CI 2014 - Collective Intelligence 2014
Topics/Call fo Papers
This interdisciplinary conference seeks to bring together researchers from a variety of fields relevant to understanding and designing collective intelligence of many types.
Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
human computation
social computing
crowdsourcing
wisdom of crowds (e.g., prediction markets)
group memory and extended cognition
collective decision making and problem-solving
participatory and deliberative democracy
animal collective behavior
organizational design
public policy design (e.g., regulatory reform)
ethics of collective intelligence (e.g., “digital sweatshops”)
computational models of group search and optimization
emergence and evolution of intelligence
new technologies for making groups smarter
CONFERENCE FORMAT
The conference will consist of:
Invited talks from prominent researchers in different areas related to collective intelligence
Oral presentations (see below)
Poster/Demo sessions (see below)
“Ignite” sessions in which practitioners (e.g. policy makers) connect with researchers around collective-intelligence-based solutions to real-world problems
SUBMISSION
Submissions of two types are invited:
Reports of original results results
Demonstrations of tools/technology
All submissions should be formatted as three-page extended abstracts
LaTeX template, ci2014-sample-latex
Word template, ci2014-sample-word
Abstracts should be submitted at https://cmt.research.microsoft.com/CI2014
In order to encourage a diversity of innovative ideas from a variety of fields, submissions may refer to work that is recently published, under review elsewhere, or in preparation, and may link to up to one publicly accessible paper for the purpose of describing the work in detail. However, submissions will be evaluated solely on the submitted abstract, which must therefore comprise an entirely self-contained description of the work.
After review by the Program Committee, a subset of submitted papers will be invited for oral presentation, as well as for presentation as posters and/or demos. A second subset will also be invited exclusively for presentation as posters and/or demos.
Accepted submissions (including for posters and demos) will be compiled into a single report which will be made available on http://arxiv.org. We emphasize that published abstracts are not intended to be considered archival publications or to preclude submission of the reported work to archival journals; however, we cannot guarantee that certain journals do not have policies precluding the publishing of extended abstracts.
Authors will not receive detailed feedback from the review process, and accepted abstracts will be included as submitted (i.e. submissions should be camera-ready).
IMPORTANT DATES
Extended abstract submission deadline: January 15, 2014
Notification of acceptance / rejection: February 15, 2014
Conference dates: June 10-12, 2014
GENERAL CHAIRS
Jeffrey Nickerson (Stevens Institute of Technology)
Thomas Malone (MIT)
PROGRAM CHAIRS
Duncan Watts (Microsoft Research)
Michael Kearns (University of Pennsylvania)
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Lada Adamic (Facebook)
Chris Chabris (Union College)
Iain Couzin (Princeton)
Winter Mason (Stevens Institute of Technology, Facebook)
Beth Noveck (NYU)
Scott Page (University of Michigan)
Paul Resnick (University of Michigan)
Matthew Salganik (Princeton, Microsoft Research)
Rajiv Sethi (Columbia University)
Anita Woolley (CMU)
COMMUNICATIONS CHAIR
Elizabeth Gerber (Northwestern)
LOCAL ARRANGEMENTS CHAIRS
Seyda Ertekin (MIT)
Lawrence Abeln (MIT)
PROCEEDINGS CHAIRS
Jeff Bigham (Carnegie Mellon)
Walter Lasaecki (University of Rochester)
Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
human computation
social computing
crowdsourcing
wisdom of crowds (e.g., prediction markets)
group memory and extended cognition
collective decision making and problem-solving
participatory and deliberative democracy
animal collective behavior
organizational design
public policy design (e.g., regulatory reform)
ethics of collective intelligence (e.g., “digital sweatshops”)
computational models of group search and optimization
emergence and evolution of intelligence
new technologies for making groups smarter
CONFERENCE FORMAT
The conference will consist of:
Invited talks from prominent researchers in different areas related to collective intelligence
Oral presentations (see below)
Poster/Demo sessions (see below)
“Ignite” sessions in which practitioners (e.g. policy makers) connect with researchers around collective-intelligence-based solutions to real-world problems
SUBMISSION
Submissions of two types are invited:
Reports of original results results
Demonstrations of tools/technology
All submissions should be formatted as three-page extended abstracts
LaTeX template, ci2014-sample-latex
Word template, ci2014-sample-word
Abstracts should be submitted at https://cmt.research.microsoft.com/CI2014
In order to encourage a diversity of innovative ideas from a variety of fields, submissions may refer to work that is recently published, under review elsewhere, or in preparation, and may link to up to one publicly accessible paper for the purpose of describing the work in detail. However, submissions will be evaluated solely on the submitted abstract, which must therefore comprise an entirely self-contained description of the work.
After review by the Program Committee, a subset of submitted papers will be invited for oral presentation, as well as for presentation as posters and/or demos. A second subset will also be invited exclusively for presentation as posters and/or demos.
Accepted submissions (including for posters and demos) will be compiled into a single report which will be made available on http://arxiv.org. We emphasize that published abstracts are not intended to be considered archival publications or to preclude submission of the reported work to archival journals; however, we cannot guarantee that certain journals do not have policies precluding the publishing of extended abstracts.
Authors will not receive detailed feedback from the review process, and accepted abstracts will be included as submitted (i.e. submissions should be camera-ready).
IMPORTANT DATES
Extended abstract submission deadline: January 15, 2014
Notification of acceptance / rejection: February 15, 2014
Conference dates: June 10-12, 2014
GENERAL CHAIRS
Jeffrey Nickerson (Stevens Institute of Technology)
Thomas Malone (MIT)
PROGRAM CHAIRS
Duncan Watts (Microsoft Research)
Michael Kearns (University of Pennsylvania)
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Lada Adamic (Facebook)
Chris Chabris (Union College)
Iain Couzin (Princeton)
Winter Mason (Stevens Institute of Technology, Facebook)
Beth Noveck (NYU)
Scott Page (University of Michigan)
Paul Resnick (University of Michigan)
Matthew Salganik (Princeton, Microsoft Research)
Rajiv Sethi (Columbia University)
Anita Woolley (CMU)
COMMUNICATIONS CHAIR
Elizabeth Gerber (Northwestern)
LOCAL ARRANGEMENTS CHAIRS
Seyda Ertekin (MIT)
Lawrence Abeln (MIT)
PROCEEDINGS CHAIRS
Jeff Bigham (Carnegie Mellon)
Walter Lasaecki (University of Rochester)
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Last modified: 2013-08-10 14:09:05