There’s only one month left to submit papers to the 2019 ACM Conference on 
Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency (FAT*), an interdisciplinary 
conference to connect social, technical and policy domains around broad 
questions of fairness, accountability and transparency of computing systems, 
held in Atlanta, Georgia in late January (Jan 
29-31<x-apple-data-detectors://5>, subject to final confirmation).

Calls are out for:

• papers (deadline: abstracts Aug 16<x-apple-data-detectors://6>, full papers 
Aug 23<x-apple-data-detectors://7>);
• tutorials on application, implementation, translation, and hands-on learning 
(deadline: 13 Sep<x-apple-data-detectors://8>).

In addition, there will be a interdisciplinary doctoral symposium, with later 
deadlines and specifications to be announced.

== Papers ==

The conference this year features dedicated tracks for work on or building 
bridges between:

- Theory and Security

- Statistics, Machine Learning, Data Mining

- Applications (NLP, Computer Vision, Search Engines, and other Systems)

- Systems (Programming Languages, Databases)

- Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) and Information Visualization

- Measurement and Algorithm Audits

- Empirical Studies (Qualitative, Quantitative, Experimental, Etc.)

- Law, Policy, and Humanistic/Critical Analysis

Papers (8-10 pages, due August 23<x-apple-data-detectors://9>, abstract 
pre-registration August 16<x-apple-data-detectors://10>) are double-blind peer 
reviewed and published in conference proceedings in the ACM Digital Library. 
Authors can also opt for non-archival submission, subject to the same review 
process but only appearing as an abstract in the proceedings.

The inaugural conference at NYU in February 2018 had an acceptance rate of 25% 
and was sold-out, with 450 international attendees from across academia, 
industry and public policy.

For more details and formatting instructions, see 
https://fatconference.org/2019/cfp.html

== Tutorials ==

We are soliciting three types of tutorials for FAT* 2019: hands-on tutorials, 
translation tutorials, and implications tutorials. Presenters will have 45 or 
90 minutes for translation and implication tutorials, and 90 or 180 minutes for 
hands-on tutorials to address technical and/or policy/law aspects of FAT* 
issues for a broad audience. These will be held the day before the main 
conference.

Tutorial submission and more information: 
https://fatconference.org/2019/cftutorials.html


Please forward this call to other people or groups you think may be interested.

For more details, see https://fatconference.org/2019/cfp.html

--
Michael Veale [@mikarv, http://michae.lv<http://michae.lv/>]
Dept. of Science, Technology, Engineering & Public Policy
University College London
+44(0)2031089736<tel:+442031089736>
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