[CITASA] Call for Workshops at Web Science 2016

G
gadiraju
Tue, Sep 29, 2015 8:47 AM

Hello,

Here is the first call for workshop proposals at the 8th International
ACM Web Science 2016 conference.

Apologies for Cross-Posting

*************************** Call for Workshop Proposals


In a world increasingly connected by the Web, the divide between online
and offline is blurrier than ever. The Web serves as global newspaper,
television station, marketplace, agora, or museum. As a great deal of
social interaction moves online, the Internet promises researchers a
portal into the social life of humanity. Furthermore, the Internet
promises not only insight into, but also a full transformation of social
life.

Despite the prevalent impression of Internet saturation that may prevail
in many developed societies, the majority of humans are still offline.
New Internet users experience the Web through radically different and
diverse mobile interfaces. Although many digital prophets promised a
world where place and class would be irrelevant, the Internet has not
freed us from geography or social inequality: the “digital divide” is
alive and well, with socially-disadvantaged people often having dismal
access to the Internet.

It is thus important for scholars of the Internet to take a reasoned,
critical view of the Web. We call for discussion around the ways in
which the Web as a platform, as well as Web Science, can help address
global challenges. To this end we invite workshop proposals for the 2016
edition of the ACM WebSci conference, on topics such as, but not limited
to:

-The Web and Geography
-The Mobile Revolution and Web Science
-Web Science and Social Good
-Digital Inequalities on the Web
-The Internet in recent Middle-Eastern History
-Crime on the Web and Security

We encourage proposals on the above topics, and likewise welcome
submissions on already-established areas of focus for ACM WebSci such
as:

-Digital Humanities
-Web Architecture and Organization
-Collective Intelligence
-Social Network Analysis
-Data Ethics, Privacy and Security
-Statistics on the Web
Workshops can have a mixture of panel presentations and invited
speakers, but presentations should reflect the diversity of approaches
that characterise the multidisciplinary nature of Web Science.

Workshop submission

Workshop proposals should contain the following information:

-Title summarising the tutorial goals or workshop theme.
-Name and affiliations of the organizers.
-Details of the organising/program committee, including names and
institutional affiliations and -whether they have accepted to
participate.
-Max two-page description about the relevance, motivation and goals of
the workshop, as well as pointers to past editions, if any.
-Schedule of sessions, panels, and talks, including if it is a half- or
full-day workshop.
-Names of potential invited speakers with an indication of whether they
have accepted the preliminary invitation.
-Selection criteria for papers to be presented if the workshop invites
submissions.

It is the prerogative of organisers to decide whether to have an open
call for participants and papers, or arrange panels by invitation only.
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.
It is the responsibility of the organisers to advertise their event, and
constitute a program committee to review and select papers and manage
the review process if they wish to include paper presentations in their
workshop.
If successful, we advise proposals to have a website describing the
event (within three weeks of acceptance). Workshop websites will be
linked to from the main conference site.
Proposals should be submitted in pdf format via email to
websci16ws@googlegroups.com.

Publication of Workshop Submissions

Submissions to the proposed workshops may be included in the WebSci
proceedings, or workshop organizers may choose to not publish their
submissions. If the workshop proceedings are to be included in the
conference proceedings then the camera-ready deadline (see below) must
be adhered too.

Workshop proposal review

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

Workshop proposal deadlines

December 17, 2015 - Workshop proposal submissions
December 24, 2015 - Notification of workshop acceptance
January 14, 2016 - Workshop website due
February-March 2016 - Workshop paper submission and notification
deadlines (if applicable, details left to workshop organizers)
April 17, 2016 - Camera-ready workshop papers due (if inclusion in
conference proceedings is desired)
May 22, 2016 - Workshop date

Workshop Chairs

Ingmar Weber, QCRI, Qatar | Twitter : @ingmarweber
Bogdan State, Facebook & Stanford, USA | Twitter : @bogdanstate


