Full Articles/ Reviews/ Shorts Papers/ Abstracts are welcomed in the following research fields:
These topics represent the core, standalone pillars of how technological tools alter fundamental structures of human civilization and cultural expression.
The shifting nature of how individuals perceive themselves, communicate, and form cultural identities in digital spaces.
Online Communities and Subcultures: The formation of global networks based on niche interests, fandoms, and shared digital spaces.
The Quantified Self and Digital Persona: Curated identities on social platforms, the psychological impact of digital validation, and biometric self-tracking.
Memetics and Digital Language: The evolution of internet linguistics, emojis, memes as cultural currency, and viral communication dynamics.
Virtual and Augmented Realities: How immersive spaces redefine physical presence, spatial interaction, and social norms.
The physical and structural systems that underpin modern technological societies and dictate human behavior.
The Network Society: The decentralization of traditional social structures in favor of fluid, global information networks.
The Digital Divide: Disparities in technology access, literacy, and infrastructure between socio-economic classes and geographic regions.
Smart Cities and Urbanization: The integration of IoT (Internet of Things) devices, automated public transit, and algorithmic surveillance into city planning.
Automation and the Future of Work: The displacement of labor, the rise of the gig economy, and the demand for new technological skill sets.
The mechanisms through which knowledge is generated, distributed, and consumed within a society.
Algorithmic Curation and Echo Chambers: How recommendation loops shape political views, consumer tastes, and ideological polarization.
The Democratization of Information: The flattening of traditional media gatekeeping, giving rise to citizen journalism and decentralized content creation.
Disinformation and Epistemic Crisis: The mechanics of deepfakes, coordinated misinformation campaigns, and the erosion of trust in institutional facts.
Attention Economy Dynamics: The monetization of human attention through psychological design patterns and infinite-scroll interfaces.
These fields represent the complex spaces where technology, ethics, culture, and governance collide, creating systemic challenges that cannot be solved by one discipline alone.
The intersection where corporate economic models, legal rights, and societal behaviors overlap.
The Monetization of Behavioral Surplus: How personal data is extracted, analyzed, and packaged to predict and modify human behavior.
Data Sovereignty and Human Rights: The philosophical and legal friction between individual privacy rights and state or corporate surveillance.
Biometric Governance: The societal normalization of facial recognition, gait analysis, and DNA tracking in public and private spheres.
Predictive Policing and Justice: The implementation of algorithmic models to forecast crime, and its systemic impact on marginalized communities.
The deep cognitive shifts occurring as human biological systems adapt to constant technological interaction.
Digital Cognitive Offloading: The reliance on external devices for memory, navigation, and calculation, altering brain plasticity.
The Loneliness Epidemic and Parasocial Relationships: The paradox of hyper-connectivity leading to increased emotional isolation and one-sided digital attachments.
Technostress and Digital Burnout: The psychological toll of the "always-on" work culture and the blurring boundaries between public and private life.
Gamification of Daily Life: The application of game-design elements (scores, badges, streaks) to non-game contexts like education, fitness, and finance.
The profound philosophical boundaries being pushed by advanced technologies, altering what it means to be human.
Algorithmic Bias and Social Equity: How historical human prejudices are codified into machine learning models, perpetuating systemic discrimination.
Transhumanism and Bio-Digital Convergence: The cultural and ethical implications of genetic editing, neural interfaces, and life-extension technologies.
Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) and Anthropomorphism: The societal shift in attributing human consciousness, rights, or agency to sophisticated software systems.
Digital Heritage and Technofossil Preservation: The challenge of preserving ephemeral digital cultures, codebases, and virtual histories for future generations