Hi all,
In response to several requests, we have extended the submission deadline for the Wiki Workshop @ WWW 2017 by one week. It is now on *January 31, 2017* (end of day anywhere on Earth).
Note that this deadline applies only if authors want their contribution to appear as part of the conference proceedings. If they don't want their contribution to appear in the proceedings, they should submit to the later deadline (February 26, 2017).
*We emphasize that we explicitly encourage the submission of preliminary work in the form of extended abstracts (1 or 2 pages).*
We look forward to your submissions! If you have any further questions, don't hesitate to contact us at wikiworkshop@googlegroups.com.
Robert West, EPFL
Leila Zia, Wikimedia Foundation
Dario Taraborelli, Wikimedia Foundation
Jure Leskovec, Stanford University
------------------ Wiki Workshop 2017
Held at *WWW 2017* (International World Wide Web Conference), Perth, Australia, April 4, 2017
Workshop webpage:
http://www.wikiworkshop.org CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS
The goal of this workshop is to bring together researchers exploring all aspects of Wikimedia websites such as Wikipedia, Wikidata, and Commons. With members of the Wikimedia Foundation's Research team on the organizing committee and with the experience of successful workshops in 2015 http://snap.stanford.edu/wiki-icwsm15/ and 2016 http://snap.stanford.edu/wikiworkshop2016/, we aim to continue facilitating a direct pathway for exchanging ideas between the organization that operates Wikimedia websites and the researchers interested in studying them.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to
- new technologies and initiatives to grow content, quality, diversity, and participation across Wikimedia projects - use of bots, algorithms, and crowdsourcing strategies to curate, source, or verify content and structured data - bias in content and gaps of knowledge - diversity of Wikimedia editors and users - understanding editor motivations, engagement models, and incentives - Wikimedia consumer motivations and their needs: readers, researchers, tool/API developers - innovative uses of Wikipedia and other Wikimedia projects for AI and NLP applications - consensus-finding and conflict resolution on editorial issues - participation in discussions and their dynamics - dynamics of content reuse across projects and the impact of policies and community norms on reuse - privacy - collaborative content creation (unstructured, semi-structured, or structured) - collaborative task management - innovative uses of Wikimedia projects' content and consumption patterns as sensors for real-world events, culture, etc.
Papers should be 1 to 8 pages long and will be published on the workshop webpage and optionally (depending on the authors' choice) in the workshop proceedings. Authors whose papers are accepted to the workshop will have the opportunity to participate in a poster session.
We explicitly encourage the submission of preliminary work in the form of extended abstracts (1 or 2 pages). KEY DATES
If authors want paper to appear in proceedings:
- Submission deadline: *January 31, 2017* (end of day anywhere on Earth) - Author feedback: February 7, 2017 - Camera-ready version due: February 14, 2017
If authors *do not* want paper to appear in proceedings:
- Submission deadline: *February 26, 2017* - Author feedback: March 7, 2017
Please see workshop webpage for formatting and submission instructions. ORGANIZATION
Robert West, EPFL
Leila Zia, Wikimedia Foundation
Dario Taraborelli, Wikimedia Foundation
Jure Leskovec, Stanford University CONTACT
Please direct your questions to wikiworkshop@googlegroups.com