PATTAYA 66th World Congress on “The Impact of Technology on Society & Culture”: ITSC-27

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Call for papers/Topics

Full Articles/ Reviews/ Shorts Papers/ Abstracts are welcomed in the following research fields:

Part 1: Independent Topics & Subtopics

These are distinct sectors or domains of society that experience direct, specific transformations due to technological integration.

1. The Transformation of Communication and Social Interaction

  • The Demise of Synchronous Conversation: The shift from real-time phone calls to asynchronous texting, voice notes, and messaging apps.

  • Social Media and the Curation of Identity: How digital profiles create "performative selves" and alter self-esteem, especially among youth.

  • The Evolution of Language and Semiography: The rise of emojis, internet slang, memes, and algorithmic shorthand as legitimate linguistic dialects.

  • Digital Communities and Hyper-Niche Subcultures: The ability of geographically isolated individuals to form tight-knit online communities around highly specific interests.

2. Education, Knowledge Acquisition, and Cognitive Adaptation

  • The Democratization vs. Fragmentation of Information: Open-access learning (MOOCs, YouTube, Wikipedia) versus the loss of a shared factual baseline.

  • Cognitive Offloading and Memory Alteration: How reliance on search engines and GPS changes human spatial awareness and short-term memory retention.

  • AI-Assisted Pedagogy: The integration of large language models in classrooms, rewriting the definitions of cheating, writing, and critical thinking.

  • Attention Economy and Micro-Learning: The impact of short-form video content on human attention spans and deep-reading capabilities.

3. Work, Labor Dynamics, and the Economy

  • The Remote and Hybrid Workforce Structure: The breakdown of the traditional 9-to-5 office model and its ripple effects on commercial real estate and urban design.

  • The Gig Economy and Algorithmic Management: Labor platforms where workers are managed, rated, and compensated by automated algorithms rather than human managers.

  • Automation and the Displacement of Cognitive Labor: The transition of automation from blue-collar manufacturing tasks to white-collar creative and analytical roles.

  • Digital Nomadism and Local Economies: The cultural and economic friction caused by high-earning tech workers relocating to lower-cost developing regions.

4. Health, Medicine, and Human Biology

  • Telehealth and Decentralized Healthcare: The shift from physical clinics to remote diagnostics, wearable health monitors, and virtual consultations.

  • The Biopsychosocial Impact of Screen Time: Sleep cycle disruption via blue light, sedentary lifestyles, and the rise of "tech-neck" physical ailments.

  • Genomic Editing and Transhumanism: The cultural and ethical debates surrounding CRISPR, life extension technologies, and neural implants.

  • Gamified Wellness and Mental Health Apps: The reliance on algorithms for meditation, fitness tracking, and therapy.

5. Entertainment, Art, and Creative Expression

  • Streaming Culture and the Death of Live Media: The transition from synchronized national media events to hyper-personalized, on-demand algorithmic feeds.

  • Generative Art and the Re-evaluation of Creativity: The philosophical crisis regarding authorship, copyright, and value when AI generates music, paintings, and text.

  • Virtual and Augmented Realities as Creative Mediums: The expansion of immersive storytelling, digital fashion, and virtual concert venues.

  • The Preservation and Decay of Digital Content: The paradox of the digital age, where massive amounts of culture are created but easily lost to link rot and format obsolescence.

Part 2: Interrelated Topics & Subtopics

These topics represent systemic intersections where multiple technological trends collide, creating complex cultural loops and feedback mechanisms.

6. The Algorithmic Echo Chamber, Polarization, and Politics

  • Intersects: Communication + Politics + Psychology

  • The Gamification of Outrage: How social media algorithms maximize user engagement by promoting highly polarizing, emotionally charged political content.

  • Deepfakes, Synthetic Media, and the Erosion of Shared Truth: The geopolitical and cultural consequences of indistinguishable fake video and audio evidence.

  • Digital Surveillance Capitalism: The business model of tracking, predicting, and selling human behavior, and its use by both corporations and state actors for behavioral modification.

7. Technostress, Isolation, and the Epidemic of Loneliness

  • Intersects: Social Media + Mental Health + Urban Planning

  • The Paradox of Hyper-Connectivity: How being constantly reachable leads to profound feelings of superficial connection and deep emotional isolation.

  • Phubbing and the Degradation of Physical Spaces: The cultural phenomenon of ignoring present companions in favor of a smartphone, eroding spontaneous social friction in public areas.

  • The Commercialization of Companionship: The rise of AI companions, virtual influencers, and parasocial relationships designed to alleviate systemic loneliness.

8. Globalization, Cultural Homogenization, and Indigenous Preservation

  • Intersects: Entertainment + Internet Infrastructure + Anthropology

  • The West-Centric Digital Imperialism: How global tech platforms inadvertently export Western cultural norms, values, and languages, overshadowing local traditions.

  • The Algorithmic Flattening of Aesthetics: The global homogenization of interior design, fashion, and music driven by Pinterest, Instagram, and TikTok trends.

  • Digital Resistance and Cultural Revitalization: The counter-movement of using technology to document endangered languages, digitize indigenous histories, and organize global diaspora communities.

9. Privacy, Data Ethics, and the Digital Divide

  • Intersects: Economy + Human Rights + Education

  • The New Stratification of Society: The widening cultural and economic gap between those with high-speed internet and tech literacy, and those left in "digital deserts."

  • The Normalization of Everyday Surveillance: The cultural shift where citizens willingly trade privacy (smart home cameras, location sharing) for convenience and perceived safety.

  • Biometric Bias and Algorithmic Discrimination: How historical cultural biases are baked into facial recognition, hiring algorithms, and automated judicial sentencing.

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