Thursday, January 24, 2008

NEW ACADEMIC SPAM from Unknown Scientists

You are kindly invated to Participate and submit an Abstract to the forthcoming Nonlinear Conference titled:


Chaotic Modeling and Simulation International Conference (CHAOS2008)
(Chania, Crete, Greece, June 3-6, 2008)

Call for Abstracts/Papers (Deadline: January 31, 2008)

The forthcoming International Conference (Chaos2008) on Chaotic Modeling, Simulation and Applications will take place at the MAICh Conference Centre,
Chania, Crete, Greece (June 3-6, 2008).
The general topics (You will find the detailed list in the Conference web site: http://www.chaos2008.net ) and the special sessions proposed for the
Conference Chaos2008 include but are not limited to:
1. Chaos and Nonlinear Dynamics
2. Stochastic Chaos
3. Chemical Chaos
4. Data Analysis and Chaos
5. Hydrodynamics, Turbulence and Plasmas
4. Optics and Chaos
5. Chaotic Oscillations and Circuits
6. Chaos in Climate Dynamics
7. Geophysical Flows
8. Biology and Chaos
9. Neurophysiology and Chaos
10. Hamiltonian systems
11. Chaos in Astronomy and Astrophysics
12. Chaos and Solitons
13. Micro- and Nano- Electro-Mechanical Systems
14. Neural Networks
15. Chaos, Ecology and Economy


More information from the conference secretary at: anthi@chaos2008.net or by using the facilities of the conference web site: http://www.chaos2008.net .

Sincerely

Christos H. Skiadas
CHAOS2008 Chair
Data Analysis and Forecasting Laboratory
Technical University of Crete
Chania, Crete, Greece
skiadas@chaos2008.net

IARIA is also bogus? I received this STRANGE SPAM from IARIA

I received this STRANGE SPAM



January 2008 IARIA Newsletter,
www.iaria.org

A few things have been updated on the IARIA site:
- Photos and Best Papers from SENSORCOMM 2007 and SECURWARE 2007 held in Spain are now posted.
- Photos and Best Papers from UBICOMM 2007, SEMAPRO 2007, and ADVCOMP 2007 held in Tahiti are now posted

We have changed the paper submission system that we use. The new one (SODA - Simple Online Document Approval) is more user friendly both from the author and the administrative perspective. On top of that, we work very close with the developers and can easily have new features added in a very timely manner. Give it a try and feel free to email me with your comments or requests.

Accepting submissions now are AICT 2008 and ICIW 2008 (which also includes the SLAECE 2008 and VEWAeL 2008 workshops). There is also a one page announcement for all these colocated events, as well as some photos relevant to the specific location of the events. The deadline for submission is January 20, 2008.

It is worth noting that starting with 2008 conferences, IARIA will be inviting authors of selected papers to publish extended versions in specialized journals.

Links to the most recently updated sections of the site can be found at:
http://www.iaria.org/digest.html

Feel free to invite your friends to subscribe to IARIA News. The sign-up page is:
http://www.iaria.org/signup.html

thank you,
cosmin

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

ACADEMIC SPAM from Unknown People

CALL FOR PAPERS

 

The 5th International Symposium on
  Risk Management and Cyber-Informatics: RMCI 2008

In the Context of

The 12th World Multi-Conference on Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics: WMSCI 2008

 

June 29th - July 2nd, 2008 – Orlando, Florida, USA

 

http://www.sciiis.org/rmci2008/

 

Honorary Presidents of Past Conferences:

Bela Banathy, Stafford Beer, George Klir, Karl Pribram, Paul Jensen and Gheorghe Benga.

