---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Connie Ivey-Pasche <con...@cs.washington.edu>
Date: Wed, Feb 6, 2013 at 11:59 AM
Subject: [Researchers] UW CSE Colloq / 2-7-13 / Blumenstock / UW
Information School / Calling for help: Using terabyte-scale network
data to make sense of the "mobile phone revolution" in Sub-Saharan
Africa
To: research...@cs.washington.edu, cs-grads - Mailing List
<cs-gr...@cs.washington.edu>, wi-instruct...@cs.washington.edu,
visitors - Mailing List <visit...@cs.washington.edu>, cs-staff -
Mailing List <cs-st...@cs.washington.edu>


What's up for tomorrow's Colloquium - live and live broadcast only!

UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
Computer Science and Engineering
COLLOQUIUM

SPEAKER:   Joshua Blumenstock, UW Information School

TITLE:     Calling for help: Using terabyte-scale network data to make
sense of the "mobile phone revolution" in Sub-Saharan Africa

DATE:      Thursday, February 7, 2013
TIME:      3:30pm
PLACE:     EEB-105
HOST:      Gaetano Borriello

ABSTRACT:
NOTE:  This talk will be live broadcast only - no taping for viewing on-
demand or on UWTV.

As mobile phones grow increasingly ubiquitous in developing countries,
"Mobile Money" and other phone-based services are providing billions of
individuals with novel opportunities for social and economic interaction.
In this talk, I will discuss the results from a series of recent projects
that use transaction logs from mobile phone operators to examine the role
of mobile phones in the social and economic networks of developing
countries.  I will focus on a recent paper that uses data on billions of
phone-based interactions to show that Rwandans use an early form of Mobile
Money to send assistance to friends and family affected by severe shocks
such as earthquakes and other natural disasters.
Surprisingly, I find that the observed pattern of transfers between people
better fits of a model of quid-pro-quo reciprocity, than a simple model of
altruistic giving.  Time permitting, I will relate this work to ongoing
projects in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Tanzania.

Bio:
Joshua Blumenstock is an Assistant Professor at the Information School at
the University of Washington.  His research focuses on the economic and
social impacts of information and communication technologies, and the
development of new methods for the quantitative analysis of very large
data.  Recent projects use terabyte-scale data on network communication to
understand the adoption and diffusion of mobile technologies (Pakistan and
Tanzania), the welfare implications of Mobile Money (Rwanda and Uganda),
and the role of technological innovation in
reducing corruption and violence (Afghanistan).   Joshua has a Ph.D in
Information Management and a M.A. in Economics from U.C. Berkeley, and
Bachelor's degrees in Computer Science and Physics from Wesleyan
University in Middletown, CT.

Refreshments to be served in room prior to talk.

*NOTE* This lecture will be broadcast live via the Internet, but it will
NOT be available for on-demand viewing or viewing on UWTV. See
http://www.cs.washington.edu/news/colloq.info.html for more information.

Email: talk-i...@cs.washington.edu
Info: http://www.cs.washington.edu/
(206) 543-1695

The University of Washington is committed to providing access, equal
opportunity and reasonable accomodation in its services, programs,
activities, education and employment for individuals with disabilities.
To request disability accommodation, contact the Disability Services
Office at least ten days in advance of the event at: (206) 543-6450/V,
(206) 543-6452/TTY, (206) 685-7264 (FAX), or email at
d...@u.washington.edu.
_______________________________________________
Researchers mailing list
research...@cs.washington.edu
https://mailman.cs.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/researchers
_______________________________________________
change mailing list
change@change.washington.edu
http://changemm.cs.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/change

Reply via email to