CFP: Conversational, Cognitive, and Affective HCI (AMCIS 2025)

Ryan Schuetzler rschuet at gmail.com
Wed Jan 22 13:59:13 EST 2025


*AMCIS Mini-track on Conversational, Cognitive, and Affective HCI*

Understanding and adapting to the cognitive and affective states of users
can enable systems to interact more effectively and creates new
possibilities for information systems. Emerging systems are able to
incorporate information from these sensors to create more humanlike
responses, to improve decision processes, and to gain a deeper
understanding of how the user is thinking or feeling.

The cross-disciplinary nature of the IS discipline and its unique ability
to view technology in novel ways gives it strong potential to make big
waves in this domain. We encourage full paper and research-in-progress
submissions ranging from exploratory to confirmatory work. All methods of
research are welcome, including design science, qualitative, empirical, and
theoretical research. Potential topics include, but are not limited to the
following:

·       Affective or cognitive state detection, classification, and
prediction

·       Chatbots and other conversational interactions, including digital
assistants

·       HCI for credibility assessment

·       Movement and expression analysis

·       Novel use of biometric and behavioral sensors, including fMRI, eye
tracking, heart rate, keystroke dynamics, and mouse tracking

·       Affective computing

·       Visualization for affective and cognitive data

·       Barriers to effective user experience

·       Mobile factors

We encourage authors to not be limited by this list, but to seek to submit
research that describes or demonstrates innovative potential for cognitive
and affective information systems.

Some previously accepted papers include:

·       Göldi & Rietsche (2024), Insert-expansions for Large Language Model
Agents

·       Durneva, et al. (2022) Being There: Spatial Presence in Immersive
Environments

·       Rzepka (2019) Examining the Use of Voice Assistants: A
Value-Focused Thinking Approach

·       Jenkins, Kirk, and Valacich (2019) Improving Compassion Measurement
in the Workforce by Analyzing Users’ Mouse-Cursor Movements

IMPORTANT DATES

-          January 13, 2025: Manuscript submissions begin

-          February 28, 2025: Submissions are due at 5 pm EST

*Mini-track Chairs:*

Ryan Schuetzler, Brigham Young University, ryan.schuetzler at byu.edu

Nathan Twyman, Brigham Young University, nathantwyman at gmail.com

Mark Grimes, University of Houston, gmgrimes at bauer.uh.edu

Stefan Morana, Saarland University, stefan.morana at uni-saarland.de
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