Call for Papers: IEEE ICDM International Workshop on AI for Nudging (WAIN) 2021
Co-located with IEEE International Conference on Data Mining (ICDM)
https://lirio-brell.github.io/wain21/

Nudging has been widely used by decision makers and organizations (both 
government and private) to influence the behavior of target populations, and 
the concept of nudging is now being widely used in the digital world. Examples 
of digital nudging include emails from hospitals or public health officials 
encouraging individuals to get vaccinated, text messages from colleges to 
stressed-out students to advertise the availability of counseling services 
during exam weeks, marketing messages through various digital media, and user 
interfaces designed to guide people’s behavior in digital choice environments. 

The central idea behind nudging is to make small changes to the environments in 
which citizens make decisions to encourage better behaviors. Even though nudges 
have traditionally involved simple changes that are easy and inexpensive to 
implement, more complex and sustained behavior change requires more complex 
interventions, presenting new challenges for nudging in the virtual world. 
Though the concept of nudging has been popularized recently, nudges have been 
in use in various aspects of society for a long time, including in healthcare, 
public health policy, law, economics, politics, insurance, finance, and 
advertising. With increasing availability of big data from many scientific 
disciplines, artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), and data 
science (DS) technologies have vast potential to transform data-driven nudging 
and decision making. This workshop seeks to build a new community around AI for 
nudging and provide a platform for exploring the state of the ar!
 t in AI/ML/DS based systems and applications of digital nudging. 

We invite contributions from researchers of any discipline who are developing 
AI/ML/DS technologies that impact human behavior based on nudging theory or 
behavioral science-based solutions. For example, in the context of public 
health communications, how can AI/ML be used to address the construction of a 
message incorporating nudges; how do you digitally nudge people towards better 
healthcare outcomes, better financial decisions, or improve productivity; or 
how can nudging be personalized? In addition to algorithmic and systems papers, 
case studies that shed light on the effectiveness of nudges at maximizing a 
specific outcome, how AI/ML based systems can nudge people to make better 
decisions, or how industry is developing and/or using nudging technology to 
influence behavior of consumers are of great interest to this workshop.  

Topics of interest include, but not limited to, the following:

Theoretical foundations of nudging 

Core AI/ML topics including multi-agents, federated learning, active learning, 
semi-supervised learning, multi-armed bandits, contextual bandits, 
reinforcement learning, deep learning, transfer learning 

Multi-modal data and model fusion 

Representation learning, and embeddings 

Learning from categorical and relational data 

Feature engineering Statistical models, A/B testing 

Privacy and Ethical issues in nudging 

Personalized nudging 

Challenges for AI in real-time nudging 

AI-driven interactions encoding behavior change solutions 

Nudging in conversational AI 

Evaluation strategies to measure impact and effectiveness of nudging 

Applications: Healthcare, Precision Medicine, Energy, Environment, 
Transportation, Workforce, Education, Advertising, Government, Politics, 
Policy, Software Engineering


Important dates:

Aug. 30, 2021: Paper submission 

Sep. 24, 2021: Acceptance notification 

Oct. 01, 2021: Camera-ready deadline and copyright form 

Dec. 17, 2021: Workshop (WAIN follows ICDM conference guidelines regarding 
COVID-19. Please keep monitoring the ICDM-21 main page for future notifications 
regarding the same.)

Paper Submissions:

This is an open call for papers. We invite both full papers (max 8 pages) 
describing mature work and short papers (max 5-6 pages) describing 
work-in-progress or case studies. Only original and high-quality papers 
conforming to the ICDM 2021 standard guidelines will be considered for this 
workshop.

Proceedings:

All submitted papers will be evaluated by 2-3 program committee members, and 
accepted papers will be included in an ICDM Workshop Proceedings volume, to be 
published by IEEE Computer Society Press and included in the IEEE Xplore 
Digital Library.

Contact:

Visit the official workshop website for additional details at: 
https://lirio-brell.github.io/wain21/

If you have questions, please contact us by e-mail to: [email protected]

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