MIS2: MIS2: Misinformation and Misbehavior Mining on the Web Los Angeles Los Angeles, California, CA, United States, February 9, 2018 |
Conference website | http://snap.stanford.edu/mis2/ |
Submission link | https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=mis2 |
Submission deadline | November 27, 2017 |
Web is a space for all where people interact with each other and anyone can read, publish, and share content. While this has led to several groundbreaking benefits, it is also a breeding ground for misbehavior and misinformation. Anyone can reach thousands of people on the web instantaneously, say whatever they want, whenever they want, and yet be shielded by anonymity. This has led to increase of misbehavior and misinformation, such as harrassment, scams, spread of propaganda, hate speech, fake reviews, and many more. Study of this topic has become important among researchers across many subfields of the computational and social sciences, such as social network analysis, cybersecurity, human–computer interaction, linguistics, natural language processing, social psychology, sociology, political science, and cognitive science.
MIS2 is an interdisciplinary venue that invites researchers and practitioners that work on studying misbehavior and misinformation on the web. Web include social media, e-commerce platforms, collaborative and knowledge-based platforms (e.g., wikis and question-answer platforms like Quora, StackOverflow, etc.), computer mediated communications, both p2p (e.g., email, text chat, video chat, etc.) and broadcasting (e.g., discussion boards, video broadcast), online games, crowdsourcing platforms, and many more.
Areas of interest include, but are not limited to:
- misbehavior and threat on the web, such as spam, trolling, scam, fraud, bots, coordinated attacks, cyberbullying, sockpuppets, propaganda, extremism, hate speech, and others.
- false information on the web: fake reviews, fake news, rumors, fabricated images, videos, and others.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- empirical measurement of characteristics
- measuring real world and online impact
- deception in misinformation and misbehavior
- reputation manipulation
- measuring economic, ideological, and other rationale behind creation
- rationale behind spread and success
- targets or victims of misbehavior and misinformation
- effect of echo chambers, personalization, confirmation bias, and other socio-psychological and technological phenomenon
- detection methods using network, text, behavior, image, video, and audio analysis
- adversarial analysis of misbehavior and misinformation
- prevention and mitigation techniques, tools, and countermeasures
- theoretical and/or empirical modeling of spread and contagion
- visualizing creation and/or spread
- ethics, privacy, fairness, and biases in current tools and techniques
- case studies
Papers should be 2 to 8 pages long, will be published on the workshop webpage, and will not be considered archival for resubmission purposes to future venues. Authors whose papers are accepted to the workshop will have the opportunity to present their research in oral presentation and participate in a poster session.
We explicitly encourage the submission of preliminary work in the form of extended abstracts (2 pages).
Best Paper Awards: Best paper awards will be given to papers submitted to the workshop. The award includes cash award and long oral presentation.
Submission Guidelines
All papers will be peer reviewed.
We encourage submissions of the following types, but not limited to:
- Novel research papers
- Demo papers
- Survey papers
- Comparison papers of existing methods and tools
- Work-in-progress papers
- Extended abstracts
- Relevant work that has been previously published
- Work that will be presented at the main conference of WSDM 2018
Submission dates: See below.
Format: Papers must be submitted in PDF according to the new ACM format published in ACM guidelines, selecting the generic "sigconf" sample. Submissions should be 2 to 8 pages long. No need to anonymize your submission.
Submission Link: Papers should be submitted via the EasyChair: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=mis2
Key Dates
Workshop date: February 9, 2017
Paper submission deadline (all types): November 27, 2017
Author Notification: December 14, 2017
Camera Ready Due: January 1, 2018
Venue
The workshop will be held in Los Angeles, California on February 9, 2018. This workshop is colocated with WSDM 2018.
Organization
Srijan Kumar, Postdoc researcher, Stanford University
Meng Jiang, Assistant Professor, University of Notre Dame
Taeho Jung, Assistant Professor, University of Notre Dame
Roger Luo, Research & Engineering Manager, Snap Inc.
Jure Leskovec, Associate Professor, Stanford University
Contact
All questions about submissions should be emailed to srijan@cs.stanford.edu