ASSRI 2013 - Third Australasian Symposium on Service Research and Innovation
Topics/Call fo Papers
Third Australasian Symposium on Service Research and Innovation (ASSRI’13)
to be held at the School of Computer Science and Engineering
University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW
November 27-29, 2013
CALL FOR PAPERS
With the increasingly dominant role that the service sector plays in both developed and emerging economies, the conceptualisation, design, delivery, and evaluation of service systems have attracted significant research attention and policy focus. There is also a growing recognition of the critical role of service innovation in improving productivity levels and quality of life. The transition from the manufacturing and goods-based orientation to more of a service-dominant logic has gathered momentum in recent years. Information and communication technologies (ICT) play a central role in the design and delivery of service systems. Internet and World Wide Web-related developments such as web 2.0, semantic web, cloud infrastructure, and service-oriented computing and web services, social computing, and (internet-based) human computation are just a few of the technological advances that are helping to redefine the landscape of service systems.
The third Australasian Symposium on Service Research and Innovation will bring together a cross-disciplinary group of researchers and practitioners who are engaged in research and development in the area of services, broadly defined. It will feature keynote addresses and invited lectures by prominent researchers in the field. There will also be contributed paper sessions to which service and related researchers are invited to submit their recent work. A public sector and industry forum featuring some of the academic researchers and practitioners in industry and government will also be a part of the symposium.
The service science initiative (and service science, management and engineering (SSME) discipline for the study, design and implementation of service systems) has been a driver and platform for research, over the past decade, towards the goal of building a science of services. This symposium is expected to provide a forum for analyzing and assessing the progress achieved in pursuit of this goal and to explore the foundations of and emerging directions in service research.
The symposium is sponsored by the Service Science Society of Australia. This is the apex national body representing the services research community of Australia. It seeks to promote the understanding and use of service science in government, industry and academia. The Australasian Symposium on Service Research and Innovation series also serves as its annual meeting.
PAPER SUBMISSION, SYMPOSIUM PUBLICATIONS, AND BEST PAPER AWARDS
Paper submissions should be limited to a maximum of 15 pages in the Springer LNBIP format (see link), and will be reviewed by the Program Committee on the basis of overall quality, relevance to service research, originality, significance, and clarity. Please submit papers through EasyChair. The proceedings will be published by Springer under the Business Information Processing (LNBIP) series. Selected papers will be fast-tracked for publication in a services research journal of good standing (in revised and expanded form).
Two best paper awards will be presented to the authors of (1) the best research paper and (2) the best student paper. The selection of the best papers will be made by the Program Committee Chairs in consultation with the Program Committee members based on the overall quality and contribution.
TOPICS OF INTEREST (but not limited to)
Service science
Smart services
Service computing and web services
Service market-places
Human computation
Crowdsourcing
Cloud computing
Service-oriented software engineering
Service system design
Service marketplaces
Service system engineering
Service technologies
Applications and case studies
Value co-creation in service systems
Service economy
Service marketing and CRM
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
Conference Chair:
Fethi Rabhi, University of New South Wales (f.rabhi[AT]unsw.edu.au)
Program Chairs:
Joseph G. Davis, University of Sydney (joseph.davis[AT]Sydney.edu.au)
Haluk Demirkan, Arizona State University (haluk.demirkan[AT]asu.edu)
Hamid R. Motahari-Nezhad, University of New South Wales (hamidm[AT]se.unsw.edu.au)
Markus Stumptner, University of South Australia (mst[AT]cs.unisa.edu.au)
Publicity Chair
Hoa Dam, University of Wollongong (hoa[AT]uow.edu.au)
Webmaster
Yingzhi Gou, University of Wollongong
Program Committee (partial list):
Renu Agarwal, UTS Sydney
Ralph Badinelli, Virginia Tech
Boualem Benatallah, UNSW
Charlie Bess, HP
Athman Bouguettaya, RMIT
Nirmit Desai, IBM Research India
Schahram Dustdar, TU Wien
Dragan Gasevic, Athabasca University
Aditya Ghose, University of Wollongong
Bill Hefley, University of Pittsburgh
Byron Keating, University of Canberra
Ryszard Kowalczyk, Swinburne University of Technology
Yassi Moghaddam
Surya Nepal, CSIRO
Matti Rossi, Aalto University School of Economics
Hye-Young Paik, University of New South Wales
Simon Poon, University of Sydney
Babis Theodoulidis, Manchester Business School
Alberta Zomaya, University of Sydney
Important Dates:
Paper submission deadline: 8 September 2013
Author Notification: 8 October 2013
Camera Ready deadline: 31 October 2013
Conference Registration deadline: 15 November 2013
Conference Dates: 27-29 November 2013
http://www.servicesciencesociety.org.au/events/thi...
