Society for the Social Study of Mobile Communications


The Society for the Social Study of Mobile Communication (SSSMC) is intended to facilitate the international advancement of cross-disciplinary mobile communication studies. It is intended to serve as a resource and to support a network of scholarly research as to the social consequences of mobile communication.




Thursday, April 28, 2016

#Screentime 2016 - Technological Affordances and Constraints in Mediated Life

#Screentime 2016 - Technological Affordances and Constraints in Mediated Life


The graduate students of Boston University’s Division of Emerging Media Studies invite abstracts for their second annual Conference on Emerging Media.

#Screentime aims to explore the social, emotional, and civic implications of today’s media landscape. Social forces and technological elements are driving changes in this developing field of study.This conference is an opportunity to bridge diverse perspectives on the roles of users and technology in new media, and will lay the groundwork for future research.

Topics

Emerging Media Studies is an inherently interdisciplinary field; we welcome abstracts from a variety of perspectives and disciplines on a range of topics, including but not limited to:

  • Civility, sub-cultures, and online discourse
  • Uses and effects of mobile communication technologies Digital distribution and industry disruption
  • Data mining on social networks
  • Emerging technologies’ effects on users
  • Video games and virtual worlds
  • Digital communication and public health

The conference is free of charge to both presenters and attendees.This conference is aimed at graduate students to showcase their research, and as an opportunity to network with peers.

Important Dates

Abstract Submission - May 1, 2016
Acceptance Notification - June 1, 2016
Registration Deadline - TBA
Conference - June 23, 2016

Venue

10 Buick Street – 18th Floor, Student Village 1 – Boston, MA 02215

Submission Instructions

Abstracts should be no more than 300 words. Papers will be peer reviewed.
E-mail your submissions to demsconf@bu.edu

Please include your name and institutional affiliation (department/university), program and year of study, research focus/interests, and contact information (email and phone number).

Applicants will be notified of their acceptance on a rolling basis no later than June 1st, 2016.



Thursday, April 21, 2016

CFP: 9th International Conference on ICT, Society and Human Beings 2016


CALL FOR PAPERS ICT 2016: 9th International Conference on ICT, Society and Human Beings 2016
Funchal, Madeira, Portugal, 1 - 3 July 2016
(http://www.ict-conf.org/)
Part of the Multi Conference on Computer Science and Information Systems (MCCSIS 2016)
Funchal, Madeira, Portugal, 1 - 4 July 2016
(http://www.mccsis.org)

Keynote Speaker (confirmed):
Professor emerita Gunilla Bradley, Informatics, School of ICT, Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Stockholm, Sweden

Conference Scope
The effects of ICT on human beings as well as the interaction between ICT, individuals, and society are all within the focus of this conference. Both analyses of interactions and effects are important. Changes in behaviour, perspectives, values, competencies, human and psychological aspects and feelings are all of interest. Reflections on past, present, and future challenges - especially planning to handle the future - are encouraged.
The conference pays attention to societal changes, global and more local organisational and institutional changes, changes in values and in lifestyles, as well as individual cognitive effects and changes, motivational and emotional changes. It also appeals to solution-building in terms of desirable goals and actions for reaching a Good Information Society.
In general all types of research strategies are encouraged, and especially cross-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary studies. Case studies, broader empirical field studies, theoretical analyses, cross-cultural studies, scenarios, ethnographic studies, epistemological analyses may all be presented. For more details please check http://www.ict-conf.org/call-for-papers .

Paper Submission
This is a blind peer-reviewed conference. Authors are invited to submit their papers in English through the conference submission system by May 13, 2016. Submissions must be original and should not have been published previously.

Important Dates:
  • Submission Deadline (last call): 13 May 2016
  • Notification to Authors (last call): 3 June 2016
  • Final Camera-Ready Submission and Early Registration (last call): Until 17 June2016
  • Late Registration (last call): After 17 June 2016

Paper Publication
The papers will be published in book and electronic format with ISBN, will be made available through the Digital Library available at http://www.iadisportal.org/digital-library/showsearch.
The conference proceedings will be submitted for indexation by IET's INSPEC, Elsevier, EI Compendex, Scopus, Thomson Reuters Web of Science, EBSCO and other important indexing services.
The best papers will be selected for publishing as extended versions in the IADIS International Journal on WWW/Internet (ISSN: 1645-7641) and also in journals from INDERSCIENCE Publishers.

Conference Contact:
E-mail: secretariat@ict-conf.org
Web site: http://www.ict-conf.org/

Organized by: International Association for Development of the Information Society

Registered participants in the ICT, Society and Human Beings conference may attend the other conferences part of MCCSIS 2016 free of charge.

Friday, April 15, 2016

Genes · Germs · GMOs

Genes · Germs · GMOs

1:30-5:30pm
April 20, 2016
Hillel Building (second floor)
Boston University
213 Bay State Rd, Boston, MA 02215
Reception to follow
Hosted by the Division of Emerging Media Studies

Has the power of social media disrupted scientific understanding?

