Apologies for cross-posting.
HT2015, Call for Papers for Main Research Tracks
26th ACM Conference on Hypertext and Social Media
2-4 September 2015 Cyprus
http://ht.acm.org/ht2015/
--- Conference Scope ---
The ACM Conference on Hypertext and Social Media conference (HT) is a
premium venue for high quality peer-reviewed research on theory, systems
and applications for hypertext and social media. It is concerned with
all aspects of modern hypertext research, including social media,
adaptation and personalization, user modeling, linked data and semantic
web, dynamic and computed hypertext, and its application in digital
humanities.
HT2015 will focus on the role of hypertext and hyperlink theory on the
web and beyond, as a foundation for approaches and practices in the
wider community. Therefore, HT2015 has the following tracks:
* Digital Connectivity
* Data Connectivity
* Digital Humanities
--- Track DIGITAL CONNECTIVITY ---
In modern Web environments hypermedia content is increasingly generated,
processed, filtered, adjusted, and personalized. Online social networks
further generalize the conventional notion of the hypermedia to imply
connections between users via their content and media. Making sense of
these complex processes has attracted significant attention in various
research disciplines.
The Digital Connectivity track targets developing deeper insights into
the mechanisms of information generation and dissemination,
characterization of evolutionary processes on online social networks,
studies of models and systems that support these processes, and the
broader implications of these for organizations and society. The track
provides a forum for researchers and practitioners to exchange
information regarding advancements in the current state of art.
Addressing problems in the Digital Connectivity space necessitates
expertise in several domains: Computer and Information Science, Social
Sciences, Psychology, and Economics. Hence submissions of
inter-disciplinary works are highly encouraged. We also welcome works
that explore how Digital Connectivity can be applied in diverse domains,
such as Education, Health, Journalism, Government, Environment, and Media.
Topics of interest of the track include (but are not limited to):
* Adaptive authoring and design of hypermedia
* Adaptive hypertext frameworks and toolkits
* Community and social circle evolution
* Crowdsourcing and social media
* Enhancing hyperspace with recommendations
* Expertise and trust in online social networks
* Hypermedia classification and metadata systems
* Information diffusion in social networks
* Information interfaces and navigation support
* Information visualization of social data
* Language analytics in social media
* Mobile hypermedia and social media
* Narrative generation and presentation
* Personalization for hypermedia and social networks
* Social information seeking and retrieval
* Social network and social media analytics
* Spam and malicious activity discovery in social systems
* Spatio-temporal analysis of hypermedia and social networks
* Usability and scrutablility of adaptive hypermedia
* User modeling for adaptive hypermedia
Track Chairs:
Shlomo Berkovsky, CSIRO, Australia
Markel Vigo, University of Manchester, UK
--- Track DATA CONNECTIVITY ---
The need to make data available on the Web using formats and protocols
that make them easier to consume by potential data reusers has been
widely recognized and accepted by data owners. This is especially the
case with Open Government Data initiatives, although this need has also
arisen and dealt with in areas such as Culture, Journalism, Science,
etc. Besides the obvious method of placing isolated datasets as files on
Web servers, probably with some simple metadata associated to them,
several other alternative methods have been proposed for making
different types of data available on the Web: Linked Data, CSV on the
Web, REST APIs, etc. Once these are available, they can be used inside
data value chains to generate more added-value data, data-intensive
applications, etc.
This track deals with the methods, techniques and technologies that can
be used to make data available on the Web, with a special focus on how
heterogeneous data sources can be connected to each other, hence
breaking data silos on the Web. We are not only focused on using Linked
Data approaches, which sit naturally for this purpose, but also on any
other alternative approaches that may allow for such data publishing,
description and interlinking. In fact, we welcome submissions that
address any of the steps of the data-on-the-Web lifecycle, including the
creation, interlinking, entity and relation extraction, semantic
annotation, analysis and modeling, dynamics and evolution, and
applications of connected data on the Web.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
* Web and connected data publication, annotation and curation
* Web and connected data linking and integration
* Web and connected data wrangling
* Analysis, mining, modeling and management of Web and connected data,
including Linked Data, knowledge graphs, Web tables, and social network data
* Web and connected data dynamics and evolution
* Web and connected data provenance, privacy, and trust
* Web and connected data in scholarly communication and publication
* Crowdsourcing for Web and connected data
* Applications using Web and connected data for the Web, mobile devices,
and social media
* Scalability of data connectivity and linking algorithms and
infrastructures
* User experience with Web and connected data
Track Chairs:
Oscar Corcho, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid and LocaliData, Spain
Erjia Yan, Drexel University, USA
-- Track DIGITAL HUMANITIES ---
With its wide-spread adoption, the World Wide Web has become a highly
detailed yet biased reflection of human social behavior. The web in
general and social media in particular have become attractive textual
and non-textual data sources that potentially capture aspects of how
people think/feel/behave in social situations (social psychology),
relate to each other (sociology), govern themselves (political science),
handle wealth (socioeconomics), or create culture (anthropology). While
these phenomena have received attention from different communities,
understanding human social behavior via unobtrusive methods (i.e.
