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Subject:

SoHuman 2014 EXTENDED DEADLINE: Sept. 5, 2014 (Workshop @SocInfo2014)

From:

Jasminko Novak <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Jasminko Novak <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Thu, 21 Aug 2014 18:49:26 +0200

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

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text/plain (210 lines)

Dear Colleagues, 

due to several requests regarding the coinciding of the submission period  with the summer vacation time, the submission deadline for the SoHuman 2014 workshop at SocInfo 2014 has been extended to September 5, 2014.
Please find below the complete CFP for your information.

Best regards,
Jasminko Novak

[Our apologies if you receive multiple copies of this message. 
Please feel free to redistribute to your group and colleagues, thank you!] 

********************* DEADLINE EXTENSION ********************* 

                                              SoHuman 2014 

                     3rd International Workshop on Social Media 
                     in Crowdsourcing and Human Computation 


                      at SocInfo 2014, November 10, Barcelona 

                         Submission deadline: Sept 5, 2014 (EXTENDED!)

                                  http://eipcm.org/sohuman2014/ 

************************ CALL FOR PAPERS ***********************

THEME: Socially-aware Crowdsourcing – The Value of the Human Touch 


AIMS AND SCOPE 
---------------------------------------- 
This workshop aims at bringing together researchers and practitioners from 
different research communities at the intersections between computer science 
and social sciences to explore the challenges and opportunities of novel 
approaches to collective intelligence, crowdsourcing and human computation 
that address social aspects as a core element of their design principles, 
implementations or scientific investigation. 

This years theme of the workshop highlights the intersections between the 
perspectives of computer science and the social sciences, such as: 
How can the experience gained from the design of crowdsourcing applications 
inform the development of new approaches to collective intelligence and social 
computing on the web? Can we conceptualize specific classes of human 
computation as instances of different forms of social collaboration? 
And vice versa: what lessons from the broader domain of the study of 
large-scale social systems can inform the design of new kinds of systems for 
crowdsourcing and human computation? 

Both crowdsourcing and human computation consider humans as distributed 
task-solvers, with the latter embedding human users as a part of intelligent 
computational systems. They both leverage human reasoning to solve
complex  tasks that are easy for individuals but difficult for purely computational 
approaches  (human computation) or for traditional organisational work
arrangements  (crowdsourcing). Effective realisations of these paradigms
typically  require  participation of a large number of distributed users over the
Internet, a careful design of task structures, participation incentives and
mechanisms for coordinating and aggregating results of individual
participants into collective solutions.

Though rarely explicitly addressed as such, social media and related 
technologies often provide the enabling methods and technologies for the
realisation of such models. Examples include crowdsourcing marketplaces
(e.g. Amazon mTurk), crowdsourcing service providers (e.g. Microtask) or
games with a purpose. While centralised platforms are also at the core of
 "traditional" approaches to collective intelligence (e.g. Wikipedia), attention
is increasingly turning to the possibilities of harnessing existing social
platforms (e.g.Facebook, Twitter) that already gather huge numbers of
users into webs of social relationships.

For instance, such relationships allow the development of new kinds of task 
routing  mechanisms (e.g. identifying the best or most trusted participants for a 
specific task),  while social incentives can reflect community-like phenomena
(e.g. the  reputation  economy). This is already leading to experiments such
as expert-based  crowdsourcing or solutions for task-injection across
distributed  social platforms. It is also partially reflected in growing research
on inferring social influence, attention or trust from online social exchanges
with the aim of providing mechanisms for more effective information
exchanges or collective problem solving.
 
Socially-aware human computation and crowdsourcing systems call for
new work  division and execution mechanisms, where the traditional individual 
"tayloristic"  model evolves into a collaborativa labour environment featuring
different  kinds of communication and collaboration between the users going
beyond  private exchanges between the task-owner and the task-solver. 

This begs the question of how such more open, participatory models of 
collective action can inform the development of new kinds of crowdsourcing 
and human computation systems and approaches: 

* Can we conceptualize specific classes of human computation as instances of 
different forms of social collaboration? 

* How can we design crowdsourcing and human computation systems where
the  involvement of a large number of diverse human users as providers,
aggregators  or "processors" of information leads to outcomes that benefit the
entire  collective  rather than only individual contributors or commissioners
of task assignments? 

