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[ecrea] ICA Preconference "Bringing together Social and Semantic Networks in Communication Research"
Sat Oct 04 05:31:19 GMT 2014
CALL FOR PAPERS
Bringing together Social and Semantic Networks in Communication Research
Wouter van Atteveldt, Christian Baden, Jana Diesner (alphabetic)
ICA 2015 Preconference
Co-Sponsored by ICA’s Communication & Technology, Mass Communication &
Political Communication Divisions
http://www.c-b.net/netcom2015.pdf
While the analysis of social networks and semantic networks has quickly
advanced over the past years, this development is still weakly received
in the communication sciences. Network researchers have developed a
whole bouquet of powerful and scalable tools and methods to the analysis
of discourse texts and communicative interactions, and first inroads are
being cut toward the joint analysis of social and semantic network data.
However, these methods’ communication theoretic foundations, as well as
their applications for addressing pressing questions in the field are
still underdeveloped. Moreover, social and semantic network analytic
approaches are most commonly considered separately. Yet, communication
processes inevitably include patterns of both social relations and
semantic contents, which can often be fruitfully conceptualized as
networks. Building upon last year’s preconference on this theme, this
event is aimed to connect network analytic methodology with important
developments in the field of communication research, such as:
§ the rising attention to the semantic substance and meaning of messages
and the configuration of different communication content exchanged in
public discourses
§ the theoretically grounded integration of text and social network data
in communication analysis (e.g., in social media communication).
§ the rising importance of networked organizations and forms of
organizing and communicating with flat hierarchies, a dedifferentiation
of communicator roles, and self-organizing publics
§ the reconceptualization of existing communication patterns, social
structures, institutions, and other in society in terms of interaction
networks
The preconference is co-sponsored by the ICA Communication & Technology
Division, the ICA Mass Communication Division and the ICA Political
Communication Division, but it touches upon the fields of many more ICA
divisions and interest groups. The preconference aims to bring together
researchers from different backgrounds, including theoretically,
methodologically, and practically oriented researchers in diverse fields
of application, both inside and outside the academia. It thereby aims to
instill a mutual learning process and exchange innovative ideas and
challenges for the further development of network analysis in
communication research.
We invite contributions that make use of social, semantic, or both types
of network analysis to address relevant questions in communication
research, to advance network analytic methodology for the study of
communication, or to advance communication theory to integrate with
network analytic methodology. Specifically, we welcome any contributions
that consider how semantic and social relations and processes might be
linked or can affect one another (e.g., semantic networks related to
social groups or interactions, social networks related to semantic
contents or ideas, socio-semantic networks). We are also looking for
technological advances in the form of new computational solutions and
tool demonstrations.
CONFERENCE FORMAT & SUBMISSIONS (Paper, Data Presentations, Tool
Presentations)
Contributions can come from a wide variety of disciplinary backgrounds,
but should relate to both network analytic methodology and communication
science research questions and/or theory. Submissions will be evaluated
according to their innovative potential, methodological quality, and
contribution to communication science research. In addition to more
classic research presentations, we explicitly invite tool- and data sharing.
In addition to more classic research presentations, we explicitly invite
the sharing of network-analytic tools and data, which can be presented
in a especially dedicated high-density demonstration session). These
demonstrations serve to introduce new software tools (open access tools
privileged) for applying network analysis in communication science
research, and open access data sets available to the research community
(e.g., “big data” with network-analytic potential).
Submissions for a regular presentation should be original papers of
approximately 4000 to 8000 words, which have not been published
elsewhere. In an accompanying abstract of 150 words, they should
emphasize the specific contribution of their paper to advancing network
analytic research and theory in communications.
Submissions for the high-density demonstration session should provide
extended abstracts (1000 to 1500 words) that introduce the data or tool
presented. As far as applicable, these abstracts should also state the
conditions of use of the presented tool or data for other researchers.
All submissions must be uploaded to
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=netcom2015 by January 11, 2015,
with all identifying information removed from the manuscript or
abstract. All contributions will be blindly peer-reviewed, and
acceptance notifications will be sent out before the end of February 2015.
Registration for the preconference is open to both presenters and
non-presenters and opens on January 15, 2015. Registration fees are 60
USD for students (graduate, doctoral) and 100 USD for both faculty (PhD
holders) and practitioners outside the academia. The preconference will
take place on Thursday, May 21, 2015, at one of the two conference
hotels of the 65th ICA Annual conference in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
For any direct inquiries regarding this preconference, please contact
any of the following:
Wouter van Atteveldt, VU Amsterdam: (w.h.van.atteveldt /at/ vu.nl)
Christian Baden, Hebrew U Jerusalem: (c.baden /at/ mail.huji.ac.il)
Jana Diesner, UIUC: (jdiesner /at/ illinois.edu)
TENTATIVE PROGRAM
09:00 – 09:15 Welcome & introduction
09:15 – 10:30 Paper session 1 (3 papers, 25 min each: 15-20 min talk,
10-5 min Q&A)
10:30 – 11:00 Break
11:00 – 12:15 High-density session (6-7 tool-/data-demonstrations, 10
min each: 5 min talk, 5 min Q&A)
12:15 – 13:15 Lunch (off site)
13:15 – 14:30 Paper session 2 (3 papers, 25 min each: 15-20 min talk,
10-5 min Q&A)
14:30 – 15:00 Coffee break
15:00 – 16:15 Paper session 3 (3 papers, 25 min each: 15-20 min talk,
10-5 min Q&A)
16:15 – 17:00 Roundtable Discussion: Challenges and Future Directions
This preconference is kindly supported by
www.networkinstitute.org .
--
Dr. Christian Baden
Noah Mozes Department of Communication & Journalism
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Mount Scopus Campus
91905 Jerusalem, Israel
(c.baden /at/ mail.huji.ac.il)
+972-2-58-83213
Marie Curie Fellow:
Frame Justification and Resonance in Conflict-Related Discourse (RECORD)
INFOCORE Project Team, WP5-8:
(In)Forming Conflict Prevention, Response, and Resolution: The Role of
Media in Violent Conflict
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