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IEEE TSC (SNASR) 2015 : IEEE Transactions on Services Computing: Special Issue on In Search of a New Alignment in Service Research | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://www.computer.org/cms/Computer.org/transactions/cfps/cfp_tscsi_socca.pdf | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
In conjunction with INFORMS Service Science
An Unprecedented, Dual-Journal Call For Papers It is high time for engineering and business scholars to join forces to advance service research. The editors of two of the top journals in the service area, one from IEEE’s services computing community and one from INFORMS’ service science community, invite you to break out of your disciplinary comfort zone. Parallel special issues have been commissioned to intentionally challenge and disrupt the status quo. This dual special issue is intended to reconcile existing multi-pronged orientations and approaches to service research. Trans-disciplinary service research will leapfrog the current landscape to improve services computing formalisms while concomitantly designing and delivering the highest quality business service systems that can profitably delight customers and clients. In many areas, modern research advances have benefited from multiple perspectives. Trans-disciplinary research means reaching out to scholars from other backgrounds. It means that vocabulary, research methods and historical foundations need to be shared, taught, challenged and reconciled. It’s going to be hard work. It will take time. But it’s what is needed. This dual-journal call-for-papers is intended to catalyze trans-disciplinary and risk-taking research, and the review policies and procedures for both special issues will be tuned to this end. What’s missing has been a research agenda to reconcile business service systems and systems of systems ideals with services computing’s formal methods, standards, best practices and repeatable processes. New research is essential to address what has become an important inflection point: the business services and services computing research agendas need to be viewed from a common, global, societal lens. At stake is the continued viability of both research streams. Some science and engineering scholars view business services research as a soft discipline, but there is significant respect for formal business process and workflow methods that can deliver model-driven development. Business researchers often view the engineering and computer science perspectives as remiss in addressing the essential and dynamic elements of customer co-production, B2B contracting and pricing, but there is significant respect for services computing’s role in distributing, cost-effective scaling and personalization of computing service capability. Both areas are in transition, given the increasing value of big data methods and associated possibilities. Yes, there will be dueling methodologies, ranging from empirical to execution benchmarks to proof, and there will be dueling problems, ranging from NP-Complete to novel business strategy frameworks. Potential authors will need to leave their comfort zones behind and work together across disciplinary lines. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to: x Big Data Analytics and Algorithms x Service-Centric Business Models x Service Modeling and Implementation x Service Delivery, Deployment and Maintenance Service x Value Chains, Value Co-creation, and Service Innovation x Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) Industry Standards and Solution Stacks x Service-based Grid/Cloud/Autonomic Computing/Big Data x Service-Level Agreements (SLAs) Negotiation, Automation and Orchestration x Service Security, Privacy and Trust x Quality of Services (QoS) and Cost of Services (CoS) x Services Engineering Practices and Case Studies x Trust and Loyalty in Service Business Models x Cultural, Language, Social and Legal Obstacles in Service Business Models x Case Studies in Service Business Models (e.g., healthcare, financial, aviation, etc.) x Business Process Integration, Collaboration and Management x Business Process Modeling Methodology and Integration Architecture x Monitoring of Services, Process Mining, and Quality of Service x Practices in Service Science and Big Data Important Dates: Deadline for paper submission: March 1, 2015 First-round reviews (expected): May 1, 2015 Revisions due: June 15, 2015 Second-round reviews (expected): August 1, 2015 Final papers due: October 1, 2015 Expected publication: Late 2015 or early 2016 |
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