From: jlorince@umail.iu.edu
[mailto:jlorince@umail.iu.edu]
On Behalf Of Jared Lorince
Sent: 31 December 2013 22:03
To: Jared Lorince; gciampag@indiana.edu;
fil@indiana.edu
Subject: ACM Web Science Conference
(WebSci'14), June 23-26, 2014
***Please
forward to colleagues and students as relevant***
CALL
FOR PAPERS & CALL FOR WORKSHOPS AND TUTORIAL
PROPOSALS
ACM Web Science Conference (WebSci'14), June 23-26,
2014
Bloomington, Indiana, USA
websci14.org /
@WebSciConf / #WebSci14
Deadline for papers: Feb. 23rd 2014
Deadline for workshop & tutorial proposals: Jan.
17th 2014
Web Science is the emergent science of the people,
organizations,
applications, and of policies that shape and are
shaped by the Web,
the largest informational artifact constructed by
humans in history.
Web Science embraces the study of the Web as a vast
universal
information network of people and communities. As
such, Web Science
includes the study of social networks whose work,
expression, and play
take place on the Web. The social sciences and
computational sciences
meet in Web Science and complement one another:
Studying human
behavior and social interaction contributes to our
understanding of
the Web, while Web data is transforming how social
science is
conducted. The Web presents us with a great
opportunity as well as an
obligation: If we are to ensure the Web benefits
humanity we must do
our best to understand it.
Call for Papers
The Web Science conference is inherently
interdisciplinary, as it
attempts to integrate computer and information
sciences,
communication, linguistics, sociology, psychology,
economics, law,
political science, philosophy, digital humanities, and
other
disciplines in pursuit of an understanding of the Web.
This
conference is unique in the manner in which it brings
these
disciplines together in creative and critical
dialogue, and we invite
papers from all the above disciplines, and in
particular those that
cross traditional disciplinary boundaries.
Following the success of WebSci'09 in Athens,
WebSci'10 in Raleigh,
WebSci'11 in Koblenz, WebSci '12 in Evanston, and
WebSci'13 in Paris,
for the 2014 conference we are seeking papers and
posters that
describe original research, analysis, and practice in
the field of Web
Science, as well as work that discusses novel and
thought-provoking
ideas and works-in-progress.
Possible topics for submissions include, but are not
limited to, the
following:
* Analysis of human behavior using social media,
mobile devices, and
online communities
* Methodological challenges of analyzing Web-based
* large-scale social interaction
* Data-mining and network analysis of the Web and
human communities on
the Web
* Detailed studies of micro-level processes and
interactions
* on the Web
* Collective intelligence, collaborative production,
and social
computing
* Theories and methods for computational social
science on the Web
* Studies of public health and health-related behavior
on the Web
* The architecture and philosophy of the Web
* The intersection of design and human interaction on
the Web
* Economics and social innovation on the Web
* Governance, democracy, intellectual property, and
the commons
* Personal data, trust, and privacy
* Web and social media research ethics
* Studies of Linked Data, the Cloud, and digital
eco-systems
* Big data and the study of the Web
* Web access, literacy, and development
* Knowledge, education, and scholarship on and through
the Web
* People-driven Web technologies, including
crowd-sourcing, open data,
and new interfaces
* Digital humanities
* Arts & culture on the Web or engaging audiences
using Web resources
* Web archiving techniques and scholarly uses of Web
archives
* New research questions and thought-provoking ideas
A separate Call for Workshop and Tutorial Proposals is
on the
conference website at:
http://www.websci14.org/#call-for-workshop-and-tutorial-proposals
Submission
Web Science is necessarily a very selective single
track conference
with a rigorous review process. To accommodate the
distinct traditions
of its many disciplines, we provide three different
submission
formats: full papers, short papers, and posters. For
all types of
submissions, inclusion in the ACM DL proceedings will
be by default,
but not mandatory (opt-out via EasyChair). All
accepted research
papers (full and short papers) will be presented
during the
single-track conference. All accepted posters will be
given a spot in
the single-track lightning talk session, and room to
present their
papers during a dedicated poster session.
Full research papers (5 to 10 pages, ACM double
column, 20 mins
presentation including Q&A)
Full research papers should present new results and
original work that
has not been previously published. Research papers
should present
substantial theoretical, empirical, methodological, or
policy-oriented
contributions to research and/or practice.
