HotSocial 2012
First ACM International Workshop on
Hot Topics on Interdisciplinary Social Networks Research
August 12, 2012,
Beijing, China (in conjunction with ACM KDD 2012,
August 12-16, 2012)
Sponsor: ACM KDD
Supported by
Tsinghua University Interdisciplinary Social Network Research Center,
Shanghai Jiao Tong University, University of Goettingen and Nanjing
University
Call for Papers
With the blessing of information
technology, we are living in an increasingly networked world. People,
information and other entities are connected via World Wide Web, email networks,
instant messaging networks, mobile communication networks, online social
networks, etc. These online networks grow fast and possess huge amount of
recorded information, which presents great opportunities in understanding the
science of these networks, and in developing new applications from these
networks and for these networks. The increasingly networked society has
fundamentally changed our way of thinking, individual behaviors and social
activities. It is foreseen that the public health relating to epidemic diseases
is greatly impacted by this emerging connectivity as they are by nature mediated
by direct or indirect human interactions and mobility. However, new challenges
have to be met – the networks are huge and information is noisy, and they demand
new methodologies in accessing and analyzing these networks, and in developing
theories and applications for the networks.
To meet with these challenges,
researchers from a wide range of academic fields, including theory and
algorithms, data mining and machine learning, computer systems and networks,
statistical physics and complex systems, sociology, social psychology,
economics and managerial science, etc. are all actively studying various
aspects concerning social and information networks.
However, we lack the proper
opportunities for people from these diverse backgrounds to directly interact
with each other. The diversity of approaches and methodologies to study various
social networks has raised the need for an interdisciplinary effort to create
the required expertise to address the fundamental open questions in this field.
This workshop is intended to present such an opportunity and serve as a forum to
bring together people from various fields to exchange their latest research
results and to sparkle new ideas and directions to properly understand these
networks.
Some of the fundamental open questions are:
-
Accessing social network data.
Different communities have different means, each with pros and cons. Experience
exchanges from different communities will be beneficial.
-
Protecting users’ data. Privacy
and data protection techniques considering social and legal aspects are
required.
-
Interdisciplinary collaborations
to enable in depth understanding of social behaviors.
-
Can social network features be
exploited for a better computing and social network system design?
-
How do online social networks
play a role in real-life (offline) community formation and evolution?
-
How do human mobility and
interactions influence human behaviors and thus public health? How can we
develop methodologies to investigate the public health and their correlates
in the context of the social networks?
Main topics of this workshop
include (but are not limited to) the following:
-
Methods for accessing social
networks (e.g., sensor nets, mobile apps, crawlers) and bias correlation
for use in different communities (e.g., sociology, behavior studies,
epidemiology)
-
Privacy and ethic issues of data
collection and management of large social graphs, with focus on legal
and social constraints
-
Application of data mining and
machine learning in the context of specific social networks
-
Information spread models and
campaign detection
-
Trust, reputation and community
evolution in the online and offline interacted social networks,
including the presence and evolution of social identities and social
capital in OSNs
-
Understanding complex systems
and scale-free networks from an interdisciplinary angle
-
Interdisciplinary experiences
and intermediate results on social network research
Paper Submissions
Submissions must
present original results. Selected papers will be forward-looking, describe
their relationship to existing work, and have impact and implications for
ongoing or future research.
Submissions can be either a full workshop
paper (no more than 6 pages
long, double-column) or an extended abstract/position paper (2 pages,
double-column); please strictly follow the
SIGKDD template. All paper submission will be
handled via
Easychair Submission System. Papers will be reviewed single blind by
the TPC.
Extended versions of selected papers of
special merit
presented at the workshop are subject to considerations
- subject to peer review - for publication in
Elsevier
Computer Communications
journal.
Camera Ready Instruction for Authors of Accepted
Papers
Formatting:
http://kdd2012.sigkdd.org/author_instructions.shtml, keywords: ACM
template, single-space, double-colume 10pt font size.
For
your convenience we have prepared an Proceedings Template in
Word,
Latex Style File (meanwhile
http://www.acm.org/sigs/publications/sig-alternate.tex provides a Latex
sample file). ACM ISBN number will be available shortly for you to replace
the field " X-XXXX-XXX-X/XX/XXXX."
Page limit for camera ready versions:
-
For accepted full
papers: up to 8 pages
-
For accepted short
papers: up to 4 pages
-
For extended abtract
for invited speakers and panelists:
up to 2 pages
-
You must upload the camera ready version via your
EasyChair entry for the paper you submitted earlier, by 14th
June 2012.
