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Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Photogrammetric Engineering & Remote Sensing (PE&RS): Geospatial Responses to Disasters: A Holistic Approach (Web-based GIS/Mobile Devices)
11/01/2012
Photogrammetric Engineering & Remote Sensing (PE&RS)

Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Photogrammetric Engineering & Remote Sensing (PE&RS): Geospatial Responses to Disasters: A Holistic Approach (Web-based GIS/Mobile Devices)

Guest Editors
Dr. Maria Antonia Brovelli, Politecnico di Milano
Dr. Piero Boccardo, Politecnico di Torino
Mr. David Alvarez, Fluor-B&W Portsmouth

The Internet is a valuable tool for communication and data dissemination. It provides an easy way to bring people together with common interests to exchange knowledge, ideas and technology regardless of their geographical location. In its role as an effective tool for communication, it can be invaluable for disaster management yet it has been underutilized. Access to spatial data, as well as advanced mapping and spatial analysis over the Internet, is critical for all stages of disaster management including preparedness, response and recovery.

Effective disaster management requires integration and distribution of historical, preplanned, and real-time information from various sources. This information must be reliable, accurate and understandable in the fastest time possible to carry out the required activities. It is in these situations where Geo-enabled web services and mobile GIS can be used to plan for, respond to and recover from emergency situations by providing responders with the most accurate information when it is most needed and with the ability to be updated consistently. In other words, Geo-enabled web services plus the mobile GIS give emergency management professionals the ability to assemble large amounts of public information about their community to analyze and use the information in a intelligent and efficient manner. This will also allow the personnel, on the ground, to collect, maintain and store vital information related to infrastructure, cadastre, street networks and land use; all of which make the response to the disaster more cohesive.

The exploitation of web services and mobile GIS can significantly increase the usage and accessibility of spatial data, which is a key requirement before, during and after any disaster. Also, recent growth and advancements of various technologies has helped mobile GIS enabled users to decrease task redundancy and keep their data current. Utilizing mobile GIS and web services is both a way to increase speed and accuracy of communication and data flow during disasters.

This Special Issue will solicit articles on the following topics:

• Web based multidimensional GIS for disaster management
• Data interoperability for disaster management
• Web-based geospatial disaster response
• Crisis mapping
• Crowd sourcing data collection before, during and after disasters
• Workflow to increase real-time accessibility of data
• Data standardization, organizational and legal aspects of sharing remote sensing information.
• Workflow to convert data into usable information.

Authors must prepare manuscripts according to the PE&RS Instructions to Authors, published in each issue of PE&RS and also available on the ASPRS web site at http:/www.asprs.org/pers/AuthorInstructions. All submissions will be peer-reviewed in accordance with PE&RS policy. Because of page limits, not all submissions recommended for acceptance by the review panel may be included in the Special Issue. Under this circumstance, the guest editors will select the most relevant papers for inclusion in the Special Issue. Papers that are reviewed favorably, but will not fit within the Special Issue, can be revised and submitted for review as a new paper to the PE&RS Editor-in-Chief for possible publication in a future regular issue of PE&RS. .

Please e-mail your manuscript directly to: David Alvarez, Email: davidalvarez76@gmail.com, Phone: (971) 225-0039

Important Dates:

Manuscripts Due: 11/01/12

Decision to Authors: 02/01/13

Final Papers Due: 03/01/13

Publication: 10/01/13

Public Health Expert, Public Health Worker, Public Servant, Technologist
Call for Submissions: American Public Health Association Occupational Health and Safety Section and the Health Informatics Information Technology Section Digital Technology Award Contest
08/01/2012
Digital Technology Award Contest

Call for Submissions: American Public Health Association Occupational Health and Safety Section and the Health Informatics Information Technology Section Digital Technology Award Contest

The APHA Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) Section and the Health Informatics Information Technology (HIIT) Section seeks submissions of digital mixed or multimedia video presentations that represent the communication, delivery or recognition of occupational safety and health topics or products for the OHS/HIIT Digital Technology Award at the 140th Annual Meeting of the American Public Health Association. The deadline for submissions is August 1, 2012.

The purpose of the contest is to challenge designers, engineers, and information technology professional to develop a short presentation with the best or most attractive use of technology and digital video media that communicates, describes, delivers, trains, raises awareness, connects or collects - occupational safety and health, OHS issues or products. The presentations should be attuned to OHS information and utilize digital technology, social media, video, promotional and communication techniques. The best presentations will be able to reach OHS/Public Health audience and beyond.

