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[ecrea] Call for Abstracts: 1st Symposium on Societal Challenges in Computational Social Science
Tue Jun 27 13:58:41 GMT 2017
The 1st Symposium on Societal Challenges in Computational Social Science
Inequality and Imbalance
[Call for workshops below]
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CALL FOR ABSTRACTS
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November 16-17, 2017
London, United Kingdom
Website: symposium.computationalsocialscience.eu
Easychair: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=eurosymposium17
For inquiries: (css.eurosymposium /at/ gmail.com)
ORGANIZERS
General Chairs:
Luca Maria Aiello, Nokia Bell Labs
Helen Magretts, Oxford Internet Intitute
Organizing committee:
Katrin Weller, GESIS
Markus Strohmaier, RWTH Aachen & GESIS
David Garcia, ETH Zurich
Frank Schweitzer, ETH Zurich
IMPORTANT DATES
Deadline for abstract submission: September 30, 2017
Notification of acceptance: October 13, 2017
Conference: 16-17 November 2017
CONFERENCE SCOPE
The Symposium is an interdisciplinary venue that brings together
researchers from a diverse range of disciplines to contribute to the
definition and exploration of the societal challenges in Computational
Social Science, especially around the topics o inequality and imbalance.
This is the first in a series of three symposia that discuss societal
challenges in computational social sciences. Future events will be
focused on "Bias and Discrimination" (Cologne, 2018) and "Polarization
and Radicalization" (Zurich, 2019).
We welcome submissions in the intersection of the social sciences and
the computer sciences, including (a) new approaches for understanding
social phenomena and addressing societal challenges, (b) improving
methods for computational social science, (c) and understanding the
influence of the Web and digital technologies on society. We are
especially interested in:
* Methods for measuring inequality and imbalance
* Measuring inequality and imbalance on the Web
* Mediating inequalities via computational methods
* Inequality data mining
* Inequality and biases in social networks
* Detecting trends of inequality
* Digital reproduction of inequality
* Online vs. offline inequalities
* Cross-country and longitudinal studies of inequality
* Missing data
* Digital civil society and digital citizenship
* Digital divides and digital inequality
* Global inequality and effects of globalization
* Power imbalances
* Demographics and age structures
* Underrepresented groups
* Wealth and poverty research
* Economic inequality
* Inequality in the urban environment
* Health inequalities
* Models of social capital in the digital age
* Non-users of digital technologies
* Accessibility of and barriers to digital technologies
* Skills and digital literacy
Other related topics are explicitly welcome.
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
Original manuscripts should be submitted in English in pdf format to the
EasyChair submission system:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=eurosymposium17
Submissions should be 1-2 page abstracts (up to approx. 1000 words)
summarizing the work to be presented. We encourage researchers to also
submit mature work that has already been published and/or submit work in
progress. Please give a sufficiently detailed description of your work
and your methods so we can adequately assess its relevance. Each
extended abstract will be reviewed by a Program Committee composed of
experts in computational social science. Accepted submissions will be
non-archival, i.e. there are no proceedings. We may however discuss
options for publishing selected submissions after the conference (e.g.
as a journal special issue or edited collection). Submissions will
mostly be evaluated based on relevance and the potential to stimulate
interesting discussions.
-----------------------------
CALL FOR WORKSHOP AND TUTORIALS
-----------------------------
November 15, 2017
London, United Kingdom
Website: symposium.computationalsocialscience.eu
For inquiries: (css.eurosymposium /at/ gmail.com)
ORGANIZERS
General Chairs:
Luca Maria Aiello, Nokia Bell Labs
Helen Magretts, Oxford Internet Intitute
Organizing committee:
Katrin Weller, GESIS
Markus Strohmaier, RWTH Aachen & GESIS
David Garcia, ETH Zurich
Frank Schweitzer, ETH Zurich
IMPORTANT DATES
Workshops and tutorials proposal submission deadline: September 8, 2017
Workshops and tutorials acceptance notification: September 12, 2017
Workshops and tutorials day: November 15, 2017
Main conference: 16-17 November 2017
SCOPE
The Symposium is an interdisciplinary venue that brings together
researchers from a diverse range of disciplines to contribute to the
definition and exploration of the societal challenges in Computational
Social Science, especially around the topics o inequality and imbalance.
This is the first in a series of three symposia that discuss societal
challenges in computational social sciences. Future events will be
focused on "Bias and Discrimination" (Cologne, 2018) and "Polarization
and Radicalization" (Zurich, 2019).
We welcome submissions for workshops and tutorials proposals on any
emerging topic at the intersection of the social sciences and the
computer sciences. Members of all segments of the social media research
community are encouraged to submit proposals.
Workshops will give the opportunity to meet and discuss issues with a
selected focus, providing an excellent forum for exploring emerging
approaches and task areas and bridging the gaps between the social
science and technology fields.
Tutorials will be an opportunity for cross-disciplinary engagement and a
deeper understanding of new tools, techniques, and research
methodologies. Tutorials should provide either an in-depth look at an
emerging technique or software package or a broad summary of an
important direction in the field.
Example topics include (but are not limited to):
* Inequality, imbalance, bias, discrimination
* Digital health
* Urban informatics
* Web mining for social good
* Algorithmic regulations
* Impact of online phenomena on the offline world
* Credibility of online content
* Impact of AI on the social life
* Rich representations of social ties
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
Authors are kindly requested to send a PDF with their proposal at the
following email address with the subject "Workshop/Tutorial proposal":
(css.eurosymposium /at/ gmail.com)
Proposals for workshops and tutorials should be no more than three (3)
pages in length (10pt, single column, with reasonable margins), written
in English, and should contain:
* A concise title
* The names, affiliations, and contacts of the organizing committee
* Duration of the event (half-day or full-day meeting)
* A short abstract describing the scope and main objective of the event
* A short description of the main topic and themes (2 paragraphs maximum)
* A description of the event format and a list of proposed activities
* An approximate timeline of the activities
* Historical information about the event, when available
* [Workshops only] A description of how workshop submissions will be
evaluated
(invited contributions, peer review, etc.)
Workshops and tutorials will be selected based on the following criteria:
* Timeliness of the topic
* Potential to attract the interest a diverse set of attendees
* Activities that are different from the classic mini-conference format
* Involvement people of different backgrounds in the organizing committee
* Addressing topics at the intersection of different disciplines
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