ICWSM 2008

Call For Papers

The rapid creation and consumption of social media content continues to drive the evolution of the Internet and the Web. Social media content now accounts for the majority of content published daily on the web.

As the space evolves, researcher and industrial practitioners find themselves at a key point for collaborating on research, implementation and deployment of a wide range of analyses and applications. The International Conference on Weblogs and Social Media invites researchers in the broad field of social media analysis to submit papers for its second meeting. Following in the tradition of earlier workshops and the first meeting in Boulder, USA in 2007, we anticipate an exciting, high quality event which will bring together academic and industrial practitioners to present and to discuss new research, applications, thoughts and ideas that are shaping the future of social media analysis.

Areas of interest

The conference aims to bring together researchers from different subject areas including computer science, linguistics, psychology, statistics, sociology, multimedia and semantic web technologies and foster discussions about ongoing research in the following areas:

[01] Psychological, personality-based and ethnographic studies of social media [02] Analyzing relationship between social media and mainstream media [03] Centrality/influence of bloggers/blogs; ranking/relevance of blogs; web pages ranking based on blogs [04] Data acquisition: crawling/spidering and indexing [05] Human computer interaction; social media tools; navigation [06] Multimedia; audio/visual processing; aggregating information from different modalities [07] Semantic analysis; cross-system and cross-media name tracking; named relations and fact extraction; discourse analysis; summarization [08] Semantic Web; unstructured knowledge management; collaborative creation of structured knowledge [09] Sentiment analysis; polarity/opinion identification and extraction [10] Social network analysis; communities identification; expertise discovery; collaborative filtering [11] Text categorization; topic recognition; gender/age identification [12] Time series forecasting; measuring predictability of phenomena based on social media [13] Trend identification/tracking [14] Visualization [15] New social media applications; interfaces; interaction techniques [16] Trust; reputation; recommendation systems

Important Dates

* Paper Submission: December 3, 2007 * Tutorial Proposals: December 3, 2007 * Poster/Demo Submission: January 6, 2007 * Paper Acceptance: February 1, 2008 * Poster/Demo Acceptance: February 8, 2008 * Camera Ready Copies: February 15, 2008 * Tutorials: 30 March, 2008 * Conference: 31 March, 2008 - 2 April, 2008

Submission

People interested in participating should submit through the conference website a technical paper (up to 8 pages), poster or demo description (up to 2 pages) by the deadlines given above (Midnight PST). Each submission should indicate a list of relevant areas from the list above.

Chairs

* Eytan Adar, University of Washington * Matthew Hurst, Microsoft Live Labs

Co-chairs

* Tim Finin, University of Maryland, Baltimore County * Natalie Glance, Google * Nicholas Nicholov, Umbria * Belle Tseng, NEC This CfP was obtained from WikiCFP