Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Call for Papers: 2014 Fifth International Conference on E-Education, E-Business, E-Management and E-Learning.


2014 Fifth International Conference on E-Education, E-Business, E-Management and E-Learning.
Paper Deadline: September 5th, 2013

Journal: International Journal of e-Education, e-Business, e-Management and e-Learning (IJEEEE)
Description:

IC4E is an international forum for state-of-the-art research in e-Education, e-Business, e-Management and e-Learning. 2014 5th International Conference on e-Education, e-Business, e-Management and E-Learning (IC4E 2014) will be held in Toronto, Canada during January 13-14, 2014. It is one of the leading international conferences for presenting novel and fundamental advances in the fields of e-Education, e-Business, e-Management and E-Learning. It also serves to foster communication among researchers and practitioners working in a wide variety of scientific areas with a common interest in improving e-Education, e-Business, e-Management and E-Learning related techniques.

All submissions will be peer reviewed and evaluated based on originality, technical and/or research content/depth, correctness, relevance to conference, contributions, and readability. Submissions will be chosen based on technical merit, interest, applicability, and how well they fit a coherent and balanced technical program.

Website/Submission Location

Leading and Learning as a Cure for Pathological Management Styles


Learning organizations are likely to be more successful in developing new methods to compete on the market. Research by Michie & Zumitzavan (2012) furthers the argument that those organizations that foster learning and are managed by learning leaders are more successful than those who are reactive and focused on pathological styles. Learning leadership is progressive, open-minded, humanistic, and goal orientated that results in higher firm development and profits.  

Leadership and learning are two components that come together to foster development. The way in which leaders learn has an impact on how they act as administrators. Those that engaged in all four learning styles action, thinking, feeling and assessing others are more capability of using multiple leadership styles such as challenging, inspiring, enabling, modeling, and encouraging (Brown and Posner, 2001). 

Learning is one way in which organizations can continually renew themselves versus accepting the fate of a rigid decline. According to (Johnson and Scholes, 2002), organizations that are willing to continue learning throughout their lifecycles become more sustainable in the sense that they can adjust to new market trends, structures, and realities. If such organizations are not willing to learn and change they will be eventually crushed under new market realities by more competitive and nimble organizations. 

Leaders have the ability to prime the behavior of their followers. When leaders have a healthy respect for learning they can influence the expectations and behaviors of managers who further impact the social structure of employees. Creating a culture that respects and fosters learning, helps to enhance both the employees’ abilities, as well as the ability of the organization to adapt to market changes. 

The researchers Michie & Zumitzavan (2012), attempted to see how the attributes of managers impacted the learning and leading styles that influence organizational success. Twenty North Taiwanese firms were selected for the overall interviews and questionnaires.  They found that there was no relationship between learning styles and the demographics of the organization or location. In other words, learning leadership is not tied to organizational demographics. The impact of organizational learning styles was influenced by the leadership styles within the organization. 

Effective Organizations: Managers within effective organizations believed that technology and cost reduction were two important factors. However, they agreed that by developing employees skills their organizations could be enhanced. Thus, they sent people to seminars, workshops, training, educational outlets, etc… to improve their skills. They welcomed open opinions, managed workplace problems progressively, delegated for employee enhancement, and continued to forecast the needs of their organizations into the future. 

Less Effective Organizations: Less effective organizations are marked by their short-sighted thinking that focused on day-to-day issues. They were less able to forecast the future of the organization or able to solidify the goals of the organization. They rarely sent people for enhancement training or education and did not do well in managing employee problems. Furthermore, they were not willing to delegate authority and did not encourage employee opinions. 

The research results indicate that short-sighted behaviors, whereby individuals are not learning, are more prone to poor performance. With such results it is important to understand how training and development has an enhanced place in the most successful organizations.  Such training doesn’t need to be formal but does need to encourage constant learning and development to be effective. The learning style of the leaders and their level of expectation setting appear to foster organizational learning. 

Micromanaging leads to poor results and creates a systematic structure that damages the organizations ability to effectively compete on the market. Some have argued that micromanaging is a pathological behavior rooted in the manager’s childhood experiences, perceptions of incompetence, and their inability to think beyond their most immediate needs. Such managers foster fiefdoms in the workplace, manage by fear, and often take credit for others work. Many times their policies, procedures, and departmental approaches are based in the need for self-validation. For investors and executives who desire to see their organization succeed, they should take considerable care in fostering learning within their organizations and limit the advancement of those with the least capacity to lead. New ideas bring opportunities for organizational advancement. Where profits are low, adaptation slow, and employee development under toe….you may just have an abundance of pathological management styles.

Brown, M. and Posner, Z., (2001). Exploring the relationship between learning and leadership.
Leadership and organizational development journal,  22 (5–6), 274–280.

Johnson, G. and Scholes, K.,(2002). Exploring corporate strategy. Essex: Pearson Education.

Michie, J. & Zumitzavan, F. (2012). The impact of learning and leadership management styles on organizational outcomes: a study of Tyre Firms in Thailand. Asia Pacific Business Review, 18 (4).

Monday, August 26, 2013

Call for Papers Uncertain Reasoning Conference-Artificial Intelligence



Call for Papers Uncertain Reasoning Conference-Artificial Intelligence

Submission Deadline: November 18th, 2013


Many problems in AI (in reasoning, planning, learning, perception and robotics) require the agent to operate with incomplete or uncertain information. The objective of this track is to present and discuss a broad and diverse range of current work on uncertain reasoning, including theoretical and applied research based on different paradigms. We hope that the variety and richness of this track will help to promote cross fertilization among the different approaches for uncertain reasoning, and in this way foster the development of new ideas and paradigms.