* How can the theory of collective action inform the design of such 
collaborative  approaches to socially-aware crowdsourcing and
human computation? 

* What are the different sources of value of the "human touch" that can be 
brought  to bear through such new approaches? 

Topics of interest include (but are not limited to): 
----------------------------------------------------------------- 
* Social media in collective intelligence systems 
* Use cases and applications of social media to crowdsourcing and
human  computation 
* Social incentive models for crowdsourcing and human computation 
* Social-network analysis for crowdsourcing and human computation 
* Applications of social media visualisation to collective intelligence 
* Social coordination in crowdsourcing and human computation 
* Social search and human computation 
* Trust models for collective intelligence and crowdsourcing 
* Semantic modelling in crowdsourcing and human computation 
* Expert-based crowdsourcing 
* Influence metering and social trust models 
* Expertise-inference techniques and their application to task routing 
* Reputation systems for human computation 
* Quality assurance in distributed human intelligence tasks 
* Social sensing in crowdsourcing and human computation 
* Domain-specific challenges in crowdsourcing and human computation 

We are especially interested in applications and investigations in a range of 
domains  such as collective action and social deliberation, multimedia search
and  exploration,  enterprise and medical applications, cultural heritage,
social data analysis or  citizen science. 

We explicitly encourage contributions that address the importance of 
domain-specific  challenges or use cases as well as contributions that
enrich a computer science  perspective with a user-centered view and
system-level social dynamics. 

SUBMISSIONS 
--------------------- 
The workshop will accept: 
• Regular research papers (6-8 pages) 
• Applications / Demonstrators (4 pages) 
• Position papers (2-4 pages) 

Submissions should describe the innovative aspects of the work they present, 
highlighting pros and cons with respect to related work. Demo proposals should 
describe clearly what will be demonstrated and how the contributions will be 
illustrated interactively. Optionally, proposals can include a URL that shows 
a preliminary version of the demo (e.g., screenshots, videos, or a running 
system). 

All submissions will be reviewed in a peer-review process by at least two 
members  of the program committee. All submission must be formatted
according to  Springer LNCS paper formatting guidelines 
( http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-6-793341-0 ). 

All submissions must be done online via the SoHuman 2014 EasyChair 
submission system:  https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=sohuman2014 

At least one author of each paper will need to register for the conference and 
attend  the workshop to present the paper. 

IMPORTANT DATES: 
----------------------------- 
• Paper submission: Sept 5, 2014 (EXTENDED DEADLINE)
• Notification of acceptance: September 19, 2014 
• Camera-ready papers: October 3, 2014 
• Workshop date: November 10, 2014 

WORKSHOP PROCEEDINGS 
----------------------------------------- 
Accepted workshop papers will appear in Springer Lecture Note Series in
Computer  Science  as part of the conference proceedings but we also allow
accepted papers to be  presented without  publication in the proceedings,
if the authors prefer to do so. 

In addition, selected workshop papers will be invited for submission of an 
extended version  to a fast-track special issue of the interdisciplinary journal
Human  Computation. 

ORGANIZERS 
------------------- 
* Jasminko Novak (European Institute for Participatory Media) 
* Alessandro Bozzon (Delft University of Technology) 
* Piero Fraternali (Politecnico di Milano) 
* Petros Daras (ITI CERTH) 
* Otto Chrons (Microtask) 
* Bonnie Nardi (UC Irvine) 
* Alejandro Jaimes (Yahoo Research) 

Contact: [log in to unmask] 


PROGRAM COMMITTEE 
---------------------------------- 
Klemens Böhm, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology 
Marco Brambilla, Politecnico di Milano 
Simon Caton, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology 
Fausto Giunchiglia, University of Trento 
Martha Larson, Delft University of Technology 
Pietro Michelucci, Strategic Analysis, Inc. 
Ville Miettinen, Microtask 
Jasminko Novak, European Institute for Participatory Media 
Naeem Ramzan, University of West of Scotland 
Wolfgang Prinz, Fraunhofer FIT / RWTH Aachen 
Marcello Sarini, University of Milano-Bicocca
Aaron Shaw, Northwestern University and Harvard Univ. 
Mohammad Soleymani, University of Geneva 
Maja Vukovic, IBM T.J. Watson Research 
Lora Aroyo, VU University Amsterdam 
Gianluca Demartini, University of Fribourg

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