WISP 2020 Paper Template



The Title: Times New Roman, 12 Bold

Initial submissions should be blinded without authors’ info.

Camera ready submissions due by Nov 30, 2021 should include info formatted as follows:

Author 1[1]

School/College, Name of the University,

City, State, Country

Author 2

School/College, Name of the University,

City, State, Country

Author 3

School/College, Name of the University,

City, State, Country

ABSTRACT (up to 200 words)

All submission should be in Microsoft Word 97-2003 format (e.g. as .doc file not .docx) using the workshop template, with no author names or other identification in the manuscript file, including document properties, and tracked changes (blind the submission, and remove all identifying document properties please). Please use the WISP2021 style for your paper and references which is based on the MISQ style (). Completed research and case study papers should be limited to fifteen (15) pages. Research-in-progress papers should be limited to eight (8) pages. Panel proposals should be limited to three (3) pages. Final camera-ready manuscripts of accepted submissions should include authors name, email and affiliation.

Keywords: Select 5 to 10 words or phrases to be used for indexing, in consultation with a technical thesaurus, if helpful. These might include important terms from the title, their synonyms, or related words. Authors should use neither prepositions nor hyphens unless the hyphenated parts are always treated as a unit. Authors should use terms that are as specific as possible and whose meaning is generally known.

INTRODUCTION

We ask that authors follow these basic guidelines when submitting to the Workshop on Information Security & Privacy. In essence, you should format your paper exactly like this document. The easiest way to use this template is to replace the placeholder content with your own material. Citations in the text should be per MISQ as noted here with no comma (Curry et al. 2018; Ho and Gross 2021) and without ampersand (D’Arcy et al. 2009; Goel and Shawky 2009; Ho et al. 2016; Ho et al. 2017).

HEADING 1 - 12pt bold, UPPERCASE, Centered Over Text

Please adhere to the US letter size only. In MS Word, you can check the page format in the menu: File --> Page Setup). All final publications will be formatted and displayed with double-space in US letter size. Right margins should be justified, not ragged. All margins must measure 1 inch (2.5 cm) around on all sides of the page. Beware, especially when using this template on a Macintosh, Word may change these dimensions in unexpected ways.

Heading 2 – 12pt Bold, Title Case, Centered

Every submission, after listing the title and authors of the paper, should begin with an abstract, followed by a set of keywords. The abstract should be a concise statement of the problem, approach, and conclusions of the work described. It should clearly state the paper's contribution to the field. The abstract header is Times New Roman 12-point bold centered (AbstractHeader style), while the abstract text is Times New Roman 12-point regular font, full justified with left and right indents of 1-inch (2.5 cm) AbstractText style. Keywords are to appear in Times New Roman 12-point (Keyword style).

Heading 3 – 12pt bold and italic, sentence case, left aligned

Your paper’s title should be using the “Title” style in this template (which is configured as Times New Roman 12-point bold). Ensure proper capitalization within your title (i.e., “The Next Frontier of Information Systems” versus “the next frontier of Information systems.”

Heading 4 – 12pt bold and italic, sentence case, left aligned, on same line as beginning of text, followed by a colon: All proper nouns should be capitalized. Articles (the, a), coordinating conjunctions (and, but, or, for, nor, etc.) should not be capitalized, unless, of course, they are used as the first word in the title. Likewise, styles should apply for prepositions (on, at, to, from, by, etc.).

See layout of figures and tables below.

|[pic] |

Figure 1. Layout of Figures and Captions for Figures (Johns Hopkins 2020)

Place figures and tables close to the relevant text (or where they are referenced in the text). Captions should be using the “Caption” style – configured as Georgia 10-point bold. They should be numbered (e.g., “Table 1” or “Figure 2”), centered and placed beneath the figure or table. Please note that the words “Figure” and “Table” should be spelled out (e.g., “Figure” rather than “Fig.”) wherever they occur. The proceedings will be made available online, thus color figures are possible.

