SG
Sandra Gonzalez Bailon
Tue, Mar 11, 2014 5:11 PM
Hi All - this conference might be of interest to some of you. Deadline for 1,000 word abstracts this coming Friday (March 14)!
Sandra
Call for Papers
---=======================
IPP2014: Crowdsourcing for Politics and Policy
http://ipp.oii.ox.ac.uk/2014
Thursday 25 - Friday 26 September 2014
University of Oxford
Abstract deadline: 14 March 2014.
---=======================
The Internet, Politics, Policy conference is convened by the Oxford Internet Institute for the OII-edited academic journal Policy and Internet, in collaboration with the European Consortium of Political Research (ECPR) standing group on Internet and Politics.
Rationale
Crowdsourcing - the provision of goods by large numbers of people contributing via an online platform - is used to generate and sustain policy ideas, labour markets, business investment, charitable donations, knowledge commons (such as Wikipedia), cultural goods and artefacts, libraries, government transparency, public management reform, education, scientific development and the institutions of democracy itself. This pattern of technology-enabled institutional change, where a known few are replaced by an indefinite many, has deep and diverse implications for government, business, civil society, democratic life and public policy-making. Researchers and policy-makers have barely begun to examine the opportunities and challenges that the crowdsourcing model presents.
The Internet, Politics, Policy 2014 conference is dedicated to facilitating discussion on crowdsourcing across disciplinary boundaries. The conference calls for papers on the observed and potential implications of crowdsourcing for politics, policy and academic practice. Perspectives are welcomed from across science, social science and the humanities as well as from academic and policy-making communities. We aim to identify both what is novel in crowdsourcing, and the ways it enables and extends existing social and political processes.
** Topics **
The conference aims to attract papers from a range of disciplines analysing crowdsourcing-related phenomena. We welcome both theoretical and empirical papers reporting original research on crowdsourcing and related concepts such as microwork, peer production, human computing, co-creation, open innovation and e-government. We particularly welcome comparative approaches and papers drawing on new empirical findings and novel research methods.
Topics of interest include (but are not limited to):
-
How is crowdsourcing changing politics? Topics of interest include citizen participation in government and the political process, and online collective action.
-
Uses of big data in evidence-based public policy, including probabilistic, and conditional and predictive policy-making and the use of social media data for government self-improvement.
-
Online labor markets, new organizational forms, and the blurring of boundaries between work and play, as well as the economics of crowdsourcing more generally.
-
Co-production and co-creation of public policy, through (for example) the use of feedback facilities, rating, ranking and reputation applications.
-
Crowdsourcing for conflict management, peace building and humanitarian intervention, including crisis mapping.
-
Crowdsourcing for educational, scientific and technological development, such as citizen science, crowd-funding, massive online open courses, and the methodological, epistemological and ethical issues involved.
-
New methods for analyzing crowdsourcing, such as computational social science and big data analytics, including sentiment analysis, topic classification, sampling from social media platforms, and inferring from socially generated data to the wider population.
-
Ethical issues arising from the use of such methods, such as de-anonymisation,privacy, and inequalities created by the use of predictive analytics in decisions concerning individuals.
-
When crowds turn into mobs: online hate groups, organized cyberbullying, their dynamics and effective policy responses.
** Keynotes **
Elizabeth F. Churchill, Director of Human Computer Interaction, eBay Research Labs, San Jose, California. She is an applied social scientist, interactive technology designer and social communications researcher, and is particularly interested in understanding how technical, cultural and social factors affect the ways in which people do (or do not) communicate and collaborate. With a background in psychology, Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science, she draws on social, computer, engineering and data sciences to create innovative end-user applications and services, most actively in the areas of ubiquitous and mobile computing, social media, computer mediated communication, locative media and Internet/Web sciences.
Chris Lintott, Citizen Science Project Lead, Department of Physics, University of Oxford.