to be held at the School of Computer Science and Engineering
University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW
November 27-29, 2013
CALL FOR PAPERS
With the increasingly dominant role that the service sector plays in both developed and emerging economies, the conceptualisation, design, delivery, and evaluation of service systems have attracted significant research attention and policy focus. There is also a growing recognition of the critical role of service innovation in improving productivity levels and quality of life. The transition from the manufacturing and goods-based orientation to more of a service-dominant logic has gathered momentum in recent years. Information and communication technologies (ICT) play a central role in the design and delivery of service systems. Internet and World Wide Web-related developments such as web 2.0, semantic web, cloud infrastructure, and service-oriented computing and web services, social computing, and (internet-based) human computation are just a few of the technological advances that are helping to redefine the landscape of service systems.
The third Australasian Symposium on Service Research and Innovation will bring together a cross-disciplinary group of researchers and practitioners who are engaged in research and development in the area of services, broadly defined. It will feature keynote addresses and invited lectures by prominent researchers in the field. There will also be contributed paper sessions to which service and related researchers are invited to submit their recent work. A public sector and industry forum featuring some of the academic researchers and practitioners in industry and government will also be a part of the symposium.
The service science initiative (and service science, management and engineering (SSME) discipline for the study, design and implementation of service systems) has been a driver and platform for research, over the past decade, towards the goal of building a science of services. This symposium is expected to provide a forum for analyzing and assessing the progress achieved in pursuit of this goal and to explore the foundations of and emerging directions in service research.
The symposium is sponsored by the Service Science Society of Australia. This is the apex national body representing the services research community of Australia. It seeks to promote the understanding and use of service science in government, industry and academia. The Australasian Symposium on Service Research and Innovation series also serves as its annual meeting.
PAPER SUBMISSION, SYMPOSIUM PUBLICATIONS, AND BEST PAPER AWARDS
Paper submissions should be limited to a maximum of 15 pages in the Springer LNBIP format (see link), and will be reviewed by the Program Committee on the basis of overall quality, relevance to service research, originality, significance, and clarity. Please submit papers through EasyChair. The proceedings will be published by Springer under the Business Information Processing (LNBIP) series. Selected papers will be fast-tracked for publication in a services research journal of good standing (in revised and expanded form).
Two best paper awards will be presented to the authors of (1) the best research paper and (2) the best student paper. The selection of the best papers will be made by the Program Committee Chairs in consultation with the Program Committee members based on the overall quality and contribution.
TOPICS OF INTEREST (but not limited to)
Service science
Smart services
Service computing and web services
Service market-places
Human computation
Crowdsourcing
Cloud computing
Service-oriented software engineering
Service system design
Service marketplaces
Service system engineering
Service technologies
Applications and case studies
Value co-creation in service systems
Service economy
Service marketing and CRM
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
Conference Chair:
Fethi Rabhi, University of New South Wales (f.rabhi[AT]unsw.edu.au)
Program Chairs:
Joseph G. Davis, University of Sydney (joseph.davis[AT]Sydney.edu.au)
Haluk Demirkan, Arizona State University (haluk.demirkan[AT]asu.edu)
Hamid R. Motahari-Nezhad, University of New South Wales (hamidm[AT]se.unsw.edu.au)
Markus Stumptner, University of South Australia (mst[AT]cs.unisa.edu.au)
Publicity Chair
Hoa Dam, University of Wollongong (hoa[AT]uow.edu.au)
Webmaster
Yingzhi Gou, University of Wollongong
Program Committee (partial list):
Renu Agarwal, UTS Sydney
Ralph Badinelli, Virginia Tech
Boualem Benatallah, UNSW
Charlie Bess, HP
Athman Bouguettaya, RMIT
Nirmit Desai, IBM Research India
Schahram Dustdar, TU Wien
Dragan Gasevic, Athabasca University
Aditya Ghose, University of Wollongong
Bill Hefley, University of Pittsburgh
Byron Keating, University of Canberra
Ryszard Kowalczyk, Swinburne University of Technology
Yassi Moghaddam
Surya Nepal, CSIRO
Matti Rossi, Aalto University School of Economics
Hye-Young Paik, University of New South Wales
Simon Poon, University of Sydney
Babis Theodoulidis, Manchester Business School
Alberta Zomaya, University of Sydney
Important Dates:
Paper submission deadline: 8 September 2013
Author Notification: 8 October 2013
Camera Ready deadline: 31 October 2013
Conference Registration deadline: 15 November 2013
Conference Dates: 27-29 November 2013
http://www.servicesciencesociety.org.au/events/thi...
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Last modified: 2013-08-12 22:15:09