ISTAS C

20 papers

YearTitle / Authors
20112011 IEEE International Symposium on Technology and Society, ISTAS 2011, Chicago, IL, USA, May 23-25, 2011
2011Acting locally: engaging girls in computer technology.
Mary Sheila Tracy, Florence Appel, Lucinda Caughey
2011Adoption of mobile advertising [empirical evidence from a developing country].
Chin Chin Wong, Santha Vaithilingam, Mahendhiran Nair
2011An exploratory study of student confidence in using electronic books as learning tools.
Queen Esther Booker, Fred L. Kitchens
2011An interdisciplinary approach to address identity theft education.
Susan Helser
2011An ontology to integrate multiple information domains in the patent system.
Siddharth Taduri, Gloria T. Lau, Kincho H. Law, Hang Yu, Jay P. Kesan
2011E-discovery regulations and information technology management.
Gautam B. Singh
2011Embedded governance in technology and the development of the smart grid.
Timothy Kostyk
2011Energy and society: challenges ahead.
Timothy Kostyk, Clinton J. Andrews, Joseph Herkert, Clark Miller
2011Exploring the role of digital diaspora in ICT4D project implementation.
Sriram Guddireddigari, Helena Grunfeld, Graeme Johanson
2011Improving classroom visual accessibility with cooperative smartphone recordings.
Raja S. Kushalnagar, Brian P. Trager
2011Learning how to be normal online [college newspaper comment boards and the college student identity].
Aimee Rickman
2011Monitoring people using location-based social networking and its negative impact on trust.
Sarah Jean Fusco, Katina Michael, Anas Aloudat, Roba Abbas
2011Quantum computing and cloud computing: humans trusting humans via machines.
Frances S. Grodzinsky, Marty J. Wolf, Keith W. Miller
2011Social ramifications of autonomous urban land vehicles.
Tyler C. Folsom
2011Socially beneficial technology [can it be achieved in practice?].
Greg Adamson
2011The rules [moral responsibility for computing artifacts].
Michael Davis, Keith W. Miller, Andreas F. X. Wolkenstein
2011Transafe: a crowdsourced mobile platform for crime and safety perception management.
Margaret Hamilton, Flora Dilys Salim, Eva Cheng, Sue Lynn Choy
2011What farmville can teach us about cooperative workflows and architectures.
Sabine Cikic, Julian R. Kücklich
2011Why so few of us? the mystery of the lack of women in computing.
Jane Chu Prey