Difference between revisions of "Track: IND"

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               <p class="subtitle is-4">Industry 4.0</p><br>
 
               <p class="subtitle is-4">Industry 4.0</p><br>
 
               <p class="title is-3">Track Chair</p>
 
               <p class="title is-3">Track Chair</p>
               <p class="subtitle is-4">Dr. Alptekin Erkollar, Sakarya University</p><br>
+
               <p class="subtitle is-4">Dr. A. Erkollar, Sakarya University</p><br>
 
               <p class="title is-3">Call for Papers</p>
 
               <p class="title is-3">Call for Papers</p>
 
               <p><strong>Industry 4.0</strong>, referred to as the fourth industrial revolution, has exponentially grown starting from manufacturing sector, and is sweeping across industries, changing everything from production, business models, customer relations, research projects, education, regional, national and global innovation strategies. The driving force behind this development is the rapidly increasing digitization of economy and society and a growing concern with customer centricity and user-driven innovation. Industry 4.0 depends on a number of technological developments, one of them being information and communication technologies, which are used to digitize information and integrate systems at all stages of product development and service life, both inside an organization and cross-organizational. It depends on decentralization, virtualization, interoperability, real-time capability, and service orientation. Numerous industries around the world have set onto industry 4.0 in an attempt to boost competitiveness and product quality. Technology trends forming the building blocks for Industry 4.0 are big data and analytics, augmented reality, simulation, additive manufacturing, the cloud, cyber security, the (industrial) internet of things, horizontal and vertical system integration, and autonomous robots. These technologies will lead to greater efficiencies and change traditional relationships among suppliers, producers, and customers, as well as between human and machine.</p>
 
               <p><strong>Industry 4.0</strong>, referred to as the fourth industrial revolution, has exponentially grown starting from manufacturing sector, and is sweeping across industries, changing everything from production, business models, customer relations, research projects, education, regional, national and global innovation strategies. The driving force behind this development is the rapidly increasing digitization of economy and society and a growing concern with customer centricity and user-driven innovation. Industry 4.0 depends on a number of technological developments, one of them being information and communication technologies, which are used to digitize information and integrate systems at all stages of product development and service life, both inside an organization and cross-organizational. It depends on decentralization, virtualization, interoperability, real-time capability, and service orientation. Numerous industries around the world have set onto industry 4.0 in an attempt to boost competitiveness and product quality. Technology trends forming the building blocks for Industry 4.0 are big data and analytics, augmented reality, simulation, additive manufacturing, the cloud, cyber security, the (industrial) internet of things, horizontal and vertical system integration, and autonomous robots. These technologies will lead to greater efficiencies and change traditional relationships among suppliers, producers, and customers, as well as between human and machine.</p>

Revision as of 16:35, 2 May 2018

Track

Industry 4.0


Track Chair

Dr. A. Erkollar, Sakarya University


Call for Papers

Industry 4.0, referred to as the fourth industrial revolution, has exponentially grown starting from manufacturing sector, and is sweeping across industries, changing everything from production, business models, customer relations, research projects, education, regional, national and global innovation strategies. The driving force behind this development is the rapidly increasing digitization of economy and society and a growing concern with customer centricity and user-driven innovation. Industry 4.0 depends on a number of technological developments, one of them being information and communication technologies, which are used to digitize information and integrate systems at all stages of product development and service life, both inside an organization and cross-organizational. It depends on decentralization, virtualization, interoperability, real-time capability, and service orientation. Numerous industries around the world have set onto industry 4.0 in an attempt to boost competitiveness and product quality. Technology trends forming the building blocks for Industry 4.0 are big data and analytics, augmented reality, simulation, additive manufacturing, the cloud, cyber security, the (industrial) internet of things, horizontal and vertical system integration, and autonomous robots. These technologies will lead to greater efficiencies and change traditional relationships among suppliers, producers, and customers, as well as between human and machine.

In this track, we will discuss issues related to the potential of Industry 4.0 for manufacturing, businesses as well as all application areas. We also would like to attract papers that consider the impact of industry 4.0 on other areas, such as finance, human resources, marketing or education.

Dr. Alptekin Erkollar, Sakarya University

erkollar@sakarya.edu.tr


Biography of the Chair

Dr. Alptekin Erkollar is a Professor for management information Systems at Sakarya University, Business School, Department of Management Information Systems, Sakarya, Turkey.

Prof. Erkollar's research expertise includes management information systems, industry 4.0 and the factory of the future, production management, technology management, modelling of business systems and simulation. Some of his recent publications include ‘Flextrans 4.0 – Smart Logistics for Smart Cities’, ‘Industry 4.0: Big Data Revolutions require Smart Technologies’ and ‘Sustainable Cities Need Smart Transportation: The Industry 4.0 Transportation Matrix’. He is an author/editor of several books, more than 200 refereed papers, and an editorial board member of 13 international journals. His recently edited book ‘Enterprise and Business Management - Industry 4.0’ is the 2018 volume of the international EBM Series.

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Key Topics

We welcome papers (in English or Turkish) related to the following topics (but not limited to):

  • Industry4.0 related theories, models and perspectives
  • Hybrid business models
  • (Industrial) internet of things
  • CPS-based architectures
  • Integration and interoperability
  • Key drivers and enabling technologies (e.g. big data, cloud computing, mobile technology, artificial intelligence, visual computing, semantic web technologies, RFID, augmented reality and virtual reality, 3D printing)
  • Applications (e.g. smart product, smart design, smart robot, smart city, smart factory)
  • Industry 4.0 in finance, marketing, HR, education, medical application, defense & military & government applications