Quo Vadis Conferences in the Business and Information Systems Engineering (BISE) Community After Covid: What Can Stay, What Should Go, What Do We Need to Change for Our Future Scientific Conferences?
The global Covid-19 pandemic has not only influenced the way we work and collaborate on our research but also how we present and exchange novel contributions at scientific conferences. Governmental lockdowns and (inter)-national travel restrictions have forced conference organizers to move from offline conference venues to virtual platforms quickly. Our discipline, the Business & Information Systems Engineering (BISE) community, is an interdisciplinary field involving the more conference-driven computer sciences and the more journal-oriented social science. Thus, the impact of Covid-19 on—and the (needed) experience with—new conference formats require a differentiated discourse on the role of the future of our scientific conferences. Hence, we aim to contribute to a discussion on (1) what can stay offline / as on-site conference formats, (2) what we can learn from the experience with (new) online formats, and (3) what do we need for our future scientific conferences in the BISE community?
%0 Journal Article
%1 ls_leimeister
%A Leimeister, Jan Marco
%A Stieglitz, Stefan
%A Matzner, Martin
%A Kundisch, Dennis
%A Flath, Christoph
%A Röglinger, Maximilian
%D 2021
%J Business & Information Systems Engineering (BISE)
%K itegpub pub_jml u3bpub
%N 6
%P 741-749
%R 10.17170/kobra-202112095208
%T Quo Vadis Conferences in the Business and Information Systems Engineering (BISE) Community After Covid: What Can Stay, What Should Go, What Do We Need to Change for Our Future Scientific Conferences?
%U https://kobra.uni-kassel.de/handle/123456789/13575
%V 63
%X The global Covid-19 pandemic has not only influenced the way we work and collaborate on our research but also how we present and exchange novel contributions at scientific conferences. Governmental lockdowns and (inter)-national travel restrictions have forced conference organizers to move from offline conference venues to virtual platforms quickly. Our discipline, the Business & Information Systems Engineering (BISE) community, is an interdisciplinary field involving the more conference-driven computer sciences and the more journal-oriented social science. Thus, the impact of Covid-19 on—and the (needed) experience with—new conference formats require a differentiated discourse on the role of the future of our scientific conferences. Hence, we aim to contribute to a discussion on (1) what can stay offline / as on-site conference formats, (2) what we can learn from the experience with (new) online formats, and (3) what do we need for our future scientific conferences in the BISE community?
@article{ls_leimeister,
abstract = {The global Covid-19 pandemic has not only influenced the way we work and collaborate on our research but also how we present and exchange novel contributions at scientific conferences. Governmental lockdowns and (inter)-national travel restrictions have forced conference organizers to move from offline conference venues to virtual platforms quickly. Our discipline, the Business & Information Systems Engineering (BISE) community, is an interdisciplinary field involving the more conference-driven computer sciences and the more journal-oriented social science. Thus, the impact of Covid-19 on—and the (needed) experience with—new conference formats require a differentiated discourse on the role of the future of our scientific conferences. Hence, we aim to contribute to a discussion on (1) what can stay offline / as on-site conference formats, (2) what we can learn from the experience with (new) online formats, and (3) what do we need for our future scientific conferences in the BISE community?},
added-at = {2021-07-06T14:22:40.000+0200},
author = {Leimeister, Jan Marco and Stieglitz, Stefan and Matzner, Martin and Kundisch, Dennis and Flath, Christoph and Röglinger, Maximilian},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2ba4f05dee76978f6866272b3da53aea9/ls_leimeister},
doi = {10.17170/kobra-202112095208},
interhash = {c4e4e84a0d30f2cdd864cc7ce9eda0d4},
intrahash = {ba4f05dee76978f6866272b3da53aea9},
issn = {1867-0202},
journal = {Business & Information Systems Engineering (BISE)},
keywords = {itegpub pub_jml u3bpub},
language = {english},
month = jul,
number = 6,
pages = {741-749},
timestamp = {2022-08-29T12:25:56.000+0200},
title = {Quo Vadis Conferences in the Business and Information Systems Engineering (BISE) Community After Covid: What Can Stay, What Should Go, What Do We Need to Change for Our Future Scientific Conferences?},
url = {https://kobra.uni-kassel.de/handle/123456789/13575},
volume = 63,
year = 2021
}