 

Honorary President: William Lesso

Program Committee Chair: Michael Savoie

General Chair: C. Dale Zinn and Nagib Callaos (WMSCI)

Organizing Committee Co-Chairs:

Jorge Baralt, Belkis Sánchez, Andrés Tremante and Jorge Molero

 

 

CONFERENCE MAJOR THEMES AND AREAS

 






Risk Management

 

·          Effective Risk Identification, analysis and Evaluation

·          Property Loss Control

·          Quality Improvement Processes for Risk managers support

·          Fraud Prevention and Reduction

·          Risk Legislation

·          Risk and integral Control

·          Environmental insurance and risk Management

·          Wilderness Risk Management Conference

·          Loss prevention in the metal and mining industries

·          Disaster Recovery Planning

·          Civil Litigation and the Risk Management Process

·          Corporative Training and Education in Risk Management

·          Global Risk Management Programs

 

Risk Management in Informatics and Cybernetics

 

·          Software Risk Management

·          Softwares security, safety, and reliability

·          Testing and Software Assurance and Certification

·          Security, Certification and Insurance

·          Cyberspace risk management and Insurance Coverage

·          Information Services Risk Management

·          Risk Management of the electronic Workplace

 

 

 


Applying Informatics and Cybernetics in Risk Management

 

·          Modeling And Simulation Applications for Risk Assessment and Mitigation

·          Optimum Portfolio Management

·          Decision Support Systems for Risk Management

·          Collective Decision/Judgment Support for Public Risk Management

·          Anticipatory Systems. Foresight and Risk Management

·          Financial and Economic Risk Modeling and Simulation 

·          Econometric and Stochastic Volatility models 

·          Optimizing Volatility Opportunities 

·          Credit Risk Modeling 

·          Quantitative Risk Assessment 

 

Applications of Risk Management and Cyber-Informatics

 

·          Risk Management in Energy Systems, Technologies and Procedures

·          Insurance Coverage of Energy companies

·          Financial and Economic Risk Management

·          Risk Assessment and Communication for Terrorism

·          Strategic Response to Risks of terrorism

·          Planning and Risk Management for Terrorism in Campus

·          Terrorism Insurance Coverage

 

 

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Details with regards to the Topics suggested for each area can be obtained from the conference web site.

 

PROGRAM COMMITTEE

 

Honorary Chair: William Lesso (USA)

Chair: C. Dale Zinn (USA) and Nagib Callaos (WMSCI)

 

 


Al Obaidy, Mohaned (Oman)

Ayoade, John (Japan)

Bemeleit, Boris (Germany)

Boyle, Neil (Hungary)

Carrasquero, José Vicente (Venezuela)

Chen, Yung-Yuan (Taiwan)

El Baida, Rania (France)

Homayoun, Behrouz (Canada)

Johnson, Robert A. (United States)

Kandara, Osman (United States)

Loutfi, Mohamed (United Kingdom)

McIlvried, Howard G. (United States)

Ostergaard, Soren Duus (Denmark)

Petit, Frédéric (Canada)

Qi, Xiaojun (United States)

Shiraishi, Yoshiaki (Japan)

Sirkemaa, Seppo (Finland)

Stapelberg, Rudolph Frederick (Australia)

Xiang, Jianwen (Japan)

 

 


 

 

WAYS OF PARTICIPATION

 

To participate in RMCI 2008 fill, please, the respective form at the conference web site http://www.sciiis.org/Wmsci2008/Website/waysofparticipation.asp?vc=8

 

Participation in the conference could be done by means of one or several of the following activities:

·        The submission of a paper/abstract

·        The organization of Invited Session(s)

·        The organization of Focus Symposium

·        The reviewing process

·        The conference promotion

·        Recommending scholars/researchers in order to have an active participation and/or submit the papers/abstracts.

·        Panel Presentation

·        Proposing Organizations/Institutes/Universities as Academic/Scientific Co-Sponsors.

 

 

Kinds of Participants

 

Participation of both, researchers and practitioners is strongly encouraged. Papers/abstracts may be submitted on: research in science and engineering, case studies drawn on professional practice and consulting, and position papers based on large and rich experience gained through executive/managerial practices and decision-making. Hence, the Program Committee has been conformed according to the criteria given above.

