Editorial
It is intellectually and emotionally gratifying
to participate in the team who is launching The
Journal of Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics
(JSCI), and to write its first editorial.
The main purpose of the Journal
is to collaborate in the systemization
of knowledge and experience generated in the areas
of Systemics, Cybernetics (communication and control)
and Informatics. This systemization process necessarily
implies a progressive increase and enlargement
of the relatedness among the
associated areas, as well as among their respective
disciplines. So, improvement in interdisciplinary
communication would provide a very good
support for the sought systemization process.
This is one of the main objectives of the Journal
we are launching with this first issue, and our
editorial policy will be directed by it.
We are trying to support the
process of interdisciplinary communication among
and in the areas included in Systemics, Cybernetics
and Informatics, by means of 1) providing a multidisciplinary
forum in the related areas, 2) fostering
interdisciplinary research in
them, 3) publishing papers related to transdisciplinary
concepts, allowing different disciplinary perspectives
on the same concept, and 4) encouraging communication
among disciplines by means of interdisciplinary
tutorials, and among the academic, the
public and the private sectors by means of publishing
information related multi- and inter-disciplinary
projects which involve at least two of them.
The first issues of the Journal
will have a multidisciplinary orientation. Interdisciplinary
and transdisciplinary sections will gradually
grow. The multidisciplinary part of the Journal
will be nourished, basically, from the best papers
presented in conferences in the Journal’s
areas. The papers in this first issue are mostly
based on the best 2% papers presented at the 6th
World Multi-conference on Systemics, Cybernetics
and Informatics (SCI 2002), according to the reviewing
process done in this conference. Issues 2, 3 and
4 will be based on the best 5% of the papers presented
at SCI 2003. Issues 5, 6 and 7 will contain papers
belonging to the best 10%. Next following issues
will be based on the best papers presented at
the International Conference on Computing, Communication
and Control (CCCT 2003), the 9th International
Conference on Information systems analysis and
synthesis (ISAS 2003), The International Conference
on Education and Information Systems, Technologies
and Applications (EISTA 2003), The International
Conference on Political and Information Systems,
Technologies and Applications (PISTA 2003), etc.
Authors of the best papers presented, in Spanish,
at the Conferencia Ibero-Americana en Sistemas,
Cibernética e Informática (CISCI
2003) will be asked to translate their papers
to English if they want it to be included in the
JSCI. We are also considering the possibility
of publishing supplement issues of JSCI in Spanish.
In such a case, the best papers presented at CISCI
2003 would be the basic content of these supplemental
issues.
Consequently, with this approach,
we are hoping to produce a very high quality journal,
because its basic content will be related to the
5-10% best papers presented in related conferences,
which is the equivalent, though
not exactly the same, of a rate of, at least,
90% of refusal. This way of achieving a high quality
Journal, will not be based on a high number of
actual refusals. With this strategy we will be
avoiding being the cause of the hidden psychological
and economical costs caused to the authors of
refused papers. The greater the refusal rate,
the greater the hidden costs caused, by the editors,
to potential authors of refused papers by the
editors. We are hoping, with our editorial
strategy to minimize the hidden costs
we might be causing by means of our editorial
decision, while not compromising the journal high
quality.
Our methodological strategy
will be a systemic, not a systematic
one. To organize the editorial process and to
manage the publishing operational activities will
be done with an open, adaptable
and evolutionary methodological
system. It will have the flexibility
required to adapt the journal, its editorial policy,
its organizational process and its management
to the dynamics of its related areas and disciplines,
to changes produced by the inherent learning process
involved, and to the uncertainty of the environment.
It would be a matter of applying Ashby’s
Requisite Variety principle, concepts related
to Prigogine’s dissipative structures and
other basic principles found in General Systems
Theory, General Systems Methodology and Cybernetics.
Consequently, we will not have a deterministic
and a completely pre-conceived systematic editorial
methodology, nor completely pre-determined and
static editorial policy, but, in both cases, they
will be open, flexible,
adaptable and evolutionary.
To achieve this purpose we will be using a General
Systems Methodology that we have been designing,
applying and re-designing in the last 30 years,
and specifically we will be using the Incrementally-Evolutionary
Methodology we have been designing and applying,
especially to information systems developments
and to projects of complex systems analysis and
synthesis, in the last 25 years. We will be including,
in next issues, of this journal, papers related
to these methodologies which are the products
of applying concepts and principles of Systemics
and Cybernetics to real life problems and conducting
action-research projects.
Professor William Lesso
Honorary Chair of the Editorial Board (1931-2015) |
Professor Nagib Callaos
Editor-in-Chief |
|