[Air-l] Call for papers: Privacy, Trust and Identity Issues for Ambient Intelligence (fwd)

Barry Wellman wellman at chass.utoronto.ca
Fri Oct 6 18:50:03 PDT 2006


fyi
 Barry Wellman
 _____________________________________________________________________

  Barry Wellman   S.D. Clark Professor of Sociology   NetLab Director
  Centre for Urban & Community Studies          University of Toronto
  455 Spadina Avenue    Toronto Canada M5S 2G8    fax:+1-416-978-7162
  wellman at chass.utoronto.ca  http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
        for fun: http://chass.utoronto.ca/oldnew/cybertimes.php
 _____________________________________________________________________

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 06 Oct 2006 17:16:12 -0400
From: G. David Garson <Garson at social.chass.ncsu.edu>
Reply-To: david_garson at ncsu.edu

Call for Papers
Privacy, Trust and Identity Issues for Ambient Intelligence
Special Issue of Social Science Computer Review

Call for papers: Privacy, Trust and Identity Issues for Ambient
Intelligence

This special issue of Social Science Computer Review will bring
together a collection of high quality academic work that extends,
refines and challenges our understanding of privacy, trust and
identity issues related to ambient intelligence. Ambient intelligence
(AmI) evokes a near future in which humans will be surrounded by
'always-on', unobtrusive, interconnected intelligent objects few of
which will bear any resemblance to the computing devices of today.
Devices embedded in the environment will communicate seamlessly about
any number of different topics e.g. your present state of health,
when you last ate. Interactions with devices and at the same time
other people will become anywhere, anytime.  This seamless exchange
of information implicates, trust, privacy and identity issues as core
variables that need to be fully understood if we are to adopt and use
AmI systems. This special issue will bring together papers that
investigate trust and privacy issues, theoretical and methodological
approaches, policy and legal implications related to information
exchange in an AmI world. Papers from a broad range of social science
perspectives are encouraged. Submissions can be in the form of full
papers (maximum 35 double-spaced manuscript pages including figures,
tables, and references) or in the form of short reports (5 - 12
double-spaced pages).

Indicative Themes
Ambient intelligence, pervasive, ubiquitous computing
Privacy
Trust
Personal identity
Fraud including: hacking, data mining, storage and access related to
information exchange
Surveillance
Theoretical and methodological approaches for studying AmI
Policy and legal implications
Information exchange
Motivation
Social implication
Types of information exchange e.g. health, financial, workplace,
family

Submission information:
Key dates:
Submission of papers: 19th January 2007
Review feedback: 16th March 2007
Submission of final papers: 1st May 2007
Publication in SSCORE: Winter 2007

Procedure:
Send an electronic copy of the paper, along with a cover letter, to
Linda Little (l.little at unn.ac.uk)
Word or pdf format, figures must be supplied in original file format
(ex., .jpg, .eps, .tif, .png, etc.).
Formatting
1. Electronic submission only
2. We must have all these elements in this order: title, authors with
institutional affiliations, abstract, keyword list, body, short
author bios with email contact info, references, and endnotes (if
any).
3. APA style references (see the guide, above)
4. Endnotes for comments only, not citations. No footnotes at all.
5. All tables and figures must be on separate pages at the end,
numbered and with captions. In the text, all tables and figures must
be referred to and all must have call-outs ("[Figure 1 about here]").
6. All figures must also be supplied in original file format (ex.,
.jpg, .eps, .tif, etc.).
7. All documents must be labelled with the name of the lead author.
8. Everything must be double-spaced, even references, except tables
are not double-spaced.
Information about Social Science Computer Review (SSCORE)

The Social Science Computer Review is an interdisciplinary journal
covering both social science instructional and research applications
of computing as well as social science research on societal impacts
of information technology. Among topics within the scope of the
journal are artificial intelligence, computational social science
theory, computer-assisted survey research, computer-based qualitative
analysis, computer simulation, critical social theory, economic
modelling, geographic information systems, instructional multimedia,
instrumentation and research tools, social impacts of computing and
telecommunications, software evaluation, web-based survey research,
and world-wide web resources for social scientists.
SSCORE is a peer-reviewed publication of Sage Publications, Inc. Now
in its 24th year of publication, it features frequent symposia issues
on social science disciplines, on new computer-intensive
methodologies, and on the political and social impacts of computing.

A World Wide Web site for SSCORE is found at the URL:
http://hcl.chass.ncsu.edu/sscore/sscore.htm.


Send inquiries and proposals related to this special issue to:
L Little <l.little at unn.ac.uk>



=
____________________________________

G. David Garson
Editor, Social Science Computer Review
NCSU Box 8102
Department of Political Science and Public Administration
North Carolina State University
Raleigh, NC 27695-8102

For UPS and Express Mail:
G. David Garson
212 Caldwell Hall / PSPA
Hillsborough Street
North Carolina State University
Raleigh, NC 27695-8102

Tel. 919-515-3067
Fax 919-515-7333
E-mail: David_Garson at ncsu.edu



__________________________________________________________





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