He is the PI of Zooniverse, home to the Internet's largest, most popular and most successful citizen science projects. He is also the cofounder of Galaxy Zoo, an online crowdsourcing project where members of the public can volunteer their time to assist in classifying over a million galaxies. The project has not only proved incredibly popular, it has also produced many unique scientific results, ranging from individual, serendipitous discoveries to those using classifications that depend on the input of everyone who's visited the site. Chris is a fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society, has served as the Director of Citizen Science at the Adler Planetarium, and is the primary presenter of the BBC series The Sky at Night.
** Submission of Proposals **
Proposals should be submitted using the online form: http://ipp.oii.ox.ac.uk/2014/forms/abstract-submissions
Paper proposals should consist of a title and a 1,000-word extended abstract that specifies and motivates the research question, describes the methods and data used, and summarises the main findings. Abstracts will be peer reviewed, and the authors of accepted proposals are expected to submit full papers prior to the conference. Applicants will have the opportunity to co-submit their paper to the journal Policy and Internet, which will operate a fast-track review process for papers accepted to the conference.
Paper submissions can also be considered for a Best Paper Award (sponsored by the journal Policy and Internet). The prize will be awarded at the closing session of the conference. As the paper is intended to be published in a future issue of the journal, authors should indicate whether they would like their paper to be considered for the prize.
Poster proposals
Posters should summarise in a visually engaging manner the purpose, methods and results of an original piece of research. All accepted submissions will be considered for a Best Poster Award. The prize will be awarded at the closing session of the conference.
** Important Dates **
- Extended abstract submission deadline: 14 March 2014
- Decisions on abstracts: 14 April 2014
- Full paper / poster submission deadline (for accepted abstracts): 15 August 2014
- Conference dates: Thursday 25 - Friday 26 September 2014.
Conveners:
Helen Margetts (OII)
Vili Lehdonvirta (OII)
David Sutcliffe (OII)
Sandra Gonzalez-Bailon (Annenberg, UPenn)
Andrea Calderaro (EUI / ECPR).
Contact:
David Sutcliffe policyandinternet@oii.ox.ac.ukmailto:policyandinternet@oii.ox.ac.uk
http://ipp.oii.ox.ac.uk/2014
Hi All - this conference might be of interest to some of you. Deadline for 1,000 word abstracts this coming Friday (March 14)!
Sandra
* * *
Call for Papers
========================================================
IPP2014: Crowdsourcing for Politics and Policy
http://ipp.oii.ox.ac.uk/2014
Thursday 25 - Friday 26 September 2014
University of Oxford
Abstract deadline: 14 March 2014.
========================================================
The Internet, Politics, Policy conference is convened by the Oxford Internet Institute for the OII-edited academic journal Policy and Internet, in collaboration with the European Consortium of Political Research (ECPR) standing group on Internet and Politics.
**Rationale**
Crowdsourcing - the provision of goods by large numbers of people contributing via an online platform - is used to generate and sustain policy ideas, labour markets, business investment, charitable donations, knowledge commons (such as Wikipedia), cultural goods and artefacts, libraries, government transparency, public management reform, education, scientific development and the institutions of democracy itself. This pattern of technology-enabled institutional change, where a known few are replaced by an indefinite many, has deep and diverse implications for government, business, civil society, democratic life and public policy-making. Researchers and policy-makers have barely begun to examine the opportunities and challenges that the crowdsourcing model presents.
The Internet, Politics, Policy 2014 conference is dedicated to facilitating discussion on crowdsourcing across disciplinary boundaries. The conference calls for papers on the observed and potential implications of crowdsourcing for politics, policy and academic practice. Perspectives are welcomed from across science, social science and the humanities as well as from academic and policy-making communities. We aim to identify both what is novel in crowdsourcing, and the ways it enables and extends existing social and political processes.
** Topics **
The conference aims to attract papers from a range of disciplines analysing crowdsourcing-related phenomena. We welcome both theoretical and empirical papers reporting original research on crowdsourcing and related concepts such as microwork, peer production, human computing, co-creation, open innovation and e-government. We particularly welcome comparative approaches and papers drawing on new empirical findings and novel research methods.
