期刊名称:GROUP DECISION AND NEGOTIATION
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
The idea underlying the journal, Group Decision and Negotiation, emerges from evolving, unifying approaches to group decision and negotiation processes. These processes are complex and self-organizing involving multiplayer, multicriteria, ill-structured, evolving, dynamic problems. Approaches include (1) computer group decision and negotiation support systems (GDNSS), (2) artificial intelligence and management science, (3) applied game theory, experiment and social choice, and (4) cognitive/behavioral sciences in group decision and negotiation. A number of research studies combine two or more of these fields. The journal provides a publication vehicle for theoretical and empirical research, and real-world applications and case studies.
In defining the domain of group decision and negotiation, the term `group' is interpreted to comprise all multiplayer contexts. Thus, organizational decision support systems providing organization-wide support are included. Group decision and negotiation refers to the whole process or flow of activities relevant to group decision and negotiation, not only to the final choice itself, e.g. scanning, communication and information sharing, problem definition (representation) and evolution, alternative generation and social-emotional interaction. Descriptive, normative and design viewpoints are of interest. Thus, Group Decision and Negotiation deals broadly with relation and coordination in group processes. Areas of application include intraorganizational coordination (as in operations management and integrated design, production, finance, marketing and distribution, e.g. as in new products and global coordination), computer supported collaborative work, labor-management negotiations, interorganizational negotiations, (business, government and nonprofits, e.g. joint ventures), international (intercultural) negotiations, environmental negotiations, etc.
The journal also covers developments of software for group decision and negotiation.
Abstracted/Indexed in:
ABI inform, Current Contents / Social & Behavioral Sciences, International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS), International Political Science Abstracts, ISI Alerting Services, Psyc-INFO, Psychological Abstracts, PsycLIT, Risk Abstracts, SCOPUS, Social Science Citation Index (SSCI), Social SciSearch, Sociological Abstracts
Instructions to Authors
Online Manuscript Submission
Springer now offers authors, editors and reviewers of Group Decision and Negotiation the option of using our fully web-enabled online manuscript submission and review system. To keep the review time as short as possible (no postal delays!), we encourage authors to submit manuscripts online to the journal‘s editorial office. Our online manuscript submission and review system offers authors the option to track the progress of the review process of manuscripts in real time. Manuscripts should be submitted to: http://grup.edmgr.com  The online manuscript submission and review system for Group Decision and Negotiation offers easy and straightforward log-in and submission procedures. This system supports a wide range of submission file formats: for manuscripts - Word, WordPerfect, RTF, TXT and LaTex; for figures - TIFF, GIF, JPEG, EPS, PPT, and Postscript. NOTE: By using the online manuscript submission and review system, it is NOT necessary to submit the manuscript also in printout + disk. In case you encounter any difficulties while submitting your manuscript on line, please get in touch with the responsible Editorial Assistant by clicking on “CONTACT US?from the tool bar.  Electronic figures Electronic versions of your figures must be supplied. For vector graphics, EPS is the preferred format. For bitmapped graphics, TIFF is the preferred format. The following resolutions are optimal: line figures - 600 - 1200 dpi; photographs - 300 dpi; screen dumps - leave as is. Colour figures can be submitted in the RGB colour system. Font-related problems can be avoided by using standard fonts such as Times Roman, Courier and Helvetica. Colour figures Springer offers two options for reproducing colour illustrations in your article. Please let us know what you prefer: 1) Free online colour. The colour figure will only appear in colour on www.springer.com and not in the printed version of the journal. 2) Online and printed colour. The colour figures will appear in colour on our website and in the printed version of the journal. The charges are EUR 950/USD 1150 per article. Language We appreciate any efforts that you make to ensure that the language is corrected before submission. This will greatly improve the legibility of your paper if English is not your first language.
Manuscript Requirements
The first page of the manuscript should contain the author‘s name, affiliation and mailing address, article title, and a running head (condensed title) which should not exceed 45 characters, including spaces. Each page of the manuscript should be consecutively numbered, including pages of references and captions.
Abstract
Include an Abstract of 100−200 words.
Keywords
Give 5−10 Keywords.
Symbols
Unusual symbols should be identified in the margin, and an alternative or equivalent symbol or sign should be provided if the one required is rare. Special care should be taken to distinguish between the letter O and zero, the letter l and the number one, k (kappa) and k, (mu) and u, n (nu) and v, h (eta) and n. Subscripts and superscripts should be marked if not clear. The use of italics is to be indicated by single underlining; bold−face by wavy underlining.
