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DIGITAL-PRESERVATION  January 2013

DIGITAL-PRESERVATION January 2013

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Subject:

FW: FW: Workshop on Computer Mediated Social Sense-Making

From:

GRAHAM Susan <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

GRAHAM Susan <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Mon, 7 Jan 2013 14:41:42 +0000

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (1 lines)



This event may be of interest to some members.



Best wishes



Susan Graham

University of Edinburgh


-- 
The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in
Scotland, with registration number SC005336.


-----Original Message-----

Date:    Mon, 10 Dec 2012 16:48:33 +0000

From:    Mark Hartswood <[log in to unmask]>

Subject: Workshop on Computer Mediated Social Sense-Making 14th February 

2013



Call for participation

----------------------





Workshop on Computer Mediated Social Sense-Making

=================================================



http://cmssm2013.wordpress.com/about/





14th February 2013



Position statements due 18th January 2012 (See below)



School of Informatics

Edinburgh University.





'Computer Mediated Social Sense-Making'  is a specialised form of Social

Computation [1] that pertains where diverse non co-located human

expertise and machine processing are combined to enable data to be

interpreted effectively to support a range of tasks taking place in

different contexts.



This workshop aims to contribute to the development of  the concept of

cmSocial Sense-Making as a coherent  research area by exploring the

theoretical, methodological and computational approaches that can be

brought to bear on problems of achieving blends of data and expertise to

interpret complex data sets or data streams.



Examples of important CMCSM application areas include:



- Telemonitoring: Remote monitoring of chronic conditions promises to

help manage the extensive healthcare demands of an ageing population.

However Physiological data gathered in the home but interpreted by

remote clinicians often leads to high False Positive rates [2]. How can

patients, relatives and carers be enabled to supplement physiological

data with missing contextual detail to improve the quality of remote

interpretation [3]?



- Data curation: Data is an increasingly seen as a valuable commodity to

be mined over and again to solve problems beyond those for which it was

originally collected. However, without access to the context of its

production our ability to re-purpose data is degraded, moreover data

users generate insights about data quality and utility but which are

often neither accumulated  nor shared [4]. How can tools enable access

to originating contexts and capitalise on the expertise that is created

when data is used in order to increase the value of data archives for

the wider community of users?



- Validation of scientific models: Computational models make strong

contributions to policy formation and scientific advance, often in

economically important or politically contentious arenas such as climate

change. However, effective interpretation of model results for

scientific advance and policy formation often requires access to

non-local domain expertise. (This is similar to other 'data analysis'

tasks where data interpretations are crowd-sourced [5].) How can

collaborative interpretations be facilitated by shareable, annotatable

data representations?



Position statements are invited on the following workshop topic areas:



• What are the defining questions for current work in cmSocial

Sense-Making ?



• How can we identify application areas that lend themselves to cmSocial

Sense-Making?



• What conceptual frameworks or theoretical approaches are relevant to

cmSocial Sense-Making?



• What are the usability considerations in creating cmSocial

Sense-Making applications and how can existing frameworks in HCI and

CSCW be brought to bear?



• What legal, ethical or regulatory issues are relevant for cmSocial

Sense-Making?



• How might cmSocial Sense-Making implementations be evaluated?



• What types of algorithm are effective at combining data from multiple

heterogeneous data streams to underpin cmSocial Sense-Making?



• What types of infrastructures and applications can support cmSocial

Sense-Making?



• What impacts do cmSocial Sense-Making solutions have on working

divisions of interpretative labour, responsibility and accountability?



• What formal logics might model the behaviour of a cmSocial

Sense-Making approach?



• How can cmSocial Sense-Making applications be designed to motivate

participation?





Position statements should be no longer than one side of A4. These will

be reviewed by the workshop organisers and in the event of

over-subscription statements will be accepted to give the broadest

coverage of workshop topics. Attendees will be required to give a short

presentation outlining their position. The workshop will aim to balance

presentations with plenary sessions and opportunities for networking.



Please send your position statements to: [log in to unmask] by

18th January 2013.



The workshop will be held at the School of Informatics, Edinburgh

University and will be free to attend.





Workshop committee:



Mark Hartswood

Maria Wolters

Jenny Ure

Stuart Anderson

Michael Rovatsos

Marina Jirotka

Alex Voss







References



[1] Michael Kearns, Experiments in Social Computation, Communications of

the ACM, Vol. 55 No. 10, Pp 56-67  http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2347736.2347753



[2] Ure J, Pinnock H, Hanley J, Kidd G, McCall Smith E, Tarling A,

Pagliari C, Sheikh A, MacNee W, McKinstry B. Piloting tele-monitoring in

COPD: a mixed methods exploration of issues in design and

implementation. Prim Care Respir J 2012;21(1):57-64. DOI:

http://dx.doi.org/10.4104/pcrj.2011.00065



[3] Oudshoorn N (2008) Diagnosis at a distance: the invisible work of

patients and healthcare professionals in cardiac telemonitoring

technology. Sociology of Health and Illness. 30(2) 272-288.



[4] Hartswood M, Procter R, Taylor P, Blot L, Anderson S, Rouncefield M

and Slack R. Problems of data mobility and reuse in the provision of

computer-based training for screening mammography. In: CHI '12

Proceedings of the 2012 ACM annual conference on Human Factors in

Computing Systems. New York: ACM. 2012. p. 909-918.



[5] Willet W, Heer J and Agrawala M (2012) Strategies for Crowdsourcing

Social Data Analysis. CHI’12 , May 5–10, 2012, Austin, Texas, USA.







-- 

The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in

Scotland, with registration number SC005336.



------------------------------

End of BCS-HCI Digest - 9 Dec 2012 to 16 Dec 2012 (#2012-29)

************************************************************









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