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European Conference on Information Systems (ECIS) 2012, Barcelona, June 10-13, 2012

TECHNOLOGY SUBSTITUTION TRACK


TRACK DESCRIPTION

The topic of technology substitution, or the replacement of one technology with another by businesses and individuals, is increasingly a focus of attention in IS research. The substitution perspective evaluates comparative characteristics of the substitute technology over the existing technology. This differentiates substitution from technology adoption, which considers the new technology artifact in isolation.

Substitution manifests itself in many domains. The replacement of IPv4 with IPv6 is one example, especially considering the role governments have played in incentivizing this substitution across all sectors, including national and sub-national governmental entities and the for- and non-profit private sectors. IT security is a critical area of substitution, as governments and companies need to stay at least one step ahead of terrorists and criminals. Other examples of substitution are the replacement of corporate knowledge repositories with more flexible collaboration tools (often labeled Enterprise 2.0); and the transition from physical to streaming media and changes in corresponding business models.

Technology substitution is both an outcome and a driver of welfare. Many processes and functions have already become technology-enabled, and the range of operations supported by technology is constantly increasing. After the initial adoption further improvements in productivity and welfare are usually caused by the substitution of the existing technology with a new, more efficient one. Thus substitution factors play an increasingly important role in the welfare of countries, organizations and individuals.


TOPICS

Topics in this track include the following:
* Antecedents of technology substitution at the individual, organizational, interorganizational and societal levels
* Cross-country differences in technology substitution
* Substitution-based business models
* Substitution as a driver of IT security
* Theoretical and empirical interplay between technology substitution and technology adoption
* The impact of substitution in society and business
* Variations in the speed and the extent of substitution across different industries and business ecosystems
* The impact of new technologies and functionality on user experience
* Substitution and design of technology artifacts, interfaces etc.
* Other substitution-related topics

All types of contribution are invited: full research papers, research-in-progress papers as well as teaching cases.


TRACK CHAIRS

Carleen Maitland, The Pennsylvania State University, USA
Nicolai Pogrebnyakov, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark


DEADLINE

As with other ECIS tracks, submissions are due by December 1, 2011.


MORE INFORMATION

For more information about the track and the conference, please visit http://www.ecis2012.eu/tracks/technology-substitution.html

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