Short research papers (up to 5 pages, ACM double
column, 15 mins
presentation including Q&A)
Short research papers should present new results and
original work
that has not been previously published. Research
papers can present
preliminary theoretical, empirical, methodological, or
policy-oriented
contributions to research and/or practice.
Posters (up to 2 pages, ACM double column, lightning
talk + poster
presentation)
Extended abstracts for posters, which should be in
English, can be up
to 2 pages.
Submission instructions
Full and short paper and poster submissions should be
formatted
according to the official ACM SIG proceedings template
(WebSci archive
format at http://www.acm.org/sigs/publications/proceedings-templates).
Please submit papers using EasyChair at
https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=websci2014.
Other creative submission formats (flexible formats)
Other types of creative submissions are also
encouraged, and the exact
format and style of presentation are open. Examples
might include
artistic performances or installations, interactive
exhibits,
demonstrations, or other creative formats. For these
submissions, the
proposers should make clear both what they propose to
do, and any
special requirements they would need to successfully
do it (in terms
of space, time, technology, etc.)
Review
The Web Science program committee consists of a
program committee that
covers all relevant areas of Web Science. Each
submission will be
refereed by three PC members and one short meta review
written by a
Co-PC chair, to cover both the research background of
each submission
as well as the necessary interdisciplinary aspects.
(Optional) Archival Proceedings in the ACM Digital
Library
All accepted papers and posters will by default appear
in the Web
Science 2014 Conference Proceedings and can also be
made available
through the ACM Digital Library, in the same length
and format of the
submission unless indicated otherwise (those wishing
not to be indexed
and archived can "opt out" of the proceedings).
Call for Workshops and Tutorial Proposals
The Web Science conference will start with tutorials
and workshops
that will promote in-depth training and discussions
with the goal of
understanding how people, organizations, applications,
and policies
shape and are shaped by the Web. In agreement with the
spirit of the
conference, the tutorials and workshops are intended
to create
opportunities for interdisciplinary discussion around
themes and
methods that are central to the study of the Web. The
list of themes
includes, but is not restricted to,
1. Methods for data mining and network research;
2. The study of social dynamics (i.e. political
campaigns, censorship)
using Web data;
3. The relationship between technical design and
individual behaviour
(i.e. the impact of by-default design on privacy);
4. The future of the Web in an era of increasing
mobile applications;
5. The incentives and limits of regulation;
6. Participatory systems and crowdsourcing;
7. The dynamics of information creation (supply) and
consumption
(demand) and its relation to real world events.
We will give priority to proposals that approach their
topic from the
perspective of various disciplines, spanning the
divide between the
social and computer sciences. Tutorials and workshops
can be designed
as half or full day events. Workshops can have a
mixture of panel
presentations and invited speakers, but presentations
should reflect
the diversity of approaches that characterize the
multidisciplinary
nature of Web Science.
For more information about chairs, submission, review,
deadlines, etc,
please see the full call at
http://websci14.org/#call-for-workshop-and-tutorial-proposals or
contact websci2014ws@easychair.org.
Deadlines
Full & Short Papers:
* 23 February 2014: Submissions of full and short
papers
* 13 April 2014: Notification of acceptance for papers
* 11 May 2014: Camera-ready version of papers and
posters due
Late Breaking Posters:
* 23 March 2014: Submissions of posters
* 13 April 2014: Notification of acceptance for
posters
* 11 May 2014: Camera-ready version of posters due
Workshops and tutorial proposals:
* January 17th 2014: Proposal Submissions
Authors take note: The official publication date is
the date the
proceedings are made available in the ACM Digital
Library. This date
may be up to two weeks prior to the first day of the
conference. The
official publication date affects the deadline for any
patent filings
related to published work. (If proceedings are
published in the ACM
Digital Library after the conference is over, the
official publication
date is the first day of the conference.)
