- CSS Winter Symposium 2015
- Poster sessions/ presentations
Wednesday, December 2: Poster presentations
Pecha Kucha Session 1: 11:25 – 12:30
01 | Haiko Lietz | Social Networks, Meaning, and Culture |
02 | Johannes Wachs and Mihaly Fazekas | Do Networks See Corruption Risk? |
03 | Oul Han, Suin Kim and Camille Roth | Who are Birds of the Same Feather? Epistemic Communities in the EU Twittersphere |
04 | Io Taxidou and Peter M. Fischer | Identifying and Correlating Patterns and User Roles in Information Diffusion |
05 | Mahmoudreza Babaei, Przemyslaw Grabowicz, Isabel Valera, Krishna P. Gummadi and Manuel Gomez Rodriguez | On the Efficiency of the Information Networks in Social Media |
06 | Denzil Correa, Mainack Mondal and Krishna P. Gummadi | Effect of Anonymity on User Behavior in Social Media |
07 | Simon Scheller | Rationally Stubborn: A Simple Agent-based Model for the Emergence of Inequality |
08 | Stefano Bennati, Leonard Wossnig, Johannes Thiele and Dirk Helbing | The role of information in group formation |
09 | Claudia Müller-Birn & Janette Lehmann | Describing community dynamics by transitions between participation patterns in a structured data community project |
10 | Dominik Kowald, Paul Seitlinger, Tobias Ley and Elisabeth Lex | Modeling Activation Processes in Human Memory to Improve Tag Recommendations |
11 | Ségolène Charaudeau and Camille Roth | Detecting Temporally Stable Content-Sharing Communities |
12 | Telmo Menezes and Camille Roth | Implicit Interregional and Temporal Borders from Photo Sharing Data |
13 | Marcella Tambuscio, Gianluca Tursi, Mirko Lai and Giancarlo Ruffo | Understanding the attraction dynamics of geolocated hashtags |
14 | Rijurekha Sen, Daniele Quercia and Krishna Gummadi | SnapCity: Measuring Accessibility in Cities Worldwide |
15 | Ujwal Gadiraju, Stefan Dietze and Ernesto Diaz-Aviles | Ranking Buildings and Mining the Web for Popular Architectural Patterns |
16 | Aline Morais and Nazareno Andrade | The Diversity of Users on Geo-Social Networks |
17 | Stefan Schweers, Katharina Kinder-Kurlanda and Stefan Mülle | The analysis potential of georeferenced survey data: Combining the ALLBUS survey with environ-mental noise measurements and census data |
18 | Emilio Sulis, Mirko Lai, Giancarlo Ruffo, Rocco Corriero and Mario Mirabelli | Social Sensing and Official Statistics: Signals from Phone Calls and Social Media |
19 | Annerose Nisser and Nils B. Weidmann | A Field Experiment Using Mobile Advertising in Bosnia |
20 | Raphael H. Heiberger and Jan Riebling | The German Transportation System - Using trains, airports and the Autobahn as network data |
21 | Yon Soo Park | Harnessing Behavioral Spillover in Organizational Networks |
22 | Jon Mackay and James Wilson | The Impact of the Silicon Valley Wage Cartel on Management Job Transitions |
23 | Lester Lasrado and Ravi Vatrapu | Towards a computational social science fuzzy set-theoretic approach to assess an organisations’ digital maturity |
24 | Oul Han and Jinyeong Bak | Studying Political Contention using Text as Data |
25
| Vytautas Mickevičius, Tomas Krilavičius and Vaidas Morkevičius | Website for Quantitative Analysis of Voting in Lithuanian Parliament |
26 | Manuel Mittler, Christoph Kling, Jérôme Kunegis and Markus Strohmaier | Polarisation in Voting Platforms: A Case Study of LiquidFeedback in the German Pirate Party |
27 | Daria Kharkina, Valerii Nechai and Ilya Musabirov | Political Polarization: Case of Russian Social Media |
28 | Annerose Nisser and Nils Weidmann | Ethnic Salience in a Post-Conflict Blogosphere |
29 | Ruth McAlister | Trafficking and Technology: Facilitation, Investigation and Prevention |
30 | Mark Kibanov, Imaduddin Amin and Jong Gun Lee | Supporting Peat Fire Management using Social Media |
Pecha Kucha Session 2: 13:30 – 14:45
31 | Felix Schmitt, Heinz Kredel and Tobias Kienzle | High Performance Computing for Social Science in Baden-Württemberg |
32 | Alexander Hinneburg and Christian Oberländer | Visual interactive Exploration of Online Discourses with TopicExplorer |
33 | Ingo Wolf, Flavio Gortana, Ivo Herrmann, Paul Thiele, Frank Heidmann and Tobias Schröder | Drag and Drop Cognition: Graphical User Interface for Cognitive-affective Models in Multi-agent Systems |
34 | Andreas Niekler and Gregor Wiedemann | (Semi)-automatic content analysis for the identification of neo-liberal justifications in large newspaper corpora |
