[ut.theory] THEORY NET: Conference Announcement ...

arvind@utcsri.UUCP (10/06/87)

Date:         4 Oct 1987 18:56:52-EDT (Sunday)
From: Richard Ladner <LADNER@june.cs.washington.edu>
Subject:      Conference Announcement for DIAC-88

                               Call for Papers
     
              DIRECTIONS AND IMPLICATIONS OF ADVANCED COMPUTING
     
               DIAC-88   St. Paul, Minnesota   August 21, 1988
     
     
The adoption of current computing technology, and of  technologies  that  seem
likely  to  emerge  in  the near future, will have a significant impact on the
military, on financial affairs, on privacy and civil liberty, on  the  medical
and educational professions, and on commerce and business.
     
The aim of the  symposium  is  to  consider  these  influences  in  a  social,
economic,  and  political  context as well as a technical one.  The directions
and  implications  of  current  computing  technology,  including   artificial
intelligence  and  other  areas,  make attempts to separate science and policy
unrealistic.  We therefore solicit papers that directly address the wide range
of  ethical  and  moral  questions that lie at the intersection of science and
policy.
     
Within this broad context,  we  request  papers  that  address  the  following
suggested  topics.   The  scope of the topics includes, but is not limited to,
the sub-topics listed.
     
RESEARCH DIRECTIONS                      DEFENSE APPLICATIONS
     
 o+ Ethical Issues in Computing Research    o+ AI and the Conduct of War
 o+ Sources and Effects of Research Funding o+ Limits to the Automation of War
 o+ Responsible Software Development        o+ Automated Defense Systems
     
COMPUTING IN A DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY        COMPUTERS IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST
     
 o+ Community Access                        o+ Computing for the Handicapped
 o+ Computerized Voting                     o+ Resource Modeling
 o+ Civil Liberties                         o+ Arbitration and Conflict Resolu
 o+ Risks of the New Technology             o+ Software and the Professions
 o+ Computing and the Future of Work        o+ Software Safety
     
Submissions will be read  by  members  of  the  program  committee,  with  the
assistance  of  outside referees.  The program committee includes Steve Berlin
(MIT), Jonathan Jacky (U. WA), Richard Ladner (U. WA),  Bev  Littlewood  (City
U., London) Nancy Leveson (UCI), Peter Neumann (SRI), Luca Simoncini (U.Reggio
Calabria, Italy), Lucy Suchman (Xerox PARC), Terry  Winograd  (Stanford),  and
Elaine Weyuker (NYU).
     
Complete papers, not exceeding 6000 words, should include an abstract,  and  a
heading  indicating  to  which  topic  it  relates.  Reports on in-progress or
suggested directions for future work will be given  equal  consideration  with
completed work.  Submissions will be judged on clarity, insight, significance,
and originality.  Papers (4 copies) are due by  April  1,  1988.   Notices  of
acceptance  or rejection will be mailed by June 1, 1988.  Camera ready copy is
due by July 1, 1988.  Send papers to Professor Nancy Leveson, ICS  Department,
University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA 92717.
     
Proceedings will be distributed at the symposium, and will be available during
the  1988  AAAI  conference.   The  DIAC-87 proceedings are being published by
Ablex.  Publishing the DIAC-88 proceedings is planned.  The program  committee
will  select a set of submitted papers to be considered for publication in the
_C_o_m_m_u_n_i_c_a_t_i_o_n_s _o_f _t_h_e _A_C_M.
     
For further information contact Nancy Leveson (714-856-5517) or  Doug  Schuler
(206-865-3226).
     
        Sponsored by Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility
                                 P.O. Box 717
                             Palo Alto, CA  94301