Topics of interest include (but are not limited to):
* How is crowdsourcing changing politics? Topics of interest include citizen participation in government and the political process, and online collective action.
* Uses of big data in evidence-based public policy, including probabilistic, and conditional and predictive policy-making and the use of social media data for government self-improvement.
* Online labor markets, new organizational forms, and the blurring of boundaries between work and play, as well as the economics of crowdsourcing more generally.
* Co-production and co-creation of public policy, through (for example) the use of feedback facilities, rating, ranking and reputation applications.
* Crowdsourcing for conflict management, peace building and humanitarian intervention, including crisis mapping.
* Crowdsourcing for educational, scientific and technological development, such as citizen science, crowd-funding, massive online open courses, and the methodological, epistemological and ethical issues involved.
* New methods for analyzing crowdsourcing, such as computational social science and big data analytics, including sentiment analysis, topic classification, sampling from social media platforms, and inferring from socially generated data to the wider population.
* Ethical issues arising from the use of such methods, such as de-anonymisation,privacy, and inequalities created by the use of predictive analytics in decisions concerning individuals.
* When crowds turn into mobs: online hate groups, organized cyberbullying, their dynamics and effective policy responses.
** Keynotes **
Elizabeth F. Churchill, Director of Human Computer Interaction, eBay Research Labs, San Jose, California. She is an applied social scientist, interactive technology designer and social communications researcher, and is particularly interested in understanding how technical, cultural and social factors affect the ways in which people do (or do not) communicate and collaborate. With a background in psychology, Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science, she draws on social, computer, engineering and data sciences to create innovative end-user applications and services, most actively in the areas of ubiquitous and mobile computing, social media, computer mediated communication, locative media and Internet/Web sciences.
Chris Lintott, Citizen Science Project Lead, Department of Physics, University of Oxford.
He is the PI of Zooniverse, home to the Internet's largest, most popular and most successful citizen science projects. He is also the cofounder of Galaxy Zoo, an online crowdsourcing project where members of the public can volunteer their time to assist in classifying over a million galaxies. The project has not only proved incredibly popular, it has also produced many unique scientific results, ranging from individual, serendipitous discoveries to those using classifications that depend on the input of everyone who's visited the site. Chris is a fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society, has served as the Director of Citizen Science at the Adler Planetarium, and is the primary presenter of the BBC series The Sky at Night.
** Submission of Proposals **
Proposals should be submitted using the online form: http://ipp.oii.ox.ac.uk/2014/forms/abstract-submissions
* Papers
Paper proposals should consist of a title and a 1,000-word extended abstract that specifies and motivates the research question, describes the methods and data used, and summarises the main findings. Abstracts will be peer reviewed, and the authors of accepted proposals are expected to submit full papers prior to the conference. Applicants will have the opportunity to co-submit their paper to the journal Policy and Internet, which will operate a fast-track review process for papers accepted to the conference.
Paper submissions can also be considered for a Best Paper Award (sponsored by the journal Policy and Internet). The prize will be awarded at the closing session of the conference. As the paper is intended to be published in a future issue of the journal, authors should indicate whether they would like their paper to be considered for the prize.
Poster proposals
* Posters
Posters should summarise in a visually engaging manner the purpose, methods and results of an original piece of research. All accepted submissions will be considered for a Best Poster Award. The prize will be awarded at the closing session of the conference.
** Important Dates **
* Extended abstract submission deadline: 14 March 2014
* Decisions on abstracts: 14 April 2014
* Full paper / poster submission deadline (for accepted abstracts): 15 August 2014
* Conference dates: Thursday 25 - Friday 26 September 2014.
Conveners:
Helen Margetts (OII)
Vili Lehdonvirta (OII)
David Sutcliffe (OII)
Sandra Gonzalez-Bailon (Annenberg, UPenn)
Andrea Calderaro (EUI / ECPR).
Contact:
David Sutcliffe policyandinternet@oii.ox.ac.uk<mailto:policyandinternet@oii.ox.ac.uk>
http://ipp.oii.ox.ac.uk/2014