The Special Track on Uncertain Reasoning (UR) is the oldest track in FLAIRS conferences, running annually since 1996. The UR'2014 Special Track at the 27th International Florida Artificial Intelligence Research Society Conference (FLAIRS-27) is the 19th in the series. As the past tracks, UR'2014 seeks to bring together researchers working on broad issues related to reasoning under uncertainty.

Papers on all aspects of uncertain reasoning are invited. Papers of particular interest include, but are not limited to: 

- Uncertain reasoning formalisms, calculi and methodologies
- Reasoning with probability, possibility, fuzzy logic, belief function, vagueness, granularity, rough sets, and probability logics
- Modeling and reasoning using imprecise and indeterminate information, such as: Choquet capacities, comparative orderings, convex sets of measures, and interval-valued probabilities
- Exact, approximate and qualitative uncertain reasoning
- Bayesian networks
- Graphical models of uncertainty
- Multi-agent uncertain reasoning and decision making
- Decision-theoretic planning and Markov decision process
- Temporal reasoning and uncertainty
- Nonmonotonic reasoning
- Conditional Logics
- Argumentation
- Belief change and Merging
- Similarity-based reasoning
- Construction of models from elicitation, data mining and knowledge discovery
- Uncertain reasoning in information retrieval, filtering, fusion, diagnosis, prediction, situation assessment
- Practical applications of uncertain reasoning


All accepted papers will be published as FLAIRS proceedings by AAAI Press. We anticipate that, as in previous years, the International Journal of Approximate Reasoning (IJAR) will publish a special issue devoted to extended versions of the top papers at the track.


The proceedings of FLAIRS-27 will be published by the AAAI. Authors of accepted papers will be required to sign a form transferring copyright of their contribution to AAAI.


At least one author of each accepted paper is required to register, attend, and present the paper at FLAIRS-27.

Developing CRM Systems on a Global Scale


The world is abuzz with products and services from nearly every corner of the globe. High saturation requires changing Customer Relation Management (CRM) techniques from a product-centered to a customer-centered approach. Fundamentally, organizations attempt to develop strong relationships with customers in order to maintain a level of connection to customers and product identity to foster future sales. Research by Kumar, et. al (2011), helps to show how CRM systems are copied and adopted in North American, Asia, and Europe.

CRM systems have acquired a mixed bag in their effort to move from local to global in their customer development. A majority of those who attempt to make this move often fail and have to find alternative approaches to establishing CRM related relationships. Despite its difficulty companies realize that it is a worthwhile pursuit in order to gain a sense of understanding and data feedback about customers. 

Large distribution systems that span multiple countries and economic blocks will also need methods of managing customer’s data. Some firms have been successful in developing frameworks for Global Custer Relationship Management (GCRM) to help them manage regional differences between customers and their regions. Such systems encourage higher levels of product sales and management. 
The researchers conducted interviews of top marketing professionals in NY, Singapore and Italy. They also attempted to assess the use of CRM on a global level and focused on large multi-national firms. Questions were geared around understanding the nature of global CRM are and what direction companies are moving strategically in their adoption plans.

Through the interviews they found that North American had some of the largest uses of GCRM systems and has been tapering. Asian and European firms focused on benchmarking North American firms in their attempt to determine whether or not their own systems are appropriate and what direction they should be taking.  They used similar firms as theirs to benchmark. Executives believed it is beneficial to have a CRM system that works across multiple regions. At present, Asian and European firms are afraid of failure of implementation but acknowledge North American persistence in this area.

The quantitative portion of the study helps to understand that availability of information on CRM systems impacted the learning curve of adaptation in other world regions. The more structural similarity between organizations, geographic distance, economic similarities, and market similarities between two regions the more learning and adoption took place. Organizations are still actively seeking Global CRM opportunities.

There is little doubt that the growing complexity of the supply chain network and increased movement of products and service across the globe will create more complex systems. Global CRM systems are needed to manage the multiple regions and nations in order to help spur future growth. As such systems are costly and difficult to develop those systems that appear to work well are being adapted by others organizations without having to put in the research investments and time to do so. 

Kumar, et. al. (2011). Analyzing the diffusion of global customer relationship management: a cross-regional modeling framework. Journal of International Marketing, 19 (1).

Station Sushi in Solana Beach


Station Sushi in Solana Beach offers a full menu of sushi at a price that you can afford. Compared to many other restaurants their sushi is top quality. They have a full bar with sporting events and casual seating. There is a large patio for those who wish to dine outside. It is located off of N HWY 101 which offers street side parking. 

They offer appetizers, entrees, dinner, combination plates, sushi, sashimi, rolls and deserts. Sushi comes in everything from tuna to octopus. For a group of three the total price with two glasses of wine was around $60 making it an affordable choice. This may be why it is a favorite of locals on weekend nights. 

Patron age ranges were open but generally focused around the 30 to 40 years. Music was modern and just a touch loud. However, as conversation starts you seem to be able to tone it out. The patio is a little quieter and offers the opportunity to enjoy the evening coastal air. Casual sushi is the best way to describe the atmosphere.


125 N Hwy 101,
 Solana Beach, CA 92075
(858) 481-9800