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CALL FOR PAPERS

Qual Meets Quant:
Bridging the Gap between Technical and Social Researchers to Foster
International Development through Mobile Platforms

Workshop to be held at the 4th International Conference on Information
and Communication Technologies and Development, ICTD 2010, London,
13-16 December 2010
www.qualmeetsquant.org
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Scope and Motivation
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The increasing ubiquity of mobile phones in developing economies has
enabled the capture, for the first time in history, of massive amounts
of behavioral human data in areas of interest to international
development. Proper analysis of such data could provide important
insight into areas from health and education to microfinance and
agriculture. Unfortunately, much of the research related to mobile
phones and development has been done in methodological silos:
technical researchers focus on quantitative analysis; ethnographers
perform in-depth qualitative research; and policy makers extrapolate
policies from published research.

This workshop intends to bring together technical and social
researchers, as well as policy makers, to explore the potential of
mixed-method approaches to analyzing these new sources of data. On one
hand, large quantitative datasets are being generated by mobile
devices adopted either for personal use or as data-gathering tools by
practitioners from NGOs. On the other, ethnographers and social
researchers carry out qualitative research to gain a deep
understanding about mobile technology acceptance and human behavior.
Finally, organizations such as the United Nations and the National
Statistical Institutes periodically compile large datasets of
statistical information including demographic and socio-economic
indicators to assess social progress.

Joint analysis of quantitative data gathered through ubiquitous
technologies, qualitative research and statistical indicators is
likely to provide a deeper understanding than would be possible from
analyzing any single body of evidence in isolation. In fact,
interactions between these fields might provide a first step to move
beyond mere correlations and seek the cause-effect relationships that
policy makers aim to understand.

To foster this collaboration, the workshop will consist of short paper
presentations followed by a round table focused on evaluating new
analytical approaches and understanding how different research
techniques can be combined towards a holistic understanding of mobile
technology and its potential to foster international development.
Technical and social researchers as well as policy makers are welcome
to the workshop.

IMPORTANT DATES:
Paper submission deadline: 15th October, 2010.
Notification of acceptance: 15th November, 2010.
Camera-ready submission: 23rd November, 2010.

Registration for ICTD2010 required. Early Registration before 22nd September.


TOPICS OF INTEREST:

??* Techniques For Social Computing
?* Data Collection and Analysis
?* Spatio-temporal Analysis
?* Multiple-source Analysis
?* User Modeling and Personalization
?* Mixed-method approaches
?* Research Design
?* Adaptive Interaction
?* Causality Inference
?* Social Network Analysis
?* Mobility Analysis
?* Data Mining and Visualization

Application Domains
??* M-Education and Mobile Learning
??* M-health
??* M-banking, Microfinance and Microcredit
??* M-Government
??* M-Agriculture
??* M-Employment
??* M-Commerce
??* Social Protection
??* Transportation Systems
??* Disease Surveillance
??* Urban Planning

COMMITTEES

ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
Vanessa Frias-Martinez, Telefonica Research, Madrid, Spain
Kentaro Toyama, University of California, Berkeley
Jenna Burrell, University of California, Berkeley
Nathan Eagle, Santa Fe Institute, USA

PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Araba Sey, Change, University of Washington, USA
Bill Thies, Microsoft Research, India
Christoph Stork, Research ICT Africa Network (RIA)
Emma Brunskill, University of California, Berkeley
Enrique Frias-Martinez, Telefonica Research, Madrid, Spain
Ernest Mwebaze, Makerere University, Uganda
Fabiano Teixeira, Inter-American Development Bank, IADB
Gudrun Wicander, Karlstad University, Sweden
Javier Sim?, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Spain
John Quinn, Makerere University, Uganda
Jorn Klungsoyr, University of Bergen, Norway
Joshua Blumenstock, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Julian May, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
Juliana Rotich, Ushahidi
Kathleen Diga, IDRC, Canada
Muto Megumi, Japanese International Cooperation Agency, JICA, Japan
Neal Lesh, D-Tree International, USA
Raul Zambrano, United Nations Development Program, UNDP, USA
Tapan Parikh, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Ugo Vallauri, Royal Holloway, UK

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