The presentations should cover one or more of the following topic areas:

Ergonomics; Industrial Hygiene/Exposure Assessment or Hazard Control; Worker Training/ Education; Occupational Health Policy; Occupational/Industrial Safety; Cleaner Production/Pollution Prevention; Occupational/Industrial Psychology; Work Organization; Control/Hazard Banding; Prevention through Design; Occupational Medicine/Nursing; Occupational Epidemiology; or Other Occupational Safety and Health Related (e.g. economics, sociology, information technology).

The presentations should be between 2 - 15 minutes and designed for display on a LCD display monitor with or without sound. The presentations will be reviewed by the OHS/HIIT Award Committee and selected winners will be announced in September 2012. The criteria for selection are: 1) quality of design and use of technology; 2) ability to reach beyond OHS audiences; and 3) potential contribution to the field.

The first place winner will be awarded Admission to the APHA 2012 Conference. Depending on the number of submissions, there will also be awards for second place and most creative presentation. An LCD monitor will be dedicated to showcasing the presentations at the OHS booth in the Exhibition Hall of the APHA Section and SPIG Pavilion throughout the conference.

Please forward presentations to:

Walter Jones, MSc, CIH
Chair OHS Section
wjones@lhsfna.org

LHSFNA
905 16th Street, NW
WDC, 20009
202/383-2829

Nurse, Nurse Researcher, Public Health Expert, Public Health Worker, Public Servant
Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Safety Science: the Foundations of Safety Science
11/30/2012
Safety Science

Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Safety Science: the Foundations of Safety Science

Safety as a particular science can be claimed to have emerged in relation to social ambitions for increased safety and security – developing, experimenting and testing practical methods, tools and models with the aim of understanding and managing unwanted actions or events. However, being “applied” in nature does not mean that safety science is philosophy-free. All knowledge claims about safety are based on some form of foundational assumptions, rationality and logics. The ‘science’ part of ‘safety science’ seeks to ensure rigorousness of theories and methods for research, while providing credibility for the field and the community of people contributing to the domain.

Although established as a particular domain of knowledge, the status of safety science is in many ways contested. This can be related to its holistic character – through being constituted by a mix of scientists coming from different scientific traditions – and to its relatively young age as a scientific community. Moreover, over the last two decades safety science has been questioned in different ways and from different perspectives, for example: being found incoherent in its approach to risk (Clarke and Short, 1993); showing a disregard of safety as a social construct (Rochlin, 1999); and becoming embroiled in controversies over the role of culture in contributing to human actions in organisations (Hale, 2000). In addition to the concerns of safety science in particular, such questions are related to fundamental issues within scientific disciplines and the philosophy of science, such as the possibility for social modelling, the workings of the human mind, and the objective existence of the phenomenon of culture.

Perhaps one of the most profound foundational issues is the possibility of science being normative. The status of scientific knowledge can itself be questioned, for example by stating that science cannot be seen as anything more ‘value neutral’ than other knowledge, or by questioning whether scientific theories can be seen as true representations of reality. A large proportion of current debate within the philosophy of science can be argued as relating to the ongoing incommensurability of ‘realist’ and ‘constructivist’ scientific foundations. These hotly debated topics are nevertheless only the visible side of a wider debate on both science and technology, explored for some decades by different disciplines (philosophy, history, sociology) and addressing a number of classical questions about causality, determinism, laws, objectivity, induction, deduction, reductionism, facts, values, emergence, ontology, ethics, etc. These topics relate to any scientific endeavour, including safety science. We find, however, that such links to philosophical issues are not made in any consistent manner within the safety literature. New concepts, theories and models are often introduced with insufficient time and consideration devoted to clarifying and discussing their philosophical underpinnings and methodological foundations. In our view, this may be hampering the potential for fundamental and broadening scientific debate within the field. In fact, the diversity of disciplines involved in safety science is a wonderful opportunity to reflect on the different underlying assumptions about causality, laws, determinism, reductionism, value, etc. that influence methodological, empirical and theoretical developments. The idea behind this call for papers is to motivate a wide range of thought on these foundational issues.

As an example, a question such as ‘Can we learn from past incidents and accidents in order to project useful predictions into the future?’ represents an issue central to safety science. The question, however, is closely related to the well-known ‘problem of induction’ that has interested and puzzled philosophers of science for decades (Taleb, 2007). On logical grounds, it is indeed impossible to justify prediction through the observation of specific cases to be generalised. Only deductive reasoning can ensure such a logical approach. The way in which logical foundations are applied within safety science is therefore an interesting question.