Armed with just Internet connections, social-media accounts and passionate beliefs, millions of ordinary people now shape the debate on such complex-and-controversial scientific questions as personal genetic testing, genetically modified foods (GMOs), and antibiotic treatments.  This social-media activism not only can distort public understanding of these critical issues but it can disrupt governmental support and regulations.
Come hear distinguished experts discuss such questions as: How has social media empowered its users?  To what extend has the public’s engagement affected the quality of scientific debate? Have the policy outcomes improved?  Speakers include Piper Below (University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston), Kevin Folta (University of Florida), Dominique Broussard (University of Wisconsin), and Annie Waldherr (Freie Universität Berlin).


Sponsored by Boston University’s College of Communication and co-sponsored by the Office of the Vice President & Associate Provost for Research and School of Law

Thursday, April 14, 2016

CFP: From Here to Ubiquity: Critical and International Perspectives on Mobile and Ubiquitous Media

Extended call for chapters - From Here to Ubiquity: Critical and International Perspectives on Mobile and Ubiquitous Media

This is an extended call for the submission of chapter proposals for the edited volume From Here to Ubiquity: Critical and International Perspectives on Mobile and Ubiquitous Media. The purpose of this edited collection is to try to develop a clearer definition of, and theoretical grounding for, ubiquitous media by assembling a collection of chapters by established experts and emerging scholars from around the world. Chapters should critically and creatively interrogate “ubiquitous media” in the hopes of developing an overarching understanding of the meaning, processes, and ramifications of the term.

The term "ubiquitous media" has been deployed to characterize platforms such as television, social media, and mobile media; systems such as algorithms, apps, and augmented reality; concepts such as commerce and surveillance, and issues such as privacy, politics, and neocolonialism. Phrases like IoE (the “Internet of Everything”) are increasingly mentioned in academic and the popular press and framed as an inevitability. Universities have laboratories dedicated to the study of ubiquitous media, and marketing companies aggressively tout their ability to target consumers through a ubiquitous media presence (including one company simply called “Ubiquitous Media” which “specializes in targeting consumers throughout their daily routine”).

In short, the phrase “ubiquitous media” is, well, ubiquitous. There is little discussion, however, of what the term “ubiquitous media” actually means. Indeed, individual definitions of “ubiquitous media” are often assumed to be just a ubiquitous as media themselves and, as a result, there is no large-scale theoretical framework through which we can understand the term. With this in mind, we specifically welcome chapters that promise to develop a critical theoretical framework for understanding ubiquitous media.

In addition, a portion of this volume will be dedicated to a specific exploration of mobile technologies as a key precursor – if not central element – of a ubiquitous media environment. This could include past and current mobile technologies, from pagers to PDAs, and cell phones to modern smartphones and wearables, provided they contribute to an understanding of ubiquitous media as both a technical and discursive reality for individuals around the world. Representing global perspectives is also central objective of this volume. An international perspective is important to the development of a comprehensive understanding of what “ubiquitous media” means and the prospectively heterogeneous implications of this development.

Possible approaches/frameworks for these investigations include:
  • Theories of ubiquitous media
  • Mediatisation
  • Political economy
  • Space, place and time
  • User-experience design
  • Business models and start-up culture
  • Financial/transactional data and services
  • App-centric media
  • Digital labour and work-life balance
  • Surveillance
  • Ubiquitous media and digital literacy
  • Ubiquitous media and narratives
  • Coding and platforms

Abstracts of 300-350 words (for chapters of approximately 8,000 words) should be emailed to co-editors Dr. Michael S. Daubs at michael.daubs@vuw.ac.nz and Dr. Vince Manzerolle at vmanzero@uwindsor.ca by 15 May 2016. Chapters selected for publication will be notified by 15 June 2016, with full chapter drafts due by 15 September 2016.


Tuesday, April 5, 2016

CFP: Third International Conference: Social Science and the Internet

CALL FOR ABSTRACTS
Third International Conference: Social Science and the Internet

On Friday, July 1, 2016 the Human-Technology-Interaction Group at Eindhoven University of Technology (NL) will host the third conference meeting on "Social Science and the Internet". Following up on two earlier meetings of Internet researchers in Amsterdam and Utrecht, this third conference in Eindhoven aims to bring together sociologists, psychologists, communication scientists, computer- and data scientists, and other researchers who are interested in the study of human behavior and social interaction in online contexts. With this meeting we aim to further the development of an international community of researchers from various fields who study these Internet related topics. Aiming for an interdisciplinary mix of participants, the conference will provide ample opportunity for discussion in an informal atmosphere.