 


Types of Submissions Accepted

 

1.      Papers/Abstracts

·        Research papers

a.       in science

b.      in engineering, including systems analysis, design, implementation, synthesis, deployment, maintenance, etc.

·        Review papers

·        Case studies

·        Position papers

·        Reports: technical reports, engineering reports, reports on a methodological application, etc.

2.      Invited Sessions

Data regarding invited session to be organized by the submitter (title of the invited session, name of the organizer, affiliation, titles of the papers accepted for the invited session, authors’ names, etc.). More details could be found below or at the conference web site.

3.      Panel Presentation and/or Round Table Proposals. Panel or round table proposals can be made using the web page related to invited sessions proposals.

4.      Focus Symposia (which should include a minimum of 15 papers). Focus symposia proposals can be made using the web page related to invited sessions proposals.

5.      Tutorial or workshop presentation, which can be proposed sending an email to tutorial.wmsci08@sciiis.org.

 

DEADLINES

December 12th, 2007: Submission of draft papers (2000-5000), extended abstracts (400-2000) and abstracts for-presentation-only (200-500 words)

December 12th, 2007:  Invited Sessions proposals. Acceptance of invited session proposals will be done in about one week of its proposal via the respective conference web form, and final approval will be done after the inclusion of at least five papers in the respective session

January 21st, 2008:        Notifications of acceptance.

February 14th, 2008:     Submission of camera-ready or final versions of the accepted papers.

June 29th, 2008:             Conference Starts

July 2nd, 2008:               Conference Ends

Some invited sessions might have a different timetable according to its organizer and chair, but in any case the camera ready deadline should be met.

THREE KINDS OF REVIEWING PROCESSES

 

Draft papers and abstracts will have three kinds of reviewing: double-blind, non-blind and participatory reviewing:

1.      Each submission will be sent to at least three reviewers, randomly selected, from the Program Committee’s members and from the additional reviewers, for its double-blind reviewing.

2.      Draft papers and extended abstracts will also have non-blind, open reviewing by means of 1-3 reviewers suggested by the submitting authors. The author(s) of each submitted paper/abstract should nominate at least one or two reviewers (accordingly to the submission option selected), and can nominate a maximum of three reviewers for the non-blind review of their respective submitted paper/abstract.

3.      Submissions will also be included in a Participative Peer-to-Peer Reviewing (PPPR). Consequently, submissions will be posted, without previous screening, in the conference web site in a way that it could be accessed, reviewed, commented and evaluated by the authors who sent draft papers or abstracts in the same area or topic. Authors will get a login and a password in order to have this kind of access. Details related to the Participative Peer-to-Peer Reviewing (PPPR), as well as the reasoning supporting it can be found at http://www.sciiis.org/Wmsci2008/Website/Pptpr.asp?vc=8

Acceptance of a submitted paper will be based on all kinds of reviewing, but the first two (double-blind and non-blind) will be necessary conditions for draft papers and extended abstracts.

 

The selection of the best 10%-20% papers, for their publication in the Journal of Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics (JSCI), will also be done based on the three kinds of reviewing.

 

Several studies have shown the strength and the weaknesses of double-blind and non-blind methods of reviewing. Many editors and authors also addressed this issue, some of whom have concluded that the reviewing should be double blinded and some others reached the opposite conclusion. David Kaplan, a highly cited author for example, stated that to overcome the weaknesses of peer-reviewing and to fix it “Review of a manuscript would be solicited from colleagues by the authors. The first task of these reviewers would be to identify revisions that could be made to improve the manuscript. Second, the reviewers would be responsible for writing an evaluation of the revised work.” (Kaplan D., 2005, “How to Fix Peer Review”, The Scientist, Volume 19, Issue 1, Page 10, Jun. 6. Also in http://www.scienceboard.org/community/perspectives.142.html)

 

Since both of these reviewing methods are opposites without contradiction between them, both methods can be used in a way as to complement one another, getting their advantages and reducing their respective disadvantages. This is the aim of RMCI 2008’s Organizing Committee while choosing to combine both of them in the reviewing process of the papers that are submitted to the conference.


