https://www.openresearch.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=EC_2009&feed=atom&action=historyEC 2009 - Revision history2024-03-28T20:15:55ZRevision history for this page on the wikiMediaWiki 1.31.1https://www.openresearch.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=EC_2009&diff=12348&oldid=prev127.0.0.1: Event created2009-01-18T10:58:24Z<p>Event created</p>
<p><b>New page</b></p><div>{{Event<br />
| Acronym = EC 2009<br />
| Title = Tenth ACM Conference on Electronic Commerce<br />
| Type = Conference<br />
| Series = <br />
| Field = Uncategorized<br />
| Homepage = www.sigecom.org/ec09<br />
| Start date = Jul 6, 2009 <br />
| End date = Jul 10, 2009<br />
| City= Stanford<br />
| State = <br />
| Country = California<br />
| Abstract deadline = <br />
| Submission deadline = Feb 9, 2009<br />
| Notification = <br />
| Camera ready = <br />
}}<br />
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<pre><br />
======================================================================<br />
CALL FOR PAPERS, WORKSHOPS, AND TUTORIALS<br />
Tenth ACM Conference on Electronic Commerce (EC'09)<br />
<br />
July 6-10, 2009 Stanford, California, USA<br />
http://www.acm.org/sigs/sigecom/ec09/<br />
<br />
Since 1999 the ACM Special Interest Group on Electronic Commerce<br />
(SIGecom) has sponsored the leading scientific conference on advances in<br />
theory, systems, and applications for electronic commerce. The Tenth ACM<br />
Conference on Electronic Commerce (EC'09) will feature invited speakers,<br />
paper presentations, workshops, and tutorials covering all areas of<br />
electronic commerce.<br />
<br />
The natural focus of the conference is on computer science issues, but<br />
the conference is interdisciplinary in nature, addressing research<br />
related to (but not limited to) the following topics:<br />
<br />
* Applications and Empirical Studies, including<br />
o Prediction/information markets<br />
o Experience with e-commerce systems and markets<br />
o Economic approaches to spam control<br />
o Pricing for quality of service<br />
o Web analysis and characterization for e-commerce<br />
o Open access publishing<br />
o User contributed content<br />
o Economics of online textual content<br />
o Behavioral and experimental economics related to e-commerce<br />
<br />
* Theory and Foundations, including<br />
o Computational aspects of economics, game theory, finance, and voting<br />
o Automated mechanism design, including computational pricing<br />
o Algorithmic mechanism design<br />
o Auction and negotiation technology<br />
o Formation of supply chains, coalitions, and virtual enterprises<br />
o Agency and contract theory in e-commerce<br />
o Game-theoretic aspects of network formation on the Internet<br />
o Preferences and decision theory<br />
o Economics of information<br />
<br />
* Architectures and Languages, including<br />
o Peer-to-peer, grid, and other open distributed systems<br />
o Mobile commerce<br />
o Software and systems requirements, architectures, and performance<br />
o Languages for describing agents, goods, services, and contracts<br />
<br />
* Automation, Personalization, and Targeting, including<br />
o AI and autonomous agent systems in e-commerce<br />
o Automated shopping, trading, and contract management<br />
o Recommendation, reputation, and trust systems<br />
o Advertising and marketing technology<br />
o Sponsored web search, viral marketing<br />
o Databases and data mining<br />
o Machine learning for e-commerce applications<br />
o Mobile and location-based services<br />
o Search and information retrieval for e-commerce<br />
<br />
* Security, Privacy, Encryption, and Digital Rights, including<br />
o Intellectual property and digital rights management<br />
o Digital payment systems<br />
o Authentication<br />
o Privacy-enhancing technologies<br />
o Economics of information security and privacy<br />
<br />
* Social factors, including<br />
o Usability of e-commerce systems<br />
o Human factors in security and privacy<br />
o Human factors in agents and mechanism design for e-commerce<br />
o Legal, policy, and social issues<br />
<br />
The conference will be held from Monday July 6th through Friday July<br />
10th in the Frances C. Arrillaga Alumni Center at Stanford University,<br />
Palo Alto, Calfornia. Tutorials and workshops will be held on Monday<br />
July 6th and Wednesday July 7th, 2009. Accepted technical papers and<br />
invited talks will be presented from Wednesday July 8th through Friday<br />
July 10th, 2009. This conference is co-located with the TARK XII<br />
conference (Theoretical Aspects of Rationality and Knowledge) at<br />
Stanford on July 6-8, 2009.<br />
<br />
PAPER SUBMISSION<br />
<br />
The conference is soliciting full papers (as well as workshop and<br />
tutorial proposals; see below) on all aspects of electronic commerce.<br />
Submitted papers will be evaluated on significance, originality,<br />
technical quality, and exposition. They should clearly establish the<br />
research contribution, its relevance to electronic commerce, and its<br />
