Hosted by the Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL USA
Kathleen Carley
Social Influence on the Web: Bots and Fake News
Maria Pereda
Learning to be Nice: Social Norms as a Result of Adjusting Expectations
Dashun Wang
Predictive Signals Behind Success
Dirk Brockmann
Measuring What Matters in Disease Dynamics
Sandra González-Bailón
Online Networks and Large-Scale Coordination
Shawndra Hill
Measuring the Impact of TV Content on Digital Behaviors
“Big Data. Big Obstacles.”
Conley, Dalton et al.,
The Chronicle of Higher Education
“Computational Social Science: Exciting Progress and Future Directions”
Watts, Duncan J.,
National Academy of Engineering
“Computational Social Science”
Lazer, David, et al.,
Science
"Is Bigger Always Better?"
Hargittai, Eszter,
The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
"The Ultimate Data Set - Computational Social Science Aims to Discover Universal Facts."
Uzzi, Brian,
Kellogg Insight
“Computational CAM: studying children and media in the age of big data”
Welles, Brooke Foucault,
Journal of Children and Media
“Computational Social Science”
Mann, Adam
PNAS
IC2S2 features two special events prior to the main conference: a datathon and a series of skills workshops.
Workshops are intended to be an introduction to core computing skills used in computational social science. It is a great opportunity for sociological researchers who are newcomers to computational techniques or who want to broaden their tool-kits with exposure to new methodologies.
The datathon is a marathon research session in which participants work together to turn datasets into insight. Participants will utilize prepared datasets and computational methods to respond to a theory-driven prompt developed by a panel of judges.
Check back later for more details on these sessions as the agenda is finalized.
Concurrent Sessions will address issues such as social contagion, social dynamics and influence, political collective action, economical models, social media and more. Panels will be run concurrently and will feature nearly 150 speakers. Presenters will be from a diverse selection of research institutions and organizations. They will be from numerous countries and disciplines, and their commonality will be the contributions they are making to the field of computational social science.
The final agenda will be posted closer to the conference date.