Notes
Notes which do not belong to the head of the article should be numbered consecutively. They should be placed at the end of the article, before the references, not as footnotes. A note which refers to the head of the article should be indicated by an asterisk. Notes should be kept to an absolute minimum.
Figures
All photographs, graphs and diagrams should be referred to as a 'Figure' and they should be numbered consecutively (1, 2, etc.). Multi-part figures ought to be labelled with lower case letters (a, b, etc.). Please insert keys and scale bars directly in the figures. Relatively small text and great variation in text sizes within figures should be avoided as figures are often reduced in size. Figures may be sized to fit approximately within the column(s) of the journal. Provide a detailed legend (without abbreviations) to each figure, refer to the figure in the text and note its approximate location in the margin. Please place the legends in the manuscript after the references. Tables Each table should be numbered consecutively (1, 2, etc.). In tables, footnotes are preferable to long explanatory material in either the heading or body of the table. Such explanatory footnotes, identified by superscript letters, should be placed immediately below the table. Please provide a caption (without abbreviations) to each table, refer to the table in the text and note its approximate location in the margin. Finally, please place the tables after the figure legends in the manuscript.
References
1. Journal article: Smith J, Jones M Jr, Houghton L et al (1999) Future of health insurance. N Engl J Med 965:325?29 2. Inclusion of issue number (optional): Saunders DS (1976) The biological clock of insects. Sci Am 234(2):114?21  3. Journal issue with issue editor: Smith J (ed) (1998) Rodent genes. Mod Genomics J 14(6):126?33  4. Journal issue with no issue editor: Mod Genomics J (1998) Rodent genes. Mod Genomics J 14(6):126?33  5. Book chapter: Brown B, Aaron M (2001) The politics of nature. In: Smith J (ed) The rise of modern genomics, 3rd edn. Wiley, New York  6. Book, authored: South J, Blass B (2001) The future of modern genomics. Blackwell, London  7. Book, edited: Smith J, Brown B (eds) (2001) The demise of modern genomics. Blackwell, London 8. Chapter in a book in a series without volume titles: Schmidt H (1989) Testing results. In: Hutzinger O (ed) Handbook of environmental chemistry, vol 2E. Springer, Berlin Heidelberg New York, p 111  9. Chapter in a book in a series with volume title: Smith SE (1976) Neuromuscular blocking drugs in man. In: Zaimis E (ed) Neuromuscular junction. Handbook of experimental pharmacology, vol 42. Springer, Berlin Heidelberg New York, pp593?60  10. Proceedings as a book (in a series and subseries): Zowghi D et al (1996) A framework for reasoning about requirements in evolution. In: Foo N, Goebel R (eds) PRICAI'96: topics in artificial intelligence. 4th Pacific Rim conference on artificial intelligence, Cairns, August 1996. Lecture notes in computer science (Lecture notes in artificial intelligence), vol 1114. Springer, Berlin Heidelberg New York, p 157  11. Proceedings with an editor (without a publisher): Aaron M (1999) The future of genomics. In: Williams H (ed) Proceedings of the genomic researchers, Boston, 1999  12. Proceedings without an editor (without a publisher): Chung S-T, Morris RL (1978) Isolation and characterization of plasmid deoxyribonucleic acid from Streptomyces fradiae. In: Abstracts of the 3rd international symposium on the genetics of industrial microorganisms, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 4? June 1978  13. Paper presented at a conference: Chung S-T, Morris RL (1978) Isolation and characterization of plasmid deoxyribonucleic acid from Streptomyces fradiae. Paper presented at the 3rd international symposium on the genetics of industrial microorganisms, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 4? June 1978  14. Patent: Name and date of patent are optional  Norman LO (1998) Lightning rods. US Patent 4,379,752, 9 Sept 1998  15. Dissertation: Trent JW (1975) Experimental acute renal failure. Dissertation, University of California  16. Institutional author (book): International Anatomical Nomenclature Committee (1966) Nomina anatomica. Excerpta Medica, Amsterdam  17. Non-English publication cited in an English publication: Wolf GH, Lehman P-F (1976) Atlas der Anatomie, vol 4/3, 4th edn. Fischer, Berlin. [NB: Use the language of the primary document, not that of the reference for "vol" etc.!]  18. Non-Latin alphabet publication: