[AISWorld] CALL FOR PAPERS - International Workshop: Dark Side of Social Media in PSB School of Business, Paris, France (May 16th, 2017)

Hajer KEFI h.kefi at psbedu.paris
Wed Oct 26 02:50:03 EDT 2016


Dear all,
please consider submitting your work to our workshop. We will be very
pleased to welcome you in Paris  and share with you about Social Media uses
and misues topics.
On behalf of the organizing committee
All the best
Hajer

*The Dark Side of Social Media*

* International Research Workshop*

*16th May 2017*

*PSB School of Business*

*Call for Papers*

A large body of research has considered the positive aspects of social
media. However, emerging research and practice are beginning to focus on
complex and often alarming ways in which use of social media may harmfully
affect individuals, organizations and societies. For example, data leakage
prevention and suspicious networks detection (Perez et al., 2012; Perez et
al., 2013), negative word-of-mouth dynamics (Pfeffer et al., 2014) and
their repercussions on marketing and e-reputation (Castellano et al. 2014;
2016), privacy violation (Fox and Moreland, 2015; Krasnova et al., 2012),
anxiety and depression (Krasnova et al., 2015) addiction (Andreassen et
al., 2012; Turel, 2015; Turel & Serenko, 2011), misrepresentation and
negative psychological consequences (Garcia & Sikström, 2014; Mäntymäki &
Islam, 2016) are some of the issues that have been studied so far. Many
others require a deepened interest, especially within the organizational
settings, in which social media pervasive usage might contribute to
jeopardize systems security (Sokolova et al., 2016), disrupt work habits
and impoverish individual performance via information overload,
technostress and fatigue (Kefi et al., 2015; Kefi et al., 2016; Maier et
al., 2015). Larger effects include enabling racism, terrorism and
cyber-crime (Dean et al., 2012).

This workshop focuses on these ‘dark’ effects of social media. The level of
analysis is the individual, group, organization or the society as a whole,
when those actors are interacting with the platforms, services and emerging
technological artifacts commonly known as social media (Kaplan & Haenlein,
2010).

*TOPICS OF INTEREST *

We welcome submissions form diverse domains including (amidst others)
sociology, psychology, marketing, human resources, computer science, etc.
All methodological approaches are equally appreciated, including
qualitative, quantitative and mixed methodologies, conceptual building and
design science. We are expecting submissions that address (but are not
limited to) the following topics:

Information atrophy

Information overload

Social networking fatigue

Addiction and dependence

Technostress, anxiety and depression

Privacy by usage

Privacy by design

Data leakage

Digital divide

Cybercrime

Information security

Social media and channel conflict

Co-destruction of value in social media

Employee misconduct in social media and bad practices

Negative word-of-mouth

Big data social media analytics abuse

Bad buzz effect

*IMPORTANT DATES*

Submissions: January 15th, 2017

Notification: February 25th, 2017

Final manuscripts: March 5th, 2017

Workshop: May 16th, 2017

*PROCEDURE AND AUTHORS GUIDELINES*

Submissions consist of complete researches (up to 5000 words) or researches
in progress (up to 3000 words) including title, abstract, 3-5 keywords,
figures, tables and references (DIN A4, 12pt Times New Roman, single
spaced). No specific template is provided. The manuscripts should be
submitted as email attachments to the following address: h.kefi at psbedu.paris,
with the subject heading "Dark Side of Social Media 2017”. The workshop
will follow a scientific procedure with selection of submitted papers
through peer-review (pursued by an international program committee). A
selection of best papers addressing Global Management information systems
(MIS) issues will be proposed to JGTIM. Selected non –MIS papers will be
proposed to a refereed international journal (to be announced soon). There
will be a moderate workshop fee covering catering.

*KEYNOTE SPEAKER *

*Michel Kalika, IAE Lyon School of Management, Business Science Institute,
Luxembourg, http://michelkalika.com <http://michelkalika.com/>*

*WORKSHOP CO-CHAIRS*

Hajer Kefi, PSB Paris School of Business, France.

Trevor Moores, Baruch College, New York, USA.

*ORGANIZING COMMITTEE*

Sylvaine Castellano, PSB Paris School of Business

Vincent Dutot, PSB Paris School of Business

Rony Germon, PSB Paris School of Business

Charles Perez, PSB Paris School of Business

Karina Sokolova, PSB Paris School of Business

*PROGRAMME COMMITTEE*

Talel Abdessalem, Télécom ParisTech & School of computing, National
University of Singapore, Singapore.