A Multi-Methodological Approach for Reviewing Submissions sent to a Multi- and Inter-Disciplinary Conference

Considering the multi- and inter-disciplinary nature of RMCI 2008 and the fact that there are different kinds of epistemological values, disciplinary rigors, reviewing standards, and conference organizational models, the RMCI 2008's Organizing Committee considered as highly desirable to have different kinds of submissions to the conference with different methods of their respective reviewing. Accordingly, submissions of draft papers will be differentiated from abstracts' submissions. Each kind of submission will have two different reviewing methods as well. Consequently, authors will have the opportunity to choose the way of submitting their paper that best fits their disciplinary rigor and their organization's requirements with regards to the conference organizational model. In any kind of submission authors should clearly indicate the contribution made by them.

 

Accordingly, there will be different reviewing methods, going from the most formal one, to less formal methods followed by those who conceive the knowledge communication made through conferences as a more informal process. Consequently, authors will have different ways of making their submissions, and these ways will be highly related to different conference organizational models followed by prestigious scholar societies or suggested by highly cited authors.

 

Three kinds of reviewing processes will be applied to submission made for their presentation at the conference and their inclusion in the hard copy and CD version of the conference proceedings. These three kinds are: 1) double-blinded reviews; 2) open, non-blind reviews; and 3) participative peer-to-peer reviews by authors who made submissions to the same topic or area in the conference.

 

The 3 submission options that authors have are the following:

A. Full draft papers (2000-5000 words) submitted for their presentation at the conference and their inclusion in the conference proceedings, in their hard copy and CD versions. These kinds of submissions will be reviewed by a Modified Kaplan's Method, where the submission's author should suggest at least two scholars, researchers and/or professionals for the open, non-blind review of his/her paper. Each paper will also be sent to at least 3 reviewers for its double-blind review as well. Acceptance decisions will be based on both kinds of reviews: Non-blind and double-blind ones.

 

B. Extended abstracts (400-2000 words, not a full paper) submitted for their presentation at the conference and their inclusion in the conference proceedings, in their hard copy and CD versions. Authors submitting Extended Abstracts should suggest at least one scholar, researcher, or professional for the open, non-blind review of his/her abstract. Each extended abstract will also be sent to at least three reviewers for its double-blind reviewing as well. Acceptance decisions will be based on both kinds of reviewing: Non-blind and double-blind ones. "The submission should contain a scholar [or a professional] exposition of ideas, techniques, and results, including motivation and a clear comparison with related work," (as it is indicated for submissions to be made to the Annual IEEE Symposia on Foundations of Computer Science: FOCS).

 

C. Abstracts (200-500 words, not full paper and not more than 500 words) are considered for their possible acceptance for presentation only. Authors submitting Abstracts (200-500 words, not a full paper and not more than 500 words) may suggest 1-3 scholars, researchers or professionals for open, non-blind reviewing of his/her abstract. Each brief abstract will also be sent to at least three reviewers for its double-blind review as well. Acceptance decisions will be based on both kinds of reviewing: Non-blind and double-blind ones. The submission should be similar to the abstracts or introductions usually written at the beginning of a full paper, containing a scholarly or a professional exposition of ideas, techniques, and results, including motivation and a clear comparison with related work. Acceptance of this kind of abstracts is for presentation only. Their respective full papers will not be published in the pre-conference proceedings but may be published in the post-conference volume of the proceedings if:

·         Their respective presenters are willing to include them in the post-conference volume of the proceedings; AND

·         The full paper is received, according to the required format, by the respective deadline (about 20 days after the conference is over); AND

·         The chair of the session where the paper was presented recommends its inclusion in the post-conference volume of the proceedings, supporting his/her recommendation on the opinions of the session’s attendees.