Best Regards,

Ujwal Gadiraju

L3S Research Center
Leibniz Universität Hannover

Hello, Here is the first call for workshop proposals at the 8th International ACM Web Science 2016 conference. ### Apologies for Cross-Posting ### *************************** Call for Workshop Proposals ********************** In a world increasingly connected by the Web, the divide between online and offline is blurrier than ever. The Web serves as global newspaper, television station, marketplace, agora, or museum. As a great deal of social interaction moves online, the Internet promises researchers a portal into the social life of humanity. Furthermore, the Internet promises not only insight into, but also a full transformation of social life. Despite the prevalent impression of Internet saturation that may prevail in many developed societies, the majority of humans are still offline. New Internet users experience the Web through radically different and diverse mobile interfaces. Although many digital prophets promised a world where place and class would be irrelevant, the Internet has not freed us from geography or social inequality: the “digital divide” is alive and well, with socially-disadvantaged people often having dismal access to the Internet. It is thus important for scholars of the Internet to take a reasoned, critical view of the Web. We call for discussion around the ways in which the Web as a platform, as well as Web Science, can help address global challenges. To this end we invite workshop proposals for the 2016 edition of the ACM WebSci conference, on topics such as, but not limited to: -The Web and Geography -The Mobile Revolution and Web Science -Web Science and Social Good -Digital Inequalities on the Web -The Internet in recent Middle-Eastern History -Crime on the Web and Security We encourage proposals on the above topics, and likewise welcome submissions on already-established areas of focus for ACM WebSci such as: -Digital Humanities -Web Architecture and Organization -Collective Intelligence -Social Network Analysis -Data Ethics, Privacy and Security -Statistics on the Web Workshops can have a mixture of panel presentations and invited speakers, but presentations should reflect the diversity of approaches that characterise the multidisciplinary nature of Web Science. ### Workshop submission ### Workshop proposals should contain the following information: -Title summarising the tutorial goals or workshop theme. -Name and affiliations of the organizers. -Details of the organising/program committee, including names and institutional affiliations and -whether they have accepted to participate. -Max two-page description about the relevance, motivation and goals of the workshop, as well as pointers to past editions, if any. -Schedule of sessions, panels, and talks, including if it is a half- or full-day workshop. -Names of potential invited speakers with an indication of whether they have accepted the preliminary invitation. -Selection criteria for papers to be presented if the workshop invites submissions. It is the prerogative of organisers to decide whether to have an open call for participants and papers, or arrange panels by invitation only. 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. It is the responsibility of the organisers to advertise their event, and constitute a program committee to review and select papers and manage the review process if they wish to include paper presentations in their workshop. If successful, we advise proposals to have a website describing the event (within three weeks of acceptance). Workshop websites will be linked to from the main conference site. Proposals should be submitted in pdf format via email to websci16ws@googlegroups.com. ### Publication of Workshop Submissions ### Submissions to the proposed workshops may be included in the WebSci proceedings, or workshop organizers may choose to not publish their submissions. If the workshop proceedings are to be included in the conference proceedings then the camera-ready deadline (see below) must be adhered too. ### Workshop proposal review ### The Web Science programme chairs will review each submission and select those with the highest scores on originality, timeliness and relevance of the proposed topic, its interdisciplinarity, rigour of the review process, coherence with the conference aims, and potential to attract a large audience. ### Workshop proposal deadlines ### December 17, 2015 - Workshop proposal submissions December 24, 2015 - Notification of workshop acceptance January 14, 2016 - Workshop website due February-March 2016 - Workshop paper submission and notification deadlines (if applicable, details left to workshop organizers) April 17, 2016 - Camera-ready workshop papers due (if inclusion in conference proceedings is desired) May 22, 2016 - Workshop date ### Workshop Chairs ### Ingmar Weber, QCRI, Qatar | Twitter : @ingmarweber Bogdan State, Facebook & Stanford, USA | Twitter : @bogdanstate *************************************************************************************************** Best Regards, Ujwal Gadiraju L3S Research Center Leibniz Universität Hannover