Table 1. Layout of Tables and Captions for Tables

|Header 1 |Header 2 |Percentage |

|Training Set |53.45 |26% |

|Development Set |22.34 |10% |

|# Unverified News |32.13 |12% |

|# Verified Facts |24.56 |11.5% |

|# Engagements |67.86 |32% |

It is important that you write for a general audience. It is also important that your work is presented in a professional fashion. This guideline is intended to help you achieve that goal. By adhering to the guideline, you also help the conference organizers tremendously in reducing our workload and ensuring impressive presentation of your conference paper. We thank you very much for your cooperation and look forward to receiving a professional looking, camera-ready version!

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS (Optional)

Acknowledgements may be added to the camera-ready version of your paper, if applicable.

REFERENCES

Citation ordering and format should follow published MISQ articles. Use of a citation manager (e.g. Mendely) and the MIS Quarterly style (e.g. ) is strongly encouraged! References must be complete, i.e., include, as appropriate, volume, number, month, publisher, city and state, editors, last name and initials of all authors, page numbers, etc. Below are some general directions:

• Sequence: Entries should be ordered alphabetically (in text and Reference section) according to authors’ or editors’ last names, or the title of the work for items with no author or editor listed.

• References in text: These must be included in Reference section and vice versa. References in text should be of the format (D’Arcy et al. 2009; Goel and Shawky 2009).

• References to items in periodicals: Author, year, title, journal, volume, number, month, pages. For authors, last names are given first, even for multiple instances.

• References to reports or proceedings: Author’s name and title of report (same style as above), report number, source, editor and/or publisher as appropriate, city and state/country of publisher OR full name of conference as appropriate, including date and pages (Ho and Hancock 2018).

• References to books: Author’s name (same style as above), year, title, city, state/country, publisher, page, or chapter.

• Use of et al.: Authors may not use “et al.” in the list of References. The names of all authors and editors must be listed. If you are using End Notes, please check your references to ensure that the settings are correct and that all authors are listed in the references.

• Number of references: The number of references should be kept to a minimum. Even for MISQ Review papers, only essential references should be used.

A few examples are:

Curry, M., Marshall, B., Crossler, R. E., and Correia, J. 2018. "Infosec Process Action Model (Ipam): Systematically Addressing Individual Security Behavior," DATABASE for Advances in Information Systems (49:SI), pp. 49-66.

D’Arcy, J., Hovav, A., and Galletta, D. 2009. "User Awareness of Security Countermeasures and Its Impact on Information Systems Misuse: A Deterrence Approach," Information Systems Research (20:1), pp. 79-98.

Goel, S., and Shawky, H. A. 2009. "Estimating the Market Impact of Security Breach Announcements on Firm Values," Information & Management (46:7), pp. 404-410.

Ho, S. M., and Gross, M. 2021. "Consciousness of Cyber Defense: A Collective Activity System for Developing Organizational Cyber Awareness," Computers & Security (108:102357), pp. 1-18.

Ho, S. M., and Hancock, J. T. 2018. "Computer-Mediated Deception: Collective Language-Action Cues as Stigmergic Signals for Computational Intelligence," Proceedings of the 2018 51th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS-51), Big Island, Hawaii: University of Hawaii, pp. 1671-1680.

Ho, S. M., Hancock, J. T., Booth, C., and Liu, X. 2016. "Computer-Mediated Deception: Strategies Revealed by Language-Action Cues in Spontaneous Communication," Journal of Management Information Systems (33:2), pp. 393-420.

Ho, S. M., Ocasio-Velázquez, M., and Booth, C. 2017. "Trust or Consequences? Causal Effects of Perceived Risk and Subjective Norms on Cloud Technology Adoption," Computers & Security (70), pp. 581-595.

APPENDIX A – HEADER OF APPENDIX HERE

Provide appendix here if needed.

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[1] Corresponding author. Authors_email@university.edu +1 999 888 7777

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