35 | Damian Trilling and Jeroen G .F. Jonkman | Packing and Unpacking the Bag of Words: Introducing a Toolkit for Inductive Automated Frame Analysis |
36 | Andreas Blätte | Dialogue and interaction with large-scale textual data. Analysing parliamentary speeches using the polmineR package |
37 | Jacco van Ossenbruggen and Laura Hollink | The nature of digitally-produced data: towards a social-scientific tool criticism |
38 | Jérôme Kunegis, Markus Strohmaier and Steffen Staab | Social Network Observatory |
39 | Sara Day Thomson | Preserving Social Media: a Technology Watch report |
40 | Ruth Garcia Gavilanes, Milena Tsvetkova and Taha Yasseri | Quantifying Collective Memory through Online Data |
41 | Daniel Alexandrov, Viktor Karepin and Ilya Musabirov | Educational Migration Patterns in Russia: Social Network Data Approach |
42 | Joana Gonçalves-Sá, Pedro Leal Varela, Ian B. Wood, Johan Bollen and Luis M. Rocha | Human Sexual Cycles Are Driven By Culture And Collective Moods |
43 | Olesya Volchenko and Violetta Korsunova | Social Values and Film Industry: the Internet Movie Database Analysis |
44 | Paul Okopny, Denis Bulygin, Ilya Musabirov and Grigorii Lysov | Exploring Social Adaptation in Online Games |
45 | John Ternovski and Taha Yasseri | Social Influence in Music Listenership: A Natural Experiment on 1.3 Million Last.fm Users |
46 | Fabian Flöck | Data services and visual analytics for researching word provenance, content disputes and longitudinal editor interaction networks in Wikipedia |
47 | Anna Samoilenko, Fariba Karimi, Daniel Edler, Jérôme Kunegis and Markus Strohmaier | Quantifying cultural similarity through language co-occurrences in Wikipedia editing activity |
48 | Michael Ruster, René Pickhardt and Steffen Staab | Will I be Blocked? A Word-Level Analysis of Wikipedia Articles Deletion Discussions |
49 | Ujwal Gadiraju, Ricardo Kawase, Stefan Dietze and Gianluca Demartini | Understanding Malicious Behavior in Crowdsourcing Platforms: The Case of Online Surveys |
50 | Ramine Tinati, Markus Luczak-Roesch, Elena Simperl and Wendy Hall | Exploring the Global Adoption of Citizen Science |
51 | Neal Reeves, Max Van Kleek and Elena Simperl | From crowd to community: Support for Community Features in Online Citizen Science Projects |
52 | Zinayida Petrushyna, Mohsen Shahriari and Ralf Klamma | Asking an Expert or a Friend? Simulating Forum Communities of Learners Using Reciprocity and Preferential Attachment |
53 | Daniel Davis, Claudia Hauff and Geert-Jan Houben | Identifying Trigger Events in MOOCs |
54 | Guanliang Chen, Claudia Hauff and Geert-Jan Houben | Beyond the MOOC Environment: Enriching Learner Models through Social Web Mining |
55 | Martin Rehm, Allison Littlejohn and Bart Rienties | What are the Driving Forces behind Informal Learning in Social Media? |
56 | André Grow and Jan Van Bavel | Too Few Alternatives? The Reversal of the Gender Gap in Education and its Consequences for Union Stability |
57 | Fariba Karimi, Mohsen Jadidi and Claudia Wagner | Gender representation in co-authorship network |
58 | Athanasios Mazarakis and Isabella Peters | Digging Conference Tweets and Finding Conference Related Tweeting Behavior and Gender Disparities |
59 | Aline Morais and Robert Jäschke | The Diversity of Computer Scientists on Twitter |
60 | Mark Kibanov, Martin Atzmueller, Jens Illig, Christoph Scholz, Alain Barrat, Ciro Cattuto and Gerd Stumme | Is Web Content a Good Proxy for Real-Life Interaction? A Case Study Considering Online and Offline Interactions of Computer Scientists |
61 | Timothy Bowman and Fereshteh Didegah | Terms and sentiments may apply: Examining sentiments in tweets and epistemic terms in scientific abstracts |
- Each poster will have exactly 2 min to be presented during one of the two Pecha Kucha sessions and may use up to 4 slides.
- Presentation slides should be submitted in PDF (horizontally / landscape) prior to the symposium. Please submit your slides by November 25th to this email address: css.wintersymposium(at)gesis(dot)org
- We would like to publish your presentation slides on our conference website after the event – if you prefer your slides not being published, please let us know.
Poster exhibition: 14:45 – 16:15
- Posters may be up to DINA0 in size and will be hung vertically / portrait
- Please hand over your posters at the registration desk
- on December 1: all day at GESIS Cologne
- on December 2: from 08:15-09:00 at the main symposium venue (Maternushaus)