Registration:
Important Dates
Deadline
for submissions: May 9, 2012 (11:59 PM, EST)
Notification
of acceptance: June 3, 2012
Camera-ready
version: June 27, 2012
Early Registration: June 29, 2012
HotSocial
Workshop Date: Aug 12, 2012
Workshop
TPC Co-Chairs
Panel Chair
- Vitaly
Belik, Physics, MIT, USA and MPI-DS, Germany (Complex systems,
epidemics)
- Margarete
Boos, Courant Center for Evolution of Social Behaviors, U. Goettingen,
Germany (Social psychology, social behaviors)
-
Wei Chen,
Microsoft Research Asia, China (Social and information systems)
-
Kai Fischbach,
Social networks and information systems, U. Bamberg, Germany (Social network
analysis)
-
Xiaoming
Fu, Computer Science, University of Goettingen,
Germany (TPC Co-Chair)
-
Peter Gloor,
Management Science, MIT,
USA (TPC Co-Chair)
- Pan Hui,
Deutsche Telekom Laboratories, Germany (Mobile social networks)
-
Benyuan Liu,
Computer Science, UMass, Lowell, USA (Online social networks, mobile
social networks, epidemiology)
-
Jar-Der
Luo, Sociology, Tsinghua U., China (Social capital and social
structure, social network analysis)
-
Cecilia
Mascolo, Computer Science, U. Cambridge, UK (Mobile social networks)
-
Yasmin Merali,
Management Science, U. Warwick, UK (Complex networks)
-
Alessandra
Sala, Bell Labs, Ireland (Graph algorithms, social network privacy)
-
Christian Stegbauer,
Sociology, U. Frankfurt, Germany (Social network analysis)
-
Jie Tang, Computer
Science, Tsinghua
University, China (TPC Co-Chair)
-
Allen Zhiwei
Wu, Epidemiology/public health, Nanjing U., China (Infectious disease spreading)
-
Xifeng Yan,
Computer Science, UCSB, USA (Data mining, machine learning)
-
Ben Zhao,
Computer Science, UCSB, USA (Social network measurement, social data
analysis and anonymization)
-
Zhi-Hua Zhou,
Computer Science, Nanjing U., China (Data mining, machine learning)
Keynote (9:00-10:00):
Coffee break (10:00-10:20)
Session 1: Network Dynamics in Online and Offline
Networks (10:20-12:00)
- Sabrina Gaito , Matteo Zignani, Gian Paolo Rossi,
William Kennedy (University of Milan, Italy), Alessandra Sala (Bell
Labs, Ireland), Xiaohan Zhao (UCSB, USA), Haitao Zheng and Ben Y. Zhao (UCSB, USA). On the Bursty Evolution of
Online Social Networks (full paper)
- Massimiliano La Gala, Valerio Arnaboldi, Andrea
Passarella and Marco Conti (IIT-CNR, Italy). Ego-net Digger: a New Way
to Study Ego Networks in Online Social Networks (full paper)
- Lianghao Dai, Jar-Der Luo (Tsinghua University,
China), Xiaoming Fu (University of Göttingen, Germany) and Zhichao Li
(Tsinghua University). Predicting offline behaviors from online features
-- the ego-centric dynamical network approach (full paper)
- Peter Cogan (Bell Labs, Ireland), Matthew Andrews,
Milan Bradonjic, William Kennedy (Bell Labs, USA), Alessandra Sala (Bell
Labs, Ireland),and Gabriel Tucci (Bell Labs, USA). Reconstruction and
Analysis of Twitter Conversation Graphs (full paper)
Panel (12:00-13:00):
Integrating Social Behaviors into Social Computing
-
Chair: Jar-Der Luo (Tsinghua Univ)
-
Panelists: Xiang Li (Shanghai Jiao Tong Univ),
Peter Gloor (MIT), Jie Tang (Tsinghua Univ), Alessandra Sala (Bell
Labs), Xiaoming Fu (Univ Goettingen)
Lunch Break (13:00-14:00)
Invited talk (14:00-14:50): Yuquan Wang (CEO of Haiyin
Fund and Chief Consultant of Frost & Sullivan)
Coffee Break (14:50-15:10)
Technical Session 2: Sampling and Social Network
Platforms (15:10-16:40)
- Jianguo Lu and Dingding Li (University of Windsor,
Canada). Sampling online social networks by random walk (full paper)
- Pravin Shankar, Lu Han, Vancheswaran
Ananthanarayanan, Matthew Muscari, Badri Nath and Liviu Iftode Rutgers,
the State University of New Jersey, USA). A Case for Automatic Sharing
over Social Networks (full paper)
- Thomas Paul (TU Darmstadt, Germany), Benjamin
Greschbach (KTH, Sweden), Sonja Buchegger (KTH, Sweden) and Thorsten
Strufe (TU Darmstadt, Germany). Exploring Decentralization Dimensions of
Social Network Services: Adversaries and Availability (full paper)
- Weimin Liao (School of Culture Communication,
Zhejiang Sci-Tech University, China). Strategies for Spreading
Information from Local to Global in Social Complex Networks: Cases from
a Village in China (short paper)
Coffee Break (16:40-17:00)
Technical Session 3: Network Properties and
Behaviors (17:00-18:00)
-
Alexander Mehler and Christian Stegbauer (University of Frankfurt,
Germany). Emergent Semantics from Collaborative Writing: Self-similarity
in Wiki-based Media (short paper)
-
Lang Qin, Ling Zhou and Jar-Der Luo (Tsinghua University, China).
Complex Network Perspective on Network Dynamics: A Study on Investment
Network in VC Industry in China (short paper)
-
Yuexin Mao, Bing Wang, Wei Wei (University of Connecticut, USA) and
Benyuan Liu (University of Massachusetts Lowell, USA). Correlating S&P
500 Stocks with Twitter Data (short paper)
-
Jiayin Qi, Qixing Qu (School of Economics and Management, Beijing
University of Posts and Telecommunications, China) and Yong Tan
(Department of Information Systems and Operations Management, Michael G.
Foster School of Business, University of Washington, USA). Topic
Evolution Prediction of User Generated Contents Considering Enterprise
Generated Contents (short paper)
-
Jason Gustafson, Jun Li (University of Oregon, USA) and Haixin Duan
(Tsinghua University, China). Towards a Socially Aware Home Router
(short paper)