The English translation is optional. Marikhin VY, Myasnikova LP (1977) Nadmolekulyarnaya struktura polimerov (The supramolecular structure of polymers). Khimiya, Leningrad  19. Published and In press articles with or without DOI: 19.1 In press Wilson M et al (2006) References. In: Wilson M (ed) Style manual. Springer, Berlin Heidelberg New York (in press) 19.2. Article by DOI (with page numbers) Slifka MK, Whitton JL (2000) Clinical implications of dysregulated cytokine production. J Mol Med 78:74?0. DOI 10.1007/s001090000086 19.3. Article by DOI (before issue publication with page numbers) Slifka MK, Whitton JL (2000) Clinical implications of dysregulated cytokine production. J Mol Med (in press). DOI 10.1007/s001090000086 19.4. Article in electronic journal by DOI (no paginated version) Slifka MK, Whitton JL (2000) Clinical implications of dysregulated cytokine production. Dig J Mol Med. DOI 10.1007/s801090000086  20. Internet publication/Online document  Doe J (1999) Title of subordinate document. In: The dictionary of substances and their effects. Royal Society of Chemistry.Available via DIALOG. http://www.rsc.org/dose/title of subordinate document. Cited 15 Jan 1999  20.1. Online database Healthwise Knowledgebase (1998) US Pharmacopeia, Rockville. http://www.healthwise.org. Cited 21 Sept 1998 Supplementary material/private homepage Doe J (2000) Title of supplementary material. http://www.privatehomepage.com. Cited 22 Feb 2000 University site Doe J (1999) Title of preprint. http://www.uni-heidelberg.de/mydata.html. Cited 25 Dec 1999 FTP site Doe J (1999) Trivial HTTP, RFC2169. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2169.txt. Cited 12 Nov 1999 Organization site ISSN International Centre (1999) Global ISSN database. http://www.issn.org. Cited 20 Feb 2000
Proofs
Proofs will be sent to the corresponding author by e−mail. Your response, with or without corrections, should be sent within 72 hours.
Offprints
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Instructions to Authors instr_print_10726.061024.pdf
Editorial Board
Editor-in-Chief:
Melvin F. Shakun Leonard N. Stern School of Business, New York University, USA
Senior Editor:
Gregory Kersten Concordia University, Montreal, Canada
Departmental Editors:
Group Decision and Negotiation Support Systems:- Tung Bui, University of Hawaii; Laku Chidambaram, University of Oklahoma; Jay Nunamaker, University of Arizona; Gert-Jan de Vreede, University of Nebraska at Omaha Artificial Intelligence and Management Science:- Gregory Kersten, Concordia University; Katia Sycara, Carnegie Mellon University Applied Game Theory, Experiment and Social Choice:- D. Marc Kilgour, Wilfrid Laurier University; William F. Samuelson, Boston University Social/Behavioral Sciences:- Daniel Druckman, George Mason University; Mara Olekalns, Melbourne University
Associate Editors:
Fran Ackermann, Strathclyde University; Max Bazerman, Northwestern University; Steven Brams, New York University; Christer Carlsson, .Åbo Akademi; Kalyan Chatterjee, The Pennsylvania State University; Joao C. Climaco, University of Coimbra; Colin Eden, University of Strathclyde; Guy Olivier Faure, University of Paris V-Sorbonne; Paul Gray, The Claremont Graduate School; Thomas A. Gresik, University of Notre Dame; Terri L. Griffith, Washington University of St. Louis; Raimo P. Hämäläinen, Helsinki University of Technology; Keith Hipel, University of Waterloo; Akira Ishikawa, Aoyama Gakuin University; Peri H. Iz, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; Matthias Jarke, RWTH Aachen; Pekka Korhonen, Helsinki School of Economics; Hsiangchu Lai, National Sun Yat-Sen University, Taiwan; Victor Lesser, University of Massachusetts at Amherst; C. Michael Lewis, University of Pittsburgh; L. Floyd Lewis, Western Washington University; Bilyana Martinovski, University of Southern California; Jeryl L. Mumpower, State University of New York at Albany; Bertrand Munier, Ecole Normale Supérieure; Margaret Neale, Stanford University; Gregory Northcraft, University of Illinois; Hannu Nurmi, University of Turku; Edward Stohr, New York University; Ephraim F. Sudit, Rutgers State University; Stan Szpakowicz, University of Ottawa; Northwestern University; Rostam Vahidov, Concordia University; Rudolf Vetschera, University of Vienna; Douglas Vogel, City University of Hong Kong; Christof Weinhardt, Universitaet Karlsruhe; Andrew B. Whinston, University of Texas at Austin; Ronald R. Yager, Iona College; Stanley Zionts, State University of New York at Buffalo
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