A statement such as ‘safety is an emergent property’ challenges the principle of reductionism when it comes to applying it to open and complex systems. From cognitive and social-psychological dimensions to the social and political, including their technological aspects, can a reductionist account of safety be a likely prospect for the future? Reductionism, though not a popular option for many at the moment (Bunge, 2003), has been an important methodological driver for past success in science, and is certainly still influencing the rationale of many researchers (Wilson, 1999). For example: looking for simple solutions to complex problems will always reassert itself over more complex models and answers.

With regard to the ‘realist versus constructivist’ debate (Hacking, 2000), many may argue that ‘accidents cannot be seriously seen as including a subjective or socially constructed dimension’; these must be viewed as purely objective phenomena. To a realist, the consequences of an explosion may demonstrate that accidents are real, and nothing can deny this. However, a constructivist may say that this type of reasoning is missing a crucial point. That consequences (such as damages) are experienced may be certain and undeniable; nevertheless, the models used to interpret them fail to demonstrate how close they are to a ‘true’ description of reality ‘as it is’. To a constructivist, our understanding and knowledge of accidents and consequences varies with history and is dependent on social contexts. These elements of discussion indicate the necessity – in order to better understand arguments on safety and accidents – to distinguish ontology from epistemology.

The ‘realist versus constructivist’ debate also questions the scientist in relation to the object he or she studies and to society (Gibbons et al., 1994). Is the safety scientist outside society, trying to describe and predict external objective phenomena? Is this ideal of a ‘value neutral’ scientist producing an objective knowledge – to be used by various decision-makers within society – representative of safety researches? One might instead be inclined to think that, for most safety studies, there is a much closer relationship between researchers and their object. For many, indeed, safety is also a societal value for which they want clearly to contribute by producing useful models for improving situations. This value somehow blurs the boundaries of the traditional divide between outsiders and insiders.

In fact, when one starts exploring foundational topics such as these, it becomes clear that there is no ‘philosophy-free’ safety science, and that any research introduces, more or less implicitly, a great number of preconceptions that have been taken for granted. This call for papers is intended to contribute towards making scientific foundations more explicit to the community of safety scientists. The aim of this special issue is to facilitate an understanding of the philosophical underpinnings of safety science and the construction of a more systematic view on the foundations of safety science.

Original contributions are invited that deal, for example, with the following questions:

Key concepts and underlying assumptions affecting safety science
The object of study and the aim of safety science
Moral implications of the philosophical foundations of theories of safety science
Explanation and causality in safety science
Prediction in safety science
Duality of subjective and objective in safety science
The question of emergence in safety science
Philosophical underpinnings of Resilience Engineering, Behaviour Based Safety, Safety Culture, High Reliability Organisations, etc.

The deadline for receipt of papers is 30 November 2012, with publication expected for the second quarter of 2013. All papers will be subjected to the standard peer-review procedures of the journal. Papers should be submitted online via the Elsevier Editorial System (http://ees.elsevier.com/safety/)

References
Bunge, M. (2003). Emergence and convergence: Qualitative novelty and the unity of knowledge. University of Toronto Press.
Clarke, L., Short, J. F. (1993). Social organization and risk: Some current controversies. Annual Review of Sociology, 19, 375-399.
Gibbons, M., Limoges, C., Nowotny, H., Schwartzman, S., Scott, P., Trow, M. (1994). The new production of knowledge: The dynamics of science and research in contempory societies. Sage.
Hacking, I. (2000). The social construction of what? Harvard University Press.
Hale, A.R. (2000). Culture’s confusion. Editorial in Safety Science, 34, 1-14. Elsevier Science Ltd.
Rochlin, G. I. (1999). Safe operation as a social construct. Ergonomics, 42, 1549-1560.
Taleb, N. (2007). The Black Swan: The impact of the highly improbable. Penguin Books.
Wilson, E. O. (1999). Consilience: The unity of knowledge. Vintage.

Academic, Behavioral Scientist, Social Scientist
Call for Papers for a Focus Issue of Phytopathology on Food Safety: Human Pathogens on Plants
08/31/2012
Phytopathology

Call for Papers for a Focus Issue of Phytopathology on Food Safety: Human Pathogens on Plants

Article Submission Deadline: August 31, 2012

The special issue will focus on articles that contribute fundamental knowledge of the ecology of foodborne human pathogens on plants, include their fitness on plants, plant-microbe and intermicrobial interactions, and various aspects of plant biology that affect human pathogen colonization and survival.

Benefits to Authors

A focus issue offers the author multiple benefits. A single-topic issue gives scientists an opportunity to publish in a “Focus” issue alongside the related work of peers to highlight the progress being made. This issue will include review articles on the topic by leading scientists in this research area.

The Food Safety: Human Pathogens on Plants Focus Issue will be widely promoted and is expected to be highly cited, giving authors maximum exposure. Articles will be submitted to CrossRef, allowing citation tracking and connectivity as this research area moves forward in Phytopathology and other scientific journals. Articles will also be indexed by ISI Web of Science, PubMed and other important access portals. Submitted papers will be reviewed by an outstanding editorial board and a caring, professional editorial staff dedicated to publishing at the highest standard of quality.

If you are working on research of this type, submit your papers to Phytopathology and note that you would like to be considered for the Special Food Safety Focus Issue. Please submit your paper online at: http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/phytopathology by August 31st, 2012.

For more information about the scope of this issue, please contact George Sundin.

Biologist, Public Health Expert, Scientist, Toxicologist
Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Applied Ergonomics: Warnings
08/03/2012
Applied Ergonomics

Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Applied Ergonomics: Warnings

Christopher B. Mayhorn, North Carolina State University
Kenneth R. Laughery, Rice University
Michael S. Wogalter, North Carolina State University

Manuscripts are being solicited for a special issue of the Applied Ergonomics on Warnings to be published late 2013.

Theme of the Special Issue

Warnings are used to communicate hazard and risk information to people as a means of preventing accidents and injury. Since the mid 1980s, warning research has undergone tremendous growth in defining the factors that determine whether a warning will or will not be effective. Research has begun to evaluate early and intermediate stages of processing necessary for behavior change (e.g., tests of attention and comprehension), using new technologies and methodologies (e.g., virtual reality and behavioral paradigms), or using assessments of perceptions of risk and hazard. However, there is still a great need for new approaches and research to fill gaps in knowledge in this important area. While it is clear that warnings can be effective in increasing safe behavior in some situations and with some persons, their use remains controversial. Most research and discussions on warnings issues have been presented at conferences and in proceedings, but have not enjoyed wide dissemination in journal publications. As a result, this information has not reached individuals who might be able to use it in practice and research. The purpose of the Special Issue on Warnings in Applied Ergonomics is twofold. First, the Special Issue should make available to academics and practitioners, the state-of-the-art of warnings research and theory. Second, it should serve as a bridge between warnings research and other fields that relate to safety perceptions and behavior.

The co-editors of the Special Issue take a broad view of the area of warnings and they anticipate receiving research articles that address a range of topics. Manuscripts of particular interest might include (but are not limited to):

High quality empirical research applied to areas such as medicine, transportation, workplace safety, public information signage, security, or consumer products.

Theoretical contributions (possibly models) that would integrate and assess existing research in areas such as receiver characteristics (e.g., personality, age, etc.) or delivery modality (e.g., auditory, olfactory, etc.). Cross-cultural topics are especially important given the international readership of Applied Ergonomics.

Studies that address general warnings design and system integration that influence the effectiveness of warning labels on or accompanying consumer products (e.g., their display in owner’s manuals).

Research that includes practitioner case studies that describe domain specific situations where warnings are/are not effective. For example, research might investigate the role of warnings in the media (e.g., in advertisements, public service announcements, or on the web).

New approaches in research including methodological and technological advances to measuring and predicting compliance.

Work that explores non-design influences on warning effectiveness (e.g., personal, social, time, and stress characteristics or effects).

Forensic investigations that measure aspects of warnings and risk communications.

Manuscripts are due August 3, 2012. For further information and manuscript-format instructions, please visit http://ees.elsevier.com/jerg/ or contact any co-editor. Those wishing to submit a manuscript should contact the co-editors as soon as possible as there are specific instructions for identifying manuscripts for this Special Issue within the Elsevier Editorial System. Corresponding authors of accepted manuscripts will receive a printed copy of the special issue.

The co-editors are also soliciting qualified individuals to review submitted manuscripts. If interested, please contact Chris Mayhorn.

Christopher B. Mayhorn, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, North Carolina State University
Email: Chris_mayhorn@ncsu.edu
Telephone: (919) 513-4856

Academic, Behavioral Scientist, Informatician, Information Scientist, Psychologist, Public Health Expert, Public Health Worker, Public Servant, Social Scientist, Technologist
Call for Submissions for a Special Issue of the International Journal of Alcohol and Drug Research: Alcohol and Traffic Safety
06/30/2012
International Journal of Alcohol and Drug Research

Call for Submissions for a Special Issue of the International Journal of Alcohol and Drug Research: Alcohol and Traffic Safety

IJADR invites paper submissions on biological/behavioural aspects to social, policy and public health concerns related to alcohol and traffic safety. This special issue will be published in March, 2013. Paper submission deadline is June 30, 2012.

