CFP AMCIS 2025 (Montreal) mini-track "AI-Powered Social Computing in Decision-Making: Transformative Potential and Societal Challenges"

Plaisent, Michel plaisent.michel at uqam.ca
Fri Feb 21 00:24:14 EST 2025


Dear Researchers and Practitioners,



We are pleased to invite you to submit your contributions to our mini-track titled " AI-Powered Social Computing in Decision-Making: Transformative Potential and Societal Challenges" which will be part of the AMCIS 2025 conference to be held in Montreal (Canada), August 13-17, 2025.



Mini-Track Overview

This mini-track explores the transformative potential and critical challenges of AI-enhanced social computing across individual, organizational, and societal decision-making contexts. By integrating AI into social computing, we can foster inclusivity, improve efficiency, and unlock creativity. However, this integration also raises significant ethical concerns, including privacy issues, algorithmic bias, social inequities, and deficits in public trust. The interplay of these opportunities and challenges is further exacerbated by widening inequalities across digital platforms.



This mini-track encourages diverse methodological approaches, including theoretical frameworks, empirical studies, design science research, and case studies. By addressing both the opportunities and risks inherent in AI-powered social computing, this mini-track aims to foster nuanced discussions on designing systems that strike a balance between innovation, ethical responsibility, and meaningful social impact.



Suggested Topics (non-exhaustive list)

  *   Consumer decision-making
  *   Group dynamics and collective decision-making
  *   Innovation and creativity
  *   Corporate strategy and change management
  *   Emergency, disaster, and crisis management
  *   Public policy formulation
  *   Equity and social inclusion
  *   Mental well-being
  *   Ethical considerations and algorithmic accountability
  *   Diversity and inclusion in AI platforms
  *   AI-powered content moderation
  *   User trust and transparency
  *   User rights in social computing



Key Dates

  *   Submissions Open: January 5, 2025
  *   Submission Deadline: February 28, 2025 (5:00 PM ET)
  *   Author Notification: April 14, 2025
  *   Final Submission Deadline: April 24, 2025



For detailed submission guidelines and requirements, please visit the official AMCIS 2025 Call for Papers page: AMCIS 2025 Call for Papers<https://amcis2025.aisconferences.org/>.



Mini-Track Chairs

  *   Lili Zheng, Ph.D.

Associate Professor, Department of Marketing, Excelia Business School, France
zhengl at excelia-group.com<mailto:zhengl at excelia-group.com>

  *   Daniel Tomiuk, Ph.D.

Professor, Department of Analytics, Operations, and Information Technologies, University of Quebec in Montreal, Canada

tomiuk.daniel at uqam.ca<mailto:tomiuk.daniel at uqam.ca>

  *   Michel Plaisent, Ph.D.

Professor, Department of Management, University of Quebec in Montreal, Canada
plaisent.michel at uqam.ca<mailto:plaisent.michel at uqam.ca>



Join Us!

Whether you are a researcher, practitioner, or AI enthusiast, we strongly encourage you to participate in this mini-track and share your work. Together, let us contribute to a deeper understanding of intelligent technologies and their impact on our societies.



For any questions or further information, feel free to contact us or visit the official conference website. We look forward to receiving your contributions and seeing you in Montréal!



PS: For information https://amcis2025.aisconferences.org/submissions/track-descriptions/

under the Social Computing (SOCCOMP) main track







-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://isworld.org/pipermail/aisworld_isworld.org/attachments/20250221/81dcddd3/attachment.htm>


More information about the AISWorld mailing list