[Asis-l] ACM Web Science 2014 Call for Workshop and Tutorial Proposals

Jared Lorince jlorince at indiana.edu
Fri Nov 22 00:12:39 EST 2013


[Apologies for cross-posting. Please distribute widely]

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 workshop proposals: January 17th, 2013
Notification of Acceptance: January 31st, 2014
Workshops Date: June 23 2014

Call for Workshops and Tutorials

The Web is the largest information network ever devised. It opens a
universally accessible space for communication and knowledge sharing, with
vast effects on society that we are just starting to grasp. Web Science is
the emerging field that studies the structure, function and evolution of
the WWW to ultimately unravel the social potentials and consequences of
this ubiquitous network.

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.

Submission

Tutorial and workshop proposals should contain the following information:

1. Title summarizing the tutorial goals or workshop theme.
2. Details of the organizing committee, including names and institutional
affiliations.
3. Max two-page description about the relevance, motivation and goals of
the tutorial or workshop.
4. Schedule of sessions, panels, and talks (half or full day).
5. Names of instructors and potential invited speakers.
6. For workshops, selection criteria for papers to be presented.
7. Tutorial or workshop website URL (advisable).

It is the prerogative of organizers to decide whether to have an open call
for participants and papers, or arrange panels by invitation only (for
workshops), as well as deciding the duration  (full or half-day) of the
event. Proposals should include as many details as possible about sessions,
speakers, and talks: they will be evaluated by their coherence and ability
to address the stated goals.

Is is the responsibility of organizers to advertise their event, and (for
workshops) constitute a program committee to review and select papers,
manage the review process, and possibly arrange for selected papers to be
published in a special issue of a to-be-identified journal.

We advise proposals to have, at the time of submission, a website
describing the event and,  if applicable, information about similar  events
held in the past. Selected tutorials and workshops will be linked from the
main conference site.

Proposals should be submitted in pdf format through Easychair to:
https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=websci2014ws.

Review

The Web Science workshop chairs will review each submission and select
those with the higher scores on originality and relevance of the proposed
topic, its interdisciplinarity, rigor of the review process, coherence with
the conference aims, and potential to attract a large audience .

Deadlines

* January 17th 2013: Proposal Submissions
* January 31st 2013: Notification of acceptance
* February 15th 2013: Final website due

Workshop Chairs

Sandra González-Bailón, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia (PA), USA
Alessandro Flammini, Indiana University, Bloomington (IN), USA
Daniela Paolotti, ISI Foundation, Torino, Italy

For information, please contact websci2014ws at easychair.org

-- 
Jared Lorince
PhD student, ABC West Lab
Cognitive Science // Psychological & Brain Sciences
Indiana University, Bloomington
https://mypage.iu.edu/~jlorince
Co-Founder, motivateplay.com
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