methods where the researcher doesn't intrude into the research context)
remains a challenging endeavor and an open problem. Tackling these
challenges requires the development of new methods, instruments and
techniques as well as an interdisciplinary effort from researchers
across disciplines.
In this track, we seek submissions contributing to studies of the web
from an interdisciplinary perspective. In particular, we are seeking to
attract work on the intersection between computer science on one hand,
and the humanities and social sciences on the other.
Topics of interest of the track include (but are not limited to):
* Studies of human culture based on online social networks and
encyclopedia, computational methods to assess human culture along
different dimensions (such as language, food, music, literature etc)
* Using social media to study psychological phenomena, and corresponding
methods to assess psychological phenomena via web-based investigations
* Biases in social media, such as population biases, channel bias,
self-selection bias, etc and computational methods for assessment and
correction
* The study of limitations of tools used in digital humanities,
extension of traditional source criticism into the development of
systematic "tool criticism"
* Social and individual inequalities on the web, e.g. gender or race
disparities, computational methods and instruments to assess and track
inequalities
* Studies of political processes and dynamics on the web, such as
elections, political unrest, grassroots movements
* Predictions with social media, e.g. stock markets, spread of language,
culture, memes or diseases.
* Longitudinal studies of social phenomena and social change on the web
* Computational methods to assess and improve social and/or individual
well-being via the web
* Studies investigating the role and causal impact of algorithms in
facilitating social interactions on the web
* Innovative instruments for distant reading and quantitative methods in
humanities and social sciences
(Semi-)automated instruments to annotate social media data with
constructs relevant for social sciences / the humanities.
Track Chairs:
Jacco van Ossenbruggen, Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica (CWI) & VU
University, The Netherlands
Markus Strohmaier, GESIS / University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany
-- Important Dates for Research Tracks
03 April 2015: Research paper submission deadline
29 May 2015: Research paper notifications
19 June 2015: Camera ready deadline
02 - 04 September: Hypertext 2015 conference
--- Venue ---
The Hypertext 2015 conference will be held in the Culture and Convention
Center (CCC) at Middle East Technical University Northern Cyprus Campus
(METU NCC).
http://ht.acm.org/ht2015/venue.html
--- Organisation ---
General Chair
Yeliz Yesilada, Middle East Technical University Northern Cyprus Campus
Program Chairs
Rosta Farzan, University of Pittsburgh, USA
Geert-Jan Houben, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands
Workshop and Tutorial Chairs
Alvin Chin, Microsoft, China
Ethan Munson, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA
Posters and Demos Chair
Jessica Rubart, University of Applied Sciences Ostwestfalen-Lippe,
Germany
Doctoral Consortium Chairs
Denis Parra, Catholic University of Chile, Chile
Christopher Trattner,Norwegian University of Science and Technology,
Norway
Proceedings Chair
Claus Atzenbeck, Hof University, Germany
Caring, Child Care and Disability Support Chairs
Andy Brown, BBC, UK
Caroline Jay, University of Manchester, UK
Treasurer and Local Chair
Ilknur Celik, Middle East Technical University Northern Cyprus Campus
Publicity Chairs
Federica Cena, University of Torino, Italy
Michael Yudelson, Carnegie Learning, Inc., USA
Local Publicity Chair
Elgin Akpinar, Middle East Technical University, Turkey
Web Chair
Sukru Eraslan, Middle East Technical University Northern Cyprus Campus
SIGWEB Representative and Liason
Simon Harper, University of Manchester, UK
--
Federica Cena, Ph. D.
Assistant Professor - Researcher
Dipartimento di Informatica
Universita' di Torino
Corso Svizzera 185, 10149 Torino, Italy
Phone +39 0116706779
Fax +39 011751603
email:c...@di.unito.it
web:www.di.unito.it/~cena/
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--
Federica Cena, Ph. D.
Assistant Professor - Researcher
Dipartimento di Informatica
Universita' di Torino
Corso Svizzera 185, 10149 Torino, Italy
Phone +39 0116706779
Fax +39 011751603
email: c...@di.unito.it
web: www.di.unito.it/~cena/
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