Acceptance Policy

The acceptance policy which is usually applied to the submissions made to RMCI, the symposia organized in its context, the collocated Conferences and other conferences organized by the International Institute of Informatics and Systemics (IIIS), is oriented by:

  1. The majority rule, when there is no agreement among the reviewers with regards to acceptance or non-acceptance, of a given submission.
  2. The non-acceptance of the submission when there is agreement among its reviewers for not accepting it.
  3. Acceptance of the paper when in doubt (a draw or a tie among the opinions of the reviewers, for example).

The reasoning that is supporting this acceptance policy is based on very well established facts:

·         There usually is a low level agreement among reviewers

·         A significant probability of refusing high quality papers when the acceptance policy is oriented in such a way as to just accept those papers with no disagreement for their respective acceptance.

·         The possible plagiarism (of some non-ethical reviewer) of the content of non-accepted papers.

Details regarding the reasoning supporting this acceptance policy are given in the conference web site.

Submitted papers/abstracts will be sent to reviewers. The best 10% of the papers will also be published in the Journal of Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics (JSCI). Acceptance decisions regarding papers presentation at the conference, and their respective inclusion in the conference’s proceedings, will be based on their content review and/or on the respective author’s CV. Invited papers will not be reviewed and their acceptance decision will be based on the topic and the respective author’s CV. Some of these invited papers, if chosen by the session chair as the best paper of the session, might also be published by JSCI Journal, because the 30% of sessions best papers will also be published in the journal. All accepted papers, which should not exceed six single-spaced typed pages, will be published by means of paper and electronic proceedings.

 

Reviewing papers submitted to invited session organizers

 

Organizers of invited sessions are autonomous with regards to the reviewing method to be used in the reviewing process of the papers to be submitted to their respective sessions. They can use any of the methods described above, or some combination of them.

 

In some cases, like it is the case of Invited Papers, the CVs of the authors will also support the decision regarding the acceptance, or non-acceptance, of the respective paper.

 

Organizers of the best invited sessions or focus symposia will co-edit the respective proceedings volume, the CD version of the proceedings and might be invited to be invited editors or co-editors of the JSCI Journal issue where their session or symposia papers will be published. Multiple author books, or JSCI journal issues, might be published by IIIS, based on the best-invited sessions, the best focus symposia or the best mini-conferences, and the topic of the papers.

 

Reviewers not meeting the reviewing deadline

 

If the reviewers selected for reviewing a given paper/abstract do not make their respective reviews before the papers/abstracts acceptance deadline, the selection committee may inform the respective author about this fact.

 

Reviewing of papers and abstract other than research full papers

 
The reviewing process of abstracts, case studies, position papers, reports, white papers, panel presentations and round table proposals will be based on the relevance of the topic, its potential for interdisciplinary communications, its educational value and/or its analogical thinking potential.

 

Papers to be included in the conference proceedings

 

Accepted papers that have at least one of their authors with a confirmed registration status in the conference, will be included in both versions of the conference proceedings (hardcopy and CD). Papers received after the respective deadline may be included in the post-conference proceedings volume. Any error that results in the non-inclusion of a paper that should have been included in the proceedings will be corrected including such a paper in the post-conference proceedings volume.

 

 

Paper to be included, later, in the Journal JSCI


Each accepted paper or presentation is candidate for being a best paper of its respective session and, consequently, it is candidate for a second reviewing process to be made by the reviewers of the Journal of Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics (JSCI), for its possible inclusion among the best 10%-20% papers presented at the conference which will be selected and published in the JSCI, after doing possible modifications (in content/format) and extensions as to adequate them to a journal publication.

 

 

SUBMISSION OF DRAFT PAPERS AND ABSTRACTS

 

Abstracts or draft papers should be submitted taking into account the following format:

1.      Each submission should be related to at least one of the major themes, or the special symposia, given above.

2.      Each submission should have a title.

3.      Abstracts for-presentation-only should have 200 to 500 words, extended abstracts should have 400 to 2000 words and draft papers should have 2000 to 5000 words, in English.

4.      Author(s) with names, addresses, telephone and fax numbers, and e-mail addresses should be included.

5.      Each author making a submission should necessarily suggest at least one or two (accordingly to the submission option selected) and a maximum of three reviewers for the open review of the submitted extended abstract or paper draft, according to the acceptation policy stated above.

