Syracuse University

News Archive


Zhang establishes new academic journal, serves as founding editor in chief

September 04, 2008


Margaret Costello Spillett
mcostell@syr.edu



In 1995, Ping Zhang, a Ph.D. candidate at the time, began interviewing for her first
professorship and faced one of the key critical comments that has since spurred her research
and much of her academic career. "Nice presentation. But where does it fit in? This isn't
mainstream information systems (IS) research."


At the time, her work bridged multiple disciplines-psychology, computer science and
management-areas that typically didn't work together much. For an up-and-coming
young scholar, it was a risky area to study, as there were few academic journals that would
consider publishing this interdisciplinary research.


Yet to Zhang, it did not make sense that her research interest in human-computer
interaction (HCI) was not considered part of the mainstream IS field, which is concerned
with developing and utilizing information technologies to benefit people, organizations and
societies. She told herself that someday she would help make HCI research integral to
mainstream IS work.


The Syracuse University School of Information Studies (iSchool at Syracuse) and then-Dean
Raymond F. von Dran agreed with Zhang and saw the potential in this eager young mind.
Zhang was hired at the iSchool in 1995 and was granted tenure in 2001. That same year, she
set out to establish a Special Interest Group on Human-Computer Interaction (SIG-HCI)
within the premier professional organization of information systems researchers, the
Association for Information Systems (AIS). Her proposal was one of the first six approved by
AIS. Since then, SIG-HCI has become the largest and most active group within AIS.


In 2008, Zhang and several SIG-HCI advisors responded to the increasing interest in HCI
research and established a new journal. The quarterly online journal, AIS Transactions on
Human-Computer Interaction, was approved in June 2008 by the AIS council as the first
transactions journal of AIS. The new HCI journal complements its general research flagship
publication, Journal of the Association for Information Systems, of which Zhang serves as
senior editor.


The new international journal is open to research from all disciplines that communicate
knowledge concerning the interplay among humans, information, technologies and tasks.
The new journal is scheduled to begin publishing in July 2009 and will begin accepting
submissions soon.


Zhang serves as the founding editor in chief with her colleague Dennis Galletta from the
University of Pittsburgh. The iSchool's associate dean for research, Jeff Stanton, is on the
journal's editorial board, and Ph.D. student Janet Marsden is the managing editor.


"It is such a great honor to be part of this journal's creation," Zhang says. "Being the editor
in chief, I am able to work closely with Dennis and other advisors and senior editors to set
the goals and visions for the journal. In addition, all submissions will pass through Dennis
and me. We will have a direct impact on the field."


Zhang expects the journal to do well, as it meets a need for an increasingly popular area of
research. "We're seeing a growing realization among scholars that people really matter,"
Zhang says. "This school understood that from the very beginning. It can be a brilliant
technology, but if people don't use it, it is a waste. The same is true in business. You can have
a brilliant business plan and model, but if it doesn't attract and serve human customers, it
goes nowhere. HCI issues and phenomena can be found in many social contexts. The
Transactions journal is an outlet for scholars and practitioners to disseminate their discoveries
and opinions. It is also a statement that HCI research is an important part of the IS field."


Submissions to the journal can be made electronically at
http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/hci. Inquiries can be directed to thci@aisnet.org or
pzhang@syr.edu.