
- Actor driven IS engineering

Architectures and Platforms in and for IS Engineering
- Cloud-based IS engineering
- Service oriented IS engineering
- Multi-agent IS engineering
- Multi-platform IS engineering
- Integrated architectures and virtualization
- Internet of services
- Internet of things

Domain Specific IS Engineering
- IT governance
- eGovernment and public sector
- Intellectual heritage
- City management
- Industrial ecology management
- IS for healthcare
- Educational IS
- Value and supply chain management
- Cyber-physical systems
- Industry 4.0

Multi-aspect IS
- Sustainability and social responsibility management
- Enterprise capability management
- Decision support
- Security and safety management
- Data and knowledge intelligence
- Organizational learning
- Creativity and innovation
- Workflow management
- ERP and COTS
- Content management and semantic Web

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Author Guidelines

Types of contributions

We invite four types of original and scientific papers:
- Formal and/or technical papers describe original solutions (theoretical, methodological or conceptual) in the field of IS engineering. A technical paper should clearly describe the situation or problem tackled, the relevant state of the art, the position or solution suggested and the potential – or, even better, the evaluated – benefits of the contribution.
- Empirical evaluation papers evaluate existing problem situations or validate proposed solutions with scientific means, i.e. by empirical studies, experiments, case studies, simulations, formal analyses, mathematical proofs, etc. Scientific reflection on problems and practices in industry also falls into this category. The topic of the evaluation presented in the paper as well as its causal or logical properties must be clearly stated. The research method must be sound and appropriate.
- Experience papers present problems or challenges encountered in practice, relate success and failure stories, or report on industrial practice. The focus is on ‘what’ and on lessons learned, not on an in-depth analysis of ‘why’. The practice must be clearly described and its context must be given. Readers should be able to draw conclusions for their own practice.
- Exploratory Papers can describe completely new research positions or approaches, in order to face to a generic situation arising because of new ICT tools or new kinds of activities or new IS challenges. They must describe precisely the situation and demonstrate how current methods, tools, ways of reasoning, or meta-models are inadequate. They must rigorously present their approach and demonstrate its pertinence and correctness to addressing the identified situation.
Submission Conditions

Papers should be submitted in PDF format. The results described must be unpublished and must not be under review elsewhere. Submissions must conform to Springer’s LNCS format and should not exceed 15 pages, including all text, figures, references and appendices. Submissions not conforming to the LNCS format, exceeding 15 pages, or being obviously out of the scope of the conference, will be rejected without review. Information about the Springer LNCS format can be found at http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html. Three to five keywords characterizing the paper should be indicated at the end of the abstract. The type of paper (technical/empirical evaluation/experience/exploratory paper) should be indicated in the submission.

Submission is done through CyberChair (see http://caise2016.si/)

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Publication

Accepted papers will be presented at CAiSE ’16 and published in the conference proceedings, which is published in the Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS). Authors elected best papers from the conference will be invited to submit an expanded version for publication in the journal, Information Systems.


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