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SIGCAS Computers and Society, Volume 44
Volume 44, Number 1, April 2014
- Starr Roxanne Hiltz:
Making a difference in social use of computers. 5-8 - Tharindu Rekha Liyanagunawardena:
MOOC experience: a participant's reflection. 9-14 - Andrew A. Adams, Shirley A. Williams:
What's yours is mine and what's mine's my own: joint accounts and digital identity. 15-26
Volume 44, Number 2, July 2014
- Andréa Zariwny, Patricia Stewart, Marc Dryer:
Visuo-haptic learning of the inner ear: using the optical glyphs and augmented reality of the InvisibleEar©™. 5-7 - Peter Snyder, Chris Kanich:
Cloudsweeper and data-centric security. 8-10 - Vaibhav Garg, Emily K. Adams, Nathaniel Husted, James Brown:
Facilitative and rememberative: novel incentive structures for increased exercise in interactive media. 11-15 - Christopher Santos-Lang:
Our responsibility to manage evaluative diversity. 16-19 - Michael James Heron, Pauline Belford:
Ethics in context: a scandal in academia. 20-51 - Robin Cohen, Disney Yan Lam, Nikhil Agarwal, Michael Cormier, Jasmeet Jagdev, Tianqi Jin, Madhur Kukreti, Jiawei Liu, Kamal Rahim, Rahul Rawat, W. Sun, Donglin Wang, M. Wexler:
Using computer technology to address the problem of cyberbullying. 52-61
Volume 44, Number 3, September 2014
- Michael Goldweber:
Welcome from the new SIGCAS committee. 3-4 - Andrew A. Adams:
Report of a debate on Snowden's actions by ACM members. 5-7 - Herman T. Tavani, Frances S. Grodzinsky:
Trust, betrayal, and whistle-blowing: reflections on the Edward Snowden case. 8-13 - Joseph Verble:
The NSA and Edward Snowden: surveillance in the 21st century. 14-20 - Brian R. Hall:
A synthesized definition of computer ethics. 21-35
Volume 44, Number 4, November 2014
- Jane Stout, Tracy Camp:
Now what?: action items from social science research to bridge the gender gap in computing research. 5-8 - Gene Spafford:
We are out of balance. 9-12 - Valerie Barr:
Much ado about salary: Grace Hopper and Satya Nadella. 13-14 - Dee A. B. Weikle:
Reflections on GHC2014: the 2014 conference and hopes for the future. 15-17 - Michael James Heron, Pauline Belford, Ayse Göker:
Sexism in the circuitry: female participation in male-dominated popular computer culture. 18-29
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