Keynote speakers

Ulf-Dietrich Reips (University of Konstanz, Germany)
Martijn Willemsen (Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands)

We welcome contributions on (but not restricted to) the following topics:
  • Empirical accounts and theoretical arguments concerning online human behavior
  • The digital divide, digital skills, and digital inequality
  • (User evaluation of) online recommender systems
  • Design, use, and effects of social media (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube, etc.) and online communities
  • Making sense of social media data for the social sciences
  • Persuasive online technologies
  • Online markets and online consumer research
  • Trust and online reputation systems
  • Online research methods: web surveys and experiments
  • Privacy and self-disclosure online
  • Social networks and social capital online and offline
  • Learning analytics
  • Social media and learning in formal and informal contexts


The conference fee will be 50 Euros, which covers the costs of coffee, tea, cookies, and a lunch.  The conference language is English.

Abstracts of 300-500 words should be submitted no later than May 9 on:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ssi2016

Deadlines:
  • submission of abstract: May 9, 23:59 CET (GMT +1)
  • Notification of acceptance decision: June 1
  • Conference: July 1


More information about the conference can be found at: http://ssi.ieis.tue.nl/.
Questions? Please contact us at: conf2016tue@gmail.com<mailto:conf2016tue@gmail.com>

On behalf of the entire organizing committee:

CFP: Workshop The Challenges of Human-Robot Interaction in Real-World Contexts


Call For Papers: Workshop The Challenges of Human-Robot Interaction in Real-World Contexts

In conjunction with the IEEE International Symposium on Robot and Human Interactive Communication (RO-MAN 2016) http://ro-man2016.org/

Workshop Date: August 31, 2016, New York, NY, USA
www.challengesofhumanrobotinteractioninrealworldcontexts.wordpress.com/

Introduction
Most HRI research is performed in the lab which offers a simplification of the real-world context to allow problem solving. However, robotic systems should eventually be tested in ecologically valid settings to determine whether and how they actually meet real-world needs. Only recently, robotic systems have become reliable and robust enough to be deployed in real-world settings, such as homes, schools, care facilities, museums and alike. And long-term acceptance research of social robots in such real-world settings is about to become a sub-field in evaluating the interactions between robots and their human users. This stresses the need for more ecologically valid research and the inclusion of the real potential end-users required to be able to gain insight into how people perceive, accept and interact with robots in real-world contexts as well as to test the feasibility and/or usability of these robots in such contexts. The aim of ecologically valid research is to use methods, materials and settings that approximate the real-world as much as possible. Studying HRIs in real-world contexts reveals more natural interactions and human reactions. Moreover, the robotic system can be tested within its intended use context which is unpredictable, dynamic and unstructured, something that is difficult if not impossible to simulate in the lab. Therefore, HRI research in real-world contexts offers a unique insight into the interactions between robots and their human users. However, studying HRI in real-world contexts also brings along many challenges, among other topics related to:
  • Technologically with regard to the robustness and reliability of the system
  • Methodologically: with reference to the controllability of variables and a lack of validated measurement tool kits for the evaluation
  • Contextually: in relation to the social and cultural aspects of HRI
Aim of the workshop
The aim of this workshop is to bring together researchers from both industry and academia to discuss best practices as well as pitfalls of HRI research in real-world settings, and to provide the HRI community with guidelines to inform future developments of their robotic systems. We invite multi-disciplinary contributions from researchers and practitioners from the fields of HRI, engineering, computer sciences, fine and media arts, (interactive) design, sociology, anthropology, psychology, neurosciences, cognitive sciences, semiotics, linguistics, literary studies, history, policy, law, communication science, and cultural studies.

Submissions
We welcome prospective participants to submit extended abstracts (max. 4 pages) covering any relevant topic (related to the problem statement on the homepage) addressing real-world HRI research. In addition to papers presenting empirical research, we also welcome papers about new theoretical perspectives, design challenges, and ethical or legal issues related to HRI research in real world contexts. The manuscripts should use the IEEE RO-MAN two-column format. Please submit a PDF copy of your manuscript to maartje.degraaf@utwente.nl.

Important deadlines:
  • Submission deadline: May 22, 2016
  • Notification of acceptance: June 1, 2016
  • Camera-ready deadline: June 15, 2016

All submitted papers within the scope of the workshop will be peer-reviewed. Papers will be selected based on their originality, relevance, contributions, technical clarity, and presentation. Accepted papers will require that at least one author registers for and attends the workshop. After the conference, accepted authors will be offered to submit extended versions of their workshop contributions to be considered for a book chapter published by Springer.

Authors of accepted papers will be invited to provide a short pitch (2-3 minutes) about their most relevant topic to address in real-world HRI research, after which there is time scheduled for extended discussion (10-15 minutes) on that topic with the workshop audience. Advances made through the discussions will serve to push the sub-field of HRI in real-world contexts forward.

Organizers
Maartje de Graaf, PhD, University of Twente, The Netherlands
Somaya Ben Allouch, PhD, Saxion University of Applied Sciences, The Netherlands
Astrid Rosenthal – von der Pütten, PhD, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany