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ii Group presents their work HICSS-59 in Maui

This January, five members of our research group traveled to Maui, Hawaii, to participate in the 59th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS-59).
HICSS is one of the world’s longest-standing scientific conferences in the field of Information Systems, providing a premier stage for global scholars to discuss the future of technology management.
Our team contributed to the program with four accepted papers, presenting a diverse range of research that addresses critical sociotechnical challenges:
- Genetic Testing Privacy Policies: Leveraging LLMs to create multi-stage summarization pipelines that reduce cognitive load and improve consumer trust in complex privacy policies.
- Proactive AI Accountability: Investigating how reward-based governance can motivate AI developers to adopt a proactive mindset toward risk mitigation.
- Collaborative Machine Learning: Exploring the problem space of inter-organizational ML to identify the essential stakeholders and requirements for resource-sharing across companies.
- IS Collusion Taxonomy: Developing a multidisciplinary framework to classify and detect complex collusion within information systems by analyzing social and technical interplay.
The presentations and the subsequent discussions with international peers were incredibly insightful, providing our researchers with valuable feedback to further develop and refine their work.