relation to prior research. Submissions to be considered for publication<br />
in the archival ACM proceedings may be up to 10 pages (including the<br />
bibliography), in 10-point font, double-column format, with reasonable<br />
margins and interline spacing. Additional details may be included in<br />
appendices beyond the 10 page limit but will only be read at the<br />
discretion of the reviewers. These submissions must not have appeared<br />
before (or be pending to appear) in a journal or conference with<br />
published proceedings. All accepted submissions will need to be migrated<br />
to the publisher's format/macros for the proceedings. Instructions will<br />
be given by the publisher after the paper is accepted. Accepted papers<br />
will be presented at the conference in one of two formats: (1) a long<br />
oral presentation or (2) a short oral presentation coupled with<br />
placement in a poster session. Presentation format will be chosen by the<br />
program committee with the goal of encouraging breadth and diversity<br />
among oral presentations. Presentation format will have no bearing on<br />
how papers appear in the archival conference proceedings: all accepted<br />
papers will be allotted 10 pages in the proceedings. To accommodate the<br />
publishing traditions of different fields, authors may instead submit<br />
working papers that are under review or nearly ready for journal review.<br />
These submissions will be subject to review and considered for<br />
presentation at the conference but only a one page abstract will appear<br />
in the proceedings with a URL that points to the full paper and that<br />
will be reliable for at least two years. Open access is preferred<br />
although the paper can be hosted by a publisher who takes copyright and<br />
limits access, as long as there is a link to the location. Electronic<br />
submission in is required. Details on the submission procedure will be<br />
made available on the main conference web page.<br />
<br />
WORKSHOP AND TUTORIAL PROPOSALS<br />
<br />
The conference is soliciting proposals for tutorials and workshops to be<br />
held in conjunction with the conference. Tutorial proposals should<br />
contain the title of the tutorial, a two-page description of the topic<br />
matter, the names and short biographies of the tutor(s), and<br />
dates/venues where earlier versions of the tutorial were given (if any).<br />
Workshop proposals should contain the title of the workshop, the names<br />
and short biographies of the organizers, and the names of confirmed or<br />
candidate participants. Workshop proposals should also include a<br />
two-page description describing the theme, the reviewing process for<br />
participants, the organization of the workshop, and required facilities<br />
for the workshop. Informal suggestions for workshop or tutorial ideas<br />
can also be sent without a full proposal to the workshop and tutorial<br />
chairs at any time. Submission information can be found on the<br />
conference website.<br />
<br />
KEY DATES<br />
<br />
o February 9, 2009: Full electronic paper submissions due<br />
o Upload at http://www.acm.org/sigs/sigecom/ec09/<br />
o February 13, 2009: Workshop and Tutorial proposals due<br />
o Send to: ec09-workshops-chair@acm.org and ec09-tutorial-chair@acm.org.<br />
o March 13, 2009: Tutorial & workshop proposal accept/reject notifications<br />
o March 27, 2009: Initial Reviews Returned<br />
o April 3, 2009: Responses from Authors Returned<br />
o April 10, 2009: Paper Accept/Reject Notifications<br />
o July 6-7, 2009: Conference Workshops and Tutorials, Stanford, CA, USA<br />
o July 8-10, 2009: Conference Technical Program, Stanford, CA, USA<br />
<br />
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE<br />
<br />
General Chair: John Chuang, University of California at Berkeley<br />
<br />
Program Chairs: Lance Fortnow, Northwestern University and Pearl Pu,<br />
Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne<br />
<br />
Workshop Chair: Mohammad Mahdian, Yahoo! Research<br />
<br />
Tutorial Chair: Vincent Conitzer, Duke University<br />
<br />
Local Arrangements: Gagan Aggarwal, Google, Ashish Goel, Stanford<br />
University and Suzanne Bigas, Stanford Computer Forum<br />
<br />
Program Committee: TBD<br />
<br />
FURTHER INFORMATION<br />
<br />
More information and details are available at the conference web site:<br />
http://www.acm.org/sigs/sigecom/ec09<br />
<br />
General inquiries and requests pertaining to the conference should be<br />
sent to:<br />
ec09-general-chair@acm.org<br />
<br />
Inquiries and requests pertaining specifically to the program, and in<br />
particular to paper submission and decision status, should be sent to:<br />
ec09-pc-chairs@acm.org<br />
<br />
Inquiries and requests pertaining specifically to workshop and tutorials<br />
should be sent to<br />
ec09-workshops-chair@acm.org and ec09-tutorial-chair@acm.org respectively.<br />
</pre>This CfP was obtained from [http://www.wikicfp.com/cfp/servlet/event.showcfp?eventid=4488&amp;copyownerid=2932 WikiCFP]</div>127.0.0.1