 

Abstracts or draft papers should be sent via the conference web site (http://www.sciiis.org/rmci2008/Submission.asp), filling the respective form and uploading the respective paper or abstract. If the conference web site is not accessible for you, you can also make your submission by e-mail, attaching it to the following e-mail address: rmci2008@sciiis.org

 

 

CONFERENCE FEES

  

The registration fee for IIIS' members (http://www.iiis.org/iiis) will be $540 before their Camera Ready deadline and $590 after their Camera Ready deadline. Additional $50 applies for non-members of IIIS.

 

Full-time students at academic institutions will have a discount of $100 off the registration fee indicated above. This discount applies only to the registration fee. To qualify for the discounted fee, students must provide, via fax or postal mail, an official certification issued by their university or institution verifying they are full-time students and a copy of their valid Student ID card. Full-time students that register at the conference must have both forms of verification with them when they arrive at the registration desk.

 

Authors of papers accepted for their respective presentation at RMCI 2008, or any of the symposia organized in its context or any of the collocated conferences, may apply for a complimentary, free IIIS membership at http://www.sciiis.org/Wmsci2008/Website/IIISMembers.asp?vc=8, after getting the acceptance e-mail related to the presentation of their paper and before making their registration in the conference, so they can register with the reduced fee.

           

Each registration fee entitles the publication and presentation of one paper of up to 6 pages. The registered author may include one additional paper (of up to 6 pages and authored by him/her) at an extra charge of $300. The additional paper must be authored and presented by the registered author.

 

If two or more authors of the same paper attend the conference, each of them must pay his/her respective registration fee in full.

There is a limit of 6 pages for each paper in the Proceedings. At most 2 additional pages can be included, as long as the registered author pays the fee of US$ 75.00 per extra page.

This fee will include exclusively:

·        A CD-ROM version of the proceedings

·        One volume of the hard copy version of the conference proceedings. (If you are an author, you will receive the volume in which your paper was published).

·        Coffee breaks

·        Welcome Reception

 

Any other expenses must be afforded by the participants.

The registration fee does not include any post-conference services. There will be additional shipping and handling costs to be paid by those registered authors who, for unforeseen reasons, cannot attend RMCI 2008 and will ask us to send them the proceedings after the conference. Any other post-conference administrative requirements will be charged at a rate of US$20 per staff hour required to elaborate such a requirement, with a minimum of US$10. Post-conference requirements will have their own deadline, which, in no case, will be more than four (4) months counted from the last day of the conference.

 

INVITED SESSIONS

 

Based on past conferences experience, we suggest the following steps in order to organize an invited session:

1) Identify a special topic in the scope of RMCI 2008, and the invited session title.

2) Fill the invited session organization form, provided in the conference web page http://www.sciiis.org/rmci2008/organizer.asp, option. If you don’t have access to the web, please, contact the RMCI 2008 Secretariat to the following e-mail: rmci2008@sciiis.org.

3) If the identified topic is suitable, the General Chair will accept the proposal, and you will receive an acceptation by e-mail, in a few days. This acceptation is not a final approval of the proposed session, but a pre-approval. The final approval will depend on identifying at least five papers for the proposed session, to be presented at the conference, and informing, at least, about their titles. With this acceptation: a) the proposed session will be included in the conference web page as well as its organizer's and chair's names, and b) its organizer will be able to announce his/her invited session in the context of RMCI 2008, by any media that he/she thinks appropriate, such as: Web page, hard-copy call for papers, call for papers attached to e-mails, etc. The invited session organizer has the responsibility of his or her session content.

4) Contact researchers and/or practitioners in your field to see if they can contribute a paper to your proposed session and attend at RMCI 2008.

5) Collect the extended abstracts or the paper drafts from each prospective participant.

