[Air-l] CFP: IRIE Special Issue on Ubiquitous Computing
David J. Phillips
davidj.phillips at utoronto.ca
Tue Mar 27 15:07:36 PDT 2007
Call for Papers
IRIE: International Review of Information Ethics
Issue No. 008; Vol. 8; December 2007
Special Issue: Ethical Challenges of Ubiquitous Computing
Ubiquitous Computing (an idea introduced by Mark Weiser, and often
bracketed with slight modifications under the concepts of Pervasive
Computing or Ambient Intelligence) imagines, in the extreme case, the
entire mesosphere saturated by ICT. In this fantasy, ICT will accompany
all aspects of our life. Our everyday world will be made intelligent,
and all our actions, at all times and everywhere, will undergo some kind
of ICT support. We will be appropriately guided, monitored, and provided
with our needs and desires.
More prosaically, Ubiquitous Computing systems generally consist of
interlinked capacities for memory and data storage, for perception and
environmental sensing, and for the interpretation of contexts and
situations. These activities might be carried out using various kinds of
technology. And indeed, a whole host of technical research fields are
working toward this goal, from mechatronics to materials science, from
network engineering to computing and AI research. And of course,
ubiquity or omnipresence will never be total. For technical, economic,
and other reasons, there will only be pockets where Ubiquitous Computing
systems come into effect. Nevertheless, the present research scenarios
entail applications which will have more or less impact on every domain
of life, from leisure, jobs, and health care to domestic policing and war.
Any ethical discussion of Ubiquitous Computing is inherently problematic
because we are dealing with emergent technology. We must take into
account its potential, without knowing how far this potential can be
realised in detail, and without knowing the fields in which pervasive
ICT will find acceptance. Nevertheless, any research program that may so
radically infiltrate our daily life requires some kind of ethical
framework, to complement and counterbalance economic and militaristic
motivations, and to provide direction with respect both to traditional
values and to our hopes for the future.
The case of Ubiquitous Computing brings into sharper focus two key
problems in theoretical ethics that have already attained a special
position in applied media ethics: on the one hand, determining the
reality which will be influenced with our acting, and on the other hand,
determining the subject to whom these actions will be attributed and who
will intervene in reality. In certain sense we may say that Ubiquitous
Computing diminishes the confrontational character of reality.
Ubiquitous Computing environments will necessarily perceive and act upon
subjects as ideal types, or stereotypes. Situations may be reduced to
typical moments. Ambivalence and ambiguity may be lost. Moreover, the
more invisible, pervasive, and transparent these systems become, the
more they disappear and are taken for granted, the harder they will be
to confront. If the mechanisms by which these systems produce and
ascribe identities, situations, and contexts are unavailable for
engagement by the subjects of the system, then those subjects may lose
the skills and resources necessary to negotiate the construction of
these identities, situations, and contexts. It may simply become
necessary to accept the system’s reification of the typical.
The experience of the world and the self will therefore undergo a
transformation in intelligent environments. This gives rise to countless
ethical issues whose analysis must go hand in hand with the development
of such systems. The key questions just posed must be supplemented by
additional specific problems, concerning, for instance, the anonymous
generation of cognition, possible changes in the ethos of cognition,
privacy and the formation of trust in intelligent worlds, and finally,
the context sensitivity of the system and the related intrusion in our
sphere of understanding.
The 7th issue of IRIE will tackle the ethical challenge of ubiquitous
systems and therefore furnish a contribution to the establishment of an
ethics of Ubiquitous Computing. This ethics is anchored in the field of
media ethics, yet it may call into question the fundamental issues in
this field, insofar as the entire mesosphere appears as disposed to such
media. Thus, the boundaries between media and the what they mediate may
be radically questioned.
Deadlines
Deadline for submission abstracts: June 15, 2007
Notification of acceptance to authors: August 15, 2007
Deadline for submission of full articles: November 15, 2007
Publication: December, 2007
Possible Topics
The production of reality (as concrete contents) and the production of
Wirklichkeit (as opposed to the individual and an embedding of reality)
- Medialization of the physical world
- Interpretation of reality and environments using context sensitive and
adaptive systems
- Modelling of acting and behaviour through context sensitive and
adaptive systems
Privacy, Surveillance, Trust
- Privacy in intelligent interactive environments
- Surveillance, data protection and personal freedom
- Ubiquitous systems and trust
Manufacturing of the Acting Subject
- Identity formation in intelligent environments
- The Other in intelligent environments
- Self-perception in intelligent environments
Cognition in intelligent environments
- Generating cognition in intelligent environments
- Anonymous generation of cognition and cognitive acquisition
- Transformation of the cognitive ethos
Problems of Ubiquitous Computing in special fields of application
- Health Care
- Economy and work
- Living in a smart home (and other fields …)
Rules of the game
Potential authors must provide an extended abstract (max. 1500 words) by
31/05/2007. The abstract can be written in the mother tongue of the
author though an English translation of this abstract must be included
if the chosen language is not English. IRIE will publish articles in
English, French, German, Portuguese or Spanish. The author(s) of
contributions in French, Portuguese, or Spanish must nominate at least
two potential peer reviewers.
The abstracts will be selected by the guest editors. The authors will be
informed of acceptance or rejection by 15/08/2007. Deadline for the
final article (3.000 words or 20.000 characters including blanks) is
15/11/2007. All submissions will be subject of a peer review. Therefore
the acceptance of an extended abstract does not imply the publication of
the final text unless the article passed the peer review.
For more information about the journal see: http://www.i-r-i-e.net
Contact
PD Dr. habil. Klaus Wiegerling (Universität Stuttgart, D), Prof. Ph. D.
David Phillips (University of Toronto) manage the special issue as guest
editors. Please send the extended abstracts by e-mail to both of them:
Prof. Dr. David Phillips, davidj.phillips at utoronto.ca
PD. Dr. habil. Klaus Wiegerling, wiegerlingklaus at aol.com
--
David J. Phillips
Associate Professor, Faculty of Information Studies
University of Toronto
140 St. George Street
Toronto, Ontario M5S 3G6
CANADA
(+1) 416-978-7098 (voice) / 416-971-1399 (fax)
More information about the Air-L
mailing list