DMCCI 2011:
ICDM 2011 Workshop on
Data Mining Technologies for Computational
Collective Intelligence
1. Overview
Computational collective intelligence aims to
explore the group intelligence using computational methods. Over the recent
years, the ubiquitous use of world wide web and rapid development of internet
technology have provided an unprecedented environment of various group
activities. Numerous interdisciplinary and interdependent systems are created
and used to represent the various biological, social, physical and ecological
systems for investigating the interactions between individuals, groups,
communities. This requires joint efforts to take advantage of the
state-of-the-art research from multiple disciplines develop novel theories,
experiments, and methodologies to study these rich interactions as well as make
better group decisions.
This workshop will bring together the
interdisciplinary researchers from sociology, behavioral
science, computer science, psychology, bioinformatics, ecology, cultural study,
information systems, operations research to share, exchange, learn, and develop
preliminary results, new concepts, ideas, principles, and methodologies on
applying data mining technologies for computational collective intelligence,
aiming to merge the gap between the two areas, encourage collaborations, advance and deepen our
understanding of interactions as well as collective intelligence, and devise
more effective and efficient computational algorithms to make wiser decisions.
2.
Topic of Interests
The
topics of this special issue include, but not limit to, the following:
·
Graph
and Matrix methods for computational collective science
·
Probabilistic
models for collective social science
·
Tensor
models for evolving group/community analysis
·
Transfer
learning on heterogeneous groups/communities
·
Link
analysis and network structure discovery
·
Viral Marketing and
influence propagation
·
User
behavior modeling
·
Social tagging, blog and
forum analysis
·
Security and Privacy issues
·
Query log and click through
data analysis
·
Expertise and authority
discovery
·
Social navigation and visualization
·
Collaborative filtering and
recommendation
3. Submission Instructions
We invite regular paper
submissions, work-in-progress, and
position papers. All papers must follow the IEEE ICDM format and be submitted
through
Regular papers can be up
to 8 pages in length; short papers, such as position and work-in-progress
papers, no more than 6 pages; two additional pages can be purchased for $125 per
page. All papers will be reviewed by at least three Program Committee members
on the basis of technical quality, relevance to workshop topics, originality,
significance, and clarity before the final decision is made.
Key
Dates
·
Paper
Submission August 5, 2011
·
Author
Notification September 23, 2011
·
Camera
ready October 20,2011
·
Workshop December 11, 2011
4. Organizers
General Co-Chairs
· Charu Aggarwal.
·
Tina Eliassi-Rad.
·
Philip S.
Yu.
Program Co-Chairs
·
Hanghang Tong.
·
Fei Wang.
·
Hong Cheng.
Program Committee
·
·
Yun Chi. NEC Research Lab
·
·
Ian Davidson.
·
Brian J. Gallagher. LLNL.
·
Lise Getoor.
·
Maxim Gurevich. Yahoo!
·
·
Alejandro (Alex)
Jaimes. Yahoo! Barcelona.
·
·
Kristina Lerman.
·
Lei
·
Haibing Lu.
·
·
Spiros Papadimitriou. Google Research.
·
B. Aditya Prakash.
·
Yanghua Shaw.
·
·
Yuan
·
· Haiyi
Zhu.