Mauro Conti, University of Padua, Italy

Christophe Elie-dit-Cosaque, Université Paris Dauphine, France

Anil Aggarwal, University of Baltimore, USA

Marc Favier, Université Genoble-Alpes, France

Michel Kalika, IAE de Lyon & BSI Luxembourg, France

Trevor Moores, Baruch College, New York, USA

Prashant Palvia, Bryan School of Business and Economics, University of
North Carolina, USA

Pierre Sénellart, Ecole Nationale Supérieure (France) & National University
of Singapore, Singapore

Tuan Q. Phan, School of Computing, National University of Singapore,
Singapore

I-Hsien Ting, National University of Kaohsiung, Taiwan

*REFERENCES*

Andreassen, C. S., Torsheim, T., Brunborg, G. S., & Pallesen, S. (2012).
Development of a Scale for Facebook Addiction. *Psychological Reports*,
*110*(2), 501–517.

Castellano, S., Khelladi, I., Chipaux, A., & Kupferminc, C. (2014). The
Influence of Social Networks on E-Reputation: How Sportspersons Manage the
Relationship with Their Online Community. *International Journal of
Technology and Human Interaction*, 10(4), 65-79.

Castellano, S., & Khelladi, I. (2016). Reputation, Image, and Social Media
as Determinants of e-Reputation: The Case of Digital Natives and Luxury
Brands. *International Journal of Technology and Human Interaction*, 12(4),
48-64.

Dean, G., Bell, P., & Newman, J. (2012). The Dark Side of Social Media:
Review of Online Terrorism. *Pakistan Journal of Criminology*, *3*(3),
107–126.

Garcia, D., & Sikström, S. (2014). The dark side of Facebook: Semantic
representations of status updates predict the Dark Triad of
personality. *Personality
and Individual Differences*, *67*, 69–74.

Kaplan, A. M., & Haenlein, M. (2010). Users of the world, unite! The
challenges and opportunities of Social Media. *Business Horizons*, *53*(1),
59–68.

Kefi, H., Mlaiki, A., Kalika, M. (2015), “Social Networking Continuance:
When Habit leads to Information Overload”, *European Conference on
Information Systems Proceedings*, Munster, Germany.

Kefi, H., Mlaiki, A., Kalika, M. (2016), “ Comprendre le phénomène de
dépendance envers les réseaux sociaux numériques. Les effets de l'habitude
et de la surcharge informationnelle dans le cas de Facebook”, *Systèmes
d'information et Management,*Vol.21, N°4 (accepted for publication).

Krasnova, H., Veltri, N. F., & Günther, O. (2012). Self-disclosure and
Privacy Calculus on Social Networking Sites: The Role of Culture. *Business
& Information Systems Engineering*, *4*(3), 127–135.

Krasnova, H., Widjaja, T., Buxmann, P., Wenninger, H., & Benbasat, I.
(2015). Why Following Friends Can Hurt You : An Networking Sites among
College-Age Users College-Age Users. *Information Systems Research*, *26*(3),
585–605.

Maier, C., Laumer, S., Eckhardt, A., & Weitzel, T. (2015). Giving too much
social support: social overload on social networking sites. *European
Journal of Information Systems*, *24*(5), 447–464.

Mäntymäki, M., & Islam, A. K. M. N. (2016). The Janus face of Facebook:
Positive and negative sides of social networking site use. *Computers in
Human Behavior*, *61*, 14–26.

Perez, C., Birregah, B., Lemercier, M. (2012). The Multi-layer Imbrication
for Data Leakage Prevention from Mobile Devices. *IEEE 11th International
Conference on Trust, Security and Privacy in Computing and Communications
(TrustCom)*, 813-819.

Perez, C., Birregah, B., Lemercier, M. (2013). REPLOT: REtrieving profile
links on Twitter for suspicious networks detection. *IEEE/ACM International
Conference on Advances in Social Networks Analysis and Mining*, 1307-1314.

Pfeffer, J., Zorbach, T., & Carley, K. M. (2014). Understanding online
firestorms: Negative word-of-mouth dynamics in social media networks. *Journal
of Marketing Communications*, *20*(1–2), 117–128.

Sokolova K., Perez, C., Lemercier, M. (2016), Android application
classification and anomaly detection with graph-based permission
patterns. *Decisions
Support Systems*  (Accepted for publication).

Turel, O. (2015). An Empirical Examination of the Vicious Cycle of Facebook
Addiction. *The Journal of Computer Information Systems*, *55*(3), 83–91.

Turel, O., & Serenko, A. (2011). Developing a (bad) habit: Antecedents and
adverse consequences of social networking website use habit. In *17th
Americas Conference on Information Systems 2011, AMCIS 2011* (Vol. 1, pp.
705–712).


Hajer KEFI, Ph.D, HDR

Professeur
*Full Professor                       PSB Paris School of Business*
59 rue Nationale
75013 Paris
*Tél:* 01 53 36 44 01
h.kefii at psbedu.paris <http://www.esgms.fr/>
*Web:* www.psbedu.paris <http://www.esgms.fr/>



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