The International Journal of Alcohol and Drug Research, a peer-reviewed, free-of-charge, open access journal and the official Journal of the Kettil Bruun Society for Social and Epidemiological Research on Alcohol (KBS), invites the submission of papers on international perspectives on alcohol and traffic safety. Papers may deal with any aspect of the impact of alcohol on traffic safety, ranging from biological and behavioural aspects to social, policy and public health concerns. We encourage submissions that seek to improve understanding the nature of the problem, that identify and evaluate current practices to address the problem, and that consider new or innovative countermeasures. The target date for publication of the Special Issue is March, 2013. Accepted papers will be published online prior to their inclusion in this special issue in order to make the research available more quickly.

It has long been known that alcohol impairs driving-related skills, and increases the likelihood of collision involvement. In spite of many efforts to address the drinking-driving problem, it remains a leading cause of alcohol-related deaths and serious injuries. We encourage the submission of original articles (including both quantitative and qualitative research), methodological pieces, reviews, and policy analyses for consideration for the special issue. Examples of papers that would be of interest include, but are not limited to, the following: papers that examine the impact of comorbid conditions on drinking driving and alcohol effects; synergistic combinations of alcohol and other drugs on driving impairment issues; papers that examine the rates or determinants of drinking-driving in specific populations, groups or parts of the world; papers that review measures to address drinking driving or factors that influence drinking driving rates in specific countries or regions of the world; international reviews of drinking driving rates or initiatives. We are particularly interested in creating a forum for viewing the drinking driving issue from an international perspective. Interested authors are encouraged to contact the two editors of the special issue for additional information, and we particularly encourage submission of papers from authors in developing countries (i.e., low and middle income countries). All submissions should be prepared in accordance with the Author Guidelines outlined in the Journal website at www.ijadr.org, and be submitted through the website. Please indicate in the cover letter accompanying your manuscript that you would like to have the paper considered for the special issue on alcohol and traffic safety. Guest editors of the special issue on the alcohol and traffic safety are Drs. Jim Lange and Robert Mann. Contact information is below.

Jim Lange, PhD, AOD Initiatives, San Diego State University

6386 Alvarado Ct, Suite 224,San Diego, CA 92120 jlange@mail.sdsu.edu

Robert Mann, PhD
Social and Epidemiological Research, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, 33 Russell Street, Toronto, ON, M5S 2S1 robert_mann@camh.net

Health Services Researcher, Physician Researcher, Policy Analyst, Public Health Expert, Public Health Worker, Public Servant
Call for Papers for a Special Symosium of Reason Papers: The Epistemology, Ethics, and Politics of Emergencies
03/01/2014
Reason Papers

Call for Papers for a Special Symosium of Reason Papers: The Epistemology, Ethics, and Politics of Emergencies

Fall 2014 Symposium: The Epistemology, Ethics, and Politics of Emergencies

The Editors of Reason Papers are soliciting submissions of manuscripts for a special symposium on emergencies (due by March 1, 2014). Send submissions to reasonpapers@gmail.com. Inquiries welcome.

Submissions may grapple with any of a wide variety of issues related to emergencies (not an exhaustive list): How is “emergency” to be defined? How do we know when we enter/exit an emergency? How should moral and legal norms be formulated so as to take stock of emergencies–if they should? Are moral norms defeasible in the face of emergencies, or specially contextualized so as to preserve their indefeasibility? Who has special authority for decision-making in an emergency? How best to guard against abuses of power or corruptions of norms in emergency situations?

We’re looking for submissions across the broadest spectrum of relevant disciplines–philosophy, political science, legal studies, history, sociology, anthropology, medicine, criminology/police studies, strategic/military studies, etc.

Reason Papers is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal appearing annually each fall. It features book reviews and review essays along with full-length articles, symposia, and discussion notes of previously published articles. All manuscripts submitted for consideration as Articles are subject to a blind peer-review process (see Submissions page for instructions), and all contributions are subject to internal editorial review. Not limited to philosophy, we publish work by economists, legal scholars, political scientists, historians, and others, provided the content is normative in the philosophical sense. In addition to articles on moral, social/political, and legal philosophy, we also run essays on epistemology, aesthetics, art history, and classics.

Academic, Bioethicist, Ethicist, Philosopher, Physician Researcher, Policy Analyst, Public Health Expert, Public Health Worker, Public Servant, Social Scientist