Conference calendar and rough program
* 23 June 2014: workshops, opening reception and
keynote
* 24 June 2014: keynote(s), technical program, poster
reception
* 25 June 2014: keynote(s), technical program, social
event
* 26 June 2014: keynote, technical program, closing
General chairs
* Fil Menczer, Indiana University
* Jim Hendler, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
* Bill Dutton, Oxford Internet Institute, University
of Oxford
Program chairs
* Markus Strohmaier, University of Koblenz and GESIS
(Computing)
* Ciro Cattuto, ISI Foundation (Physics)
* Eric T. Meyer, Oxford Internet Institute, University
of Oxford
(Social Sciences)
Program Commiteee
* Yong-Yeol Ahn, Indiana University
* Luca Maria Aiello, Yahoo! Research
* William Allen, University of Oxford
* Sitaram Asur, HP Labs
* Alain Barrat, CNRS
* Fabricio Benevenuto, Federal University of Minas
Gerais
* Mark Bernstein, Eastgate Systems, Inc
* Paolo Boldi, Universita degli Studi di Milano
* Niels Brugger, Aarhus Universitet
* Licia Capra, University College London
* Carlos Castillo, Qatar Computing Research Institute
* Lu Chen, Wright State University
* Cristobal Cobo, Oxford Internet Institute
* David Crandall, Indiana University
* Pasquale De Meo, VU University, Amsterdam
* David De Roure, Oxford e-Research Centre
* Pnina Fichman, Indiana University
* Alessandro Flammini, Indiana University
* Matteo Gagliolo, Universite libre de Bruxelles
* Laetitia Gauvin, ISI Foundation, Turin
* Daniel Gayo Avello, University of Oviedo
* Scott Golder, Cornell University
* Bruno Goncalves, Aix-Marseille Universite
* Andrew Gordon, University of Southern California
* Scott Hale, Oxford Internet Institute
* Noriko Hara, Indiana University
* Bernhard Haslhofer, University of Vienna
* Andreas Hotho, University of Wuerzburg
* Geert-Jan Houben, TU Delft
* Jeremy Hunsinger, Wilfrid Laurier University
* Ajita John, Avaya Labs
* Robert Jaschke, L3S Research Center
* Haewoon Kwak, Telefonica Research
* Renaud Lambiotte, University of Namur
* Matthieu Latapy, CNRS
* Silvio Lattanzi, Google
* Vili Lehdonvirta, Oxford Internet Institute
* Sune Lehmann, Technical University of Denmark
* Kristina Lerman, University of Southern California
* David Liben-Nowell, Carleton College
* Yu-Ru Lin, University of Pittsburgh
* Huan Liu, Arizona State University
* Jared Lorince, Indiana University
* Mathias Lux, Klagenfurt University
* Massimo Marchiori, University of Padova and UTILABS
* Yutaka Matsuo, University of Tokyo
* Jaimie Murdock, Indiana University
* Mirco Musolesi, University of Birmingham
* Eni Mustafaraj, Wellesley College
* Wolfgang Nejdl, L3S and University of Hannover
* Andre Panisson, ISI Foundation, Turin
* Hanwoo Park, Yeungnam University
* Fernando Pedone, University of Lugano
* Leto Peel, University of Colorado, Boulder
* Orion Penner, IMT Lucca
* Nicola Perra, Northeastern University
* Rob Procter, University of Warwick
* Cornelius Puschmann, Alexander von Humboldt
Institute for Internet
and Society
* Daniele Quercia, Yahoo! Labs
* Carlos P. Roca, Universitat Rovira i Virgili
* Richard Rogers, University of Amsterdam
* Daniel Romero, Northwestern University
* Matthew Rowe, Lancaster University
* Giancarlo Ruffo, Universita di Torino
* Derek Ruths, McGill University
* Rossano Schifanella, Universita di Torino
* Ralph Schroeder, Oxford Internet Institute
* Kalpana Shankar, University College Dublin
* Xiaolin Shi, Microsoft
* Elena Simperl, University of Southampton
* Philipp Singer, Knowledge Management Institute
* Marc Smith, Connected Action Consulting Group
* Steffen Staab, University of Koblenz-Landau
* Burkhard Stiller, University of Zurich
* Lei Tang, @WalmartLabs
* Loren Terveen, University of Minnesota
* Sebastiano Vigna, Universita degli Studi di Milano
* Claudia Wagner, GESIS-Leibniz Institute for the
Social Sciences
* Jillian Wallis, UC Los Angeles
* Stan Wasserman, Indiana University
* Ingmar Weber, Qatar Computing Research Institute
* Matthew Weber, Rutgers University
* Lilian Weng, Indiana University
* Christopher Wienberg, University of Southern
California
* Ben Zhao, UC Santa Barbara
* Arkaitz Zubiaga, Dublin Institute of Technology