Apologies for cross-postings.
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2016 International Conference on Social Media & Society (#SMSociety)
CALL FOR PROPOSALS
WHEN: July 11-13, 2016
WHERE: Goldsmiths, University of London, UK
SUBMISSION DEADLINES:
Dec 23, 2015(extended!): Workshops/Tutorials/Panels
Jan 15, 2016: Full & WIP Papers
Mar 4, 2016: Poster Abstracts
Conference website: http://socialmediaandsociety.org/submit/
Data, data everywhere. With faster computers and cheaper storage, bigger
data sets are becoming abundant. Social media is a key source of big data in
the form of user and system generated content. What do we do with all of the
social data and how do we make sense of it? How does the use of social media
platforms and the data that they generate change us, our organizations, and
our society? What are the inherent challenges and issues associated with
working with social media data? What obligations do we have as social media
researchers to protect the privacy of the users? These are just a few
questions that will be explored at the 2016 International Conference on
Social Media & Society (#SMSociety).
Now, in its 7th year, the conference is an interdisciplinary academic
conference focusing exclusively on social media research. The conference
brings together top researchers and practitioners from academia and industry
who are interested in studying and understanding social media impact and
implications on society. This year's conference offers an intensive
three-day program comprising of workshops, tutorials, paper presentations,
panel discussions, and posters covering wide-ranging topics related to
social media research.
PUBLISHING OPPORTUNITIES: Full papers presented at the conference will be
published in the Conference Proceedings by ACM International Conference
Proceeding Series (ICPS). All accepted papers (full and WIP) will also be
invited to submit their extended papers to Special Issues of Big Data &
Society (BD&S) and American Behavioral Scientist (ABS) published by SAGE
Publications.
TRAVEL FUNDING OPPORTUNITY: 2016 ISRF Early Career Researcher Essay
Competition (http://bit.ly/sms16ISRF )
ORGANIZER: Social Media Lab at the Ted Rogers School of Management, Ryerson
University, Canada
HOSTS & CO-ORGANIZERS: Big Data & Society Journal (BD&S) and the Centre for
Creative & Social Technologies (CAST) at Goldsmiths, University of London,
UK
TOPIC OF INTERESTS:
Social Media & Big Data
. Data Visualization
. Analytics & Data Mining
. Scalability Issues
. APIs
. Data Curation
. Virality & Memes
. Big and Small Data
. Ethics
. Privacy, Surveillance, & Security
Social Media Impact on Society
. Politics
. Journalism
. Sports
. Health
. Public Administration
. Business (Marketing, PR, HR, Risk Management, etc.)
. Sharing Economy / Crowdsourcing
. Academia (Alternative Metrics, Learning Analytics, etc.)
. Mobile
Theories & Methods
. Qualitative Approaches
. Quantitative Approaches
. Opinion Mining & Sentiment Analysis
. Social Network Analysis
. Theoretical Models
Online / Offline Communities
. Case Studies of Online or Offline Communities
. Trust & Credibility
. Online Community Detection
. Measuring Influence
. Online Identity (Gender, Private Self/Public Self)
2016 #SMSociety Organizing Committee:
Anatoliy Gruzd & Philip Mai, Ryerson University, Canada
Jenna Jacobson, University of Toronto, Canada
Dhiraj Murthy & Evelyn Ruppert, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK
2016 #SMSociety Conference Advisor:
Barry Wellman, University of Toronto, Canada
A reminder that this will be streamed today at 9pm CET / 12pm PST
You can join the conversation via IRC on #wikimedia-office
Dario
> Begin forwarded message:
>
> From: Dario Taraborelli <dtaraborelli(a)wikimedia.org>
>
> Come and join us for a brown bag this Friday December 4 at 12 PT to learn about unique identifiers and scholarly citations in Wikipedia, why they matter and how we can bridge the gap between the Wikimedia, research and librarian communities.
>
> Wikipedia as the front matter to all research
>
> YouTube stream: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mB_oexqz8pA <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mB_oexqz8pA>
> Event information on Meta: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_as_the_front_matter_to_all_resear… <https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_as_the_front_matter_to_all_resear…>
>
> Measuring citizen engagement with the scholarly literature through Wikipedia citations.
> Geoffrey Bilder, CrossRef
>
> Wikipedia (in toto) is probably the 5th largest referrer of citations to the scholarly literature. That is, more Wikipedia users click on and follow citations to the scholarly literature *from* Wikipedia domains than from any single scholarly publisher in the world. What does this tell us about general interest in the scholarly literature? What does this tell us about scholarly engagement with editing Wikipedia articles? The short answer is “we don’t know.” But we are actively working with Wikimedia to find out.
>
> Building the sum of all human citations
> Dario Taraborelli, WIkimedia Foundation
>
> As sourcing and verifiability of online information are threatened <http://www.slideshare.net/dartar/citing-as-a-public-service-building-the-su…> by the explosion of answer engines and the changing habits of web users, Wikimedia has an outstanding opportunity to extract and store source data for any conceivable statement and make it transparently verifiable by its users. In this talk, I’ll present a grassroots effort <https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Wikidata:WikiProject_Source_MetaData> to create a human-curated, comprehensive repository of all human citations in Wikidata.
>
> –––––––––––––
> Bonus read: a real-time tracker of scholarly citations added to Wikipedia, built with Raspberry Pi
> http://blog.crossref.org/2015/12/crossref-labs-plays-with-the-raspberry-pi-… <http://blog.crossref.org/2015/12/crossref-labs-plays-with-the-raspberry-pi-…>
>
Dario Taraborelli Head of Research, Wikimedia Foundation
wikimediafoundation.org <http://wikimediafoundation.org/> • nitens.org <http://nitens.org/> • @readermeter <http://twitter.com/readermeter>