6) As soon as you have 5 reviewed and accepted papers, you will complete the form regarding the invited session papers, provided in the conference web page http://www.sciiis.org/rmci2008/organizer.asp,

7) Step 6 will take your invited session to the status of an approved one if the papers fulfill all the requirements (i.e. quality). All the approved invited sessions will be included in the RMCI 2008 conference program.

8) No author, including the organizer, can present more than two papers in the invited session. A scholar/researcher can co-author more papers, but he, or she, cannot present more than two papers in the same invited session.


Invited sessions and symposia organizers with the best performance will be co-editors of the proceedings volume where their session or symposia paper were included.

Chairs of invited sessions will select the best paper presented at their session. Sessions' best papers will be reviewed by reviewers of the Journal of Systemics, Cybernetics, and Informatics (JSCI) in order to select the best 30% of them for their respective publications in the Journal.

Best invited sessions and symposia organizers are candidates for invited editors or co-editors of the JSCI Journal special issue related to their field of research interest.


Invited Session Organizer Role

An invited session organizer has a similar role to the invited editor in a journal, i.e. he or she is invited to identify and look for high quality papers, to review the papers of his, or her, session, to select the reviewers that will help him, or her, and to decide which papers he/she wants to be presented at respective invited session.

The invitation is an academic, not a financial one, because, unfortunately, we have no financial sponsor and the conference should self-finance itself. Consequently, we cannot make any financial commitment.

In this way we are trying to give a first step in re-engineering the process of conference organization: to move decisions to the right people, to those interfacing with the conference users, i.e. the authors. Our experience in the last 10 events we organized showed us that the invited organizers help a lot into achieving higher quality levels. So, an invited session organizer can dedicate his/her time and efforts to improve the papers quality in the research area of his/her interest and RMCI 2008 Organizing Committee will provide him/her with the place, the logistics, the proceedings, the intellectual and the physical context, etc. All that the invited session organizer has to worry about is the quality of the papers to be presented in her/his session(s).

Every session organizer will chair his/her session(s), and will be a member of RMCI 2008 Program Committee and might be one of the co-editors of one volume of the hard copy and the CD version of the proceedings, if his/her session(s) is(are) among the largest invited session(s) published in the respective volume. Depending on the quality and quantity of the papers of his/her session(s), as well as on the scope of the possible interested audience, IIIS may ask him/her, to edit, or co-edit, a multiple author book to be published.

An invited Session Organizer gets in charge of the reviewing process of her/his invited session papers (directly and/or by means of a Focal Program Committee she/he selects for her/his session), and she/he can make her/his own timetable, as long as the camera-ready papers are ready for the respective deadline, and she/he informs us about the initial set of accepted papers (at least 5 titles and their respective authors and e-mails) by the announced respective deadline. The invited session organizer has the autonomy required as to be the responsible for the quality of the papers to be presented in his, or her, session.

The Invited Session organizer will chair his/her session. While chairing it, she/he will determine oral presentation time according to the number of participants physically present. Usually 2-2:30 hours are allocated for each session containing an average of 5 papers, with a maximum of 6. Sometimes we include 7 papers in a session because statistically 10-15% of the registered persons don't show up. Then, when we allocate 7 papers, we are expecting a maximum of 6 oral presentations. When an Invited Session has more than 7 papers with their respective 7 registered participants, we allocate them into two time blocks of 2-2:30 hours for each block. When an Invited Session has more than 14 papers (and their respective registered participants), we allocate the presentation in three time blocks of 2-2:30 hours each block, and so on each block.

 

GUIDELINES FOR REVIEWERS (AND AUTHORS)

 

The Golden Rule “Treat others as you would like to be treated”, apply very well for the most general and essential guidelines for reviewers. Siegelman (1988) adapted this golden rule of the Ethics of Reciprocity in what might be called the Golden Rule of Reviewing. He stated “Referee manuscript as you would like to have your own papers treated” (Siegelman, 1988, p. 360; in Weller 2002; Editorial Peer Review, its Strength and Weaknesses)

 

"The Golden Rule" is an essential moral principle found in almost all major religious and cultures. It has been conceived as the most essential basis for the modern concept of human right. Principal philosophers and religious figures have stated it in different ways. At www.religioustolerance.org/reciproc.htm, for example, versions of the Golden Rule in 21 world religious are quoted. Analogously we might conceive Siegelman’s Reviewing Golden Rule as an essential rule that can be applied to virtually all reviewing processes and methods in spite of their high diversity and the variety of their ends and means.

 

To be more specific, with regards to some guidelines for reviewers, would depend on the objectives sought by the reviewing process and on its inherent limitations and restrictions. Different editorial objectives, for example, would probably originate different guidelines. Different disciplines with possibly different epistemological values would also probably require different guidelines. Journal reviewing might have different guidelines to the reviewing required by conferences presentations or proceedings publications. Scientific research papers would probably have different guidelines than those recommended for papers of case studies, work in progress, experience-based reflections, industrial innovations, analogical thinking, etc.

 

One way of dealing with the inherent diversity of disciplines and kinds of papers in a multi-disciplinary context is to ask the reviewers (beside their constructive feedback oriented to improve the paper, their reasoned recommendation for accepting/rejecting the paper) to rate the paper according different criteria established by the respective editor or the respective conference’s chair or organizers. The weights of these criteria would depend on the kind of article submitted and on the nature and the objectives of the corresponding Journal or the conference.

 

Consequently, in multi-, inter-, and trans-disciplinary contexts, especially in those oriented to forums integrated by the academic, industrial and public sectors, we recommend the reviewers to rate the article being reviewed according the following criteria:

 

1.      Originality: Not known or experienced before. A technique or a method not used before.  Has this or similar work been previously reported? Are the problems and/or approaches in the paper completely new?

 

2.      Novelty: According this criterion, it is not necessary for the paper to develop new techniques, or to generate new knowledge, but it should, at least, apply, or combine, them in a fresh and novel way or shed some new light on their applicability in a certain domain.

 

3.      Innovation: A new product, process or service based on new or known technologies, methods or methodologies. Known technologies and techniques might be combined to generate new product or service with potential users in the market. What defines an innovation is a new kind of possible users of a product or a service, not necessarily new knowledge, new techniques, new technologies, new methods, or new applications. Innovation is related to new uses or new markets.

 

4.      Relevance: Importance, usefulness, and/or applicability of the ideas, methods and/or techniques described in the paper.

 

5.      Appropriateness: Suitability, agreeableness, compatibility, congruity, and adequacy of the paper to the areas and topics of the journal or the conference. Would the article perhaps better be presented at another conference?

 

6.      Significance: Importance and noteworthiness of the ideas, methods and techniques used and/or described in the article. The problem approached in the article should be interesting and natural, and not just be chosen by the authors because it can be attacked by their methods. What it is presented in the article is not just obvious and trivial ideas.

 

7.      Quality: Scientific, technical, and/or methodological soundness of the article. Correctness of results, proofs and/or reflections. Inclusion in the articles of details that allow checking the correctness of the results or citations of articles where can be found the proof or parts of it.

 

8.      Presentation: Adequate organization of the article and the language used in it, as to make its content clear, easily readable and understandable. Clarity in what has been achieved by the author of the article. Even technical papers on a narrow topic should be written such that non-experts can comprehend the main contribution of the paper and the methods employed. The paper shouldn't just be a litany of deep but obscure theorems. The information of the paper should be available to the reader with a minimum of effort.

 

 

AUDIOVISUAL EQUIPMENT

 

The audiovisual equipment provided for most meetings will be a screen, LCD Projector, and a laptop. Any other equipment, if needed, will have to be supplied by the presenter.

 

 

CONFERENCE CONTACTS

 

Phone: +58 (212) 272-9094

Fax: + (407) 656-3516

 

Conference Secretariat: rmci2008@sciiis.org

 

 

More details can be found at the Conference web page: http://www.sciiis.org/rmci2008/

Answers to specific questions can also be requested by e-mail.