AAAI ICWSM 2023 | Limassol, Cyprus
The 17th International
AAAI Conference
on Web and Social Media
June 5th – 8th 2023
Limassol, Cyprus
Web Chair Announcement:
Conference Program has been announced. View the schedule by clicking the "Conference Program" button on the ICWSM's website homepage. (May 25, 2023)
Accepted papers have been announced. A new element has been added at the home page and under the Schedule navigation link. (May 16, 2023)
Updates on Accepted Workshops and ICWSM-23 Late Registration Prices. (May 15, 2023)
Bronze Sponsors and Adamic-Glance Plenary Talk have been announced. (May 12, 2023)
New Keynote Speaker has been announced. PC Members list has been updated. (May 5, 2023)
New Call for Papers: Special Section of
JQD:DM
in Collaboration with ICWSM 2024 has been added to the CFP. (April 12, 2023)
Information for Attending ICWSM-23, Registration, Scholarships & Grants, and Travel & Conference Logistics have been announced. (March 6, 2023)
Workshops, Tutorials and Data Challenge Schedules have been announced. (February 24, 2023)
Details about the ICWSM Adamic-Glance Distinguished Young Researcher Award have been announced in the home page. (January 31, 2023)
Dataset Paper and Posters & Demos Notification Acceptance dates have been added to the CFP. (January 10, 2023)
Detailed Guidelines for Paper Submission of the CFP have been updated. (December 16, 2022)
We have recently updated the information under the following website sections: Call For Submissions (Data Challenge Website Announced, AAAI Updated Author Kit information), the Steering and Program Committee Members (SPC & PC) of the ICWSM-2023. (December 13, 2022)
We have recently updated the information under the following website sections: Call For Submissions (Dataset Papers, Workshops, Tutorials, Data Challenge) and the Organizing Committee Members of the ICWSM-2023. (November 10, 2022)
Accepted Papers have been announced
Full Papers, Posters and Dataset Track Posters
COVID-19 Safety
We are excited to move towards a fully in-person event for our community in 2023! That said, it is our priority to ensure the safety and health of all participants. The organizers are monitoring the COVID-19 pandemic closely and will take measures as needed, including the possibility of enabling those who cannot travel to participate remotely.
For inquiries about the
ICWSM Code of Conduct
, please contact
icwsm23@aaai.org.
The International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media (ICWSM) is a forum for researchers from multiple disciplines to come together to share knowledge, discuss ideas, exchange information, and learn about cutting-edge research in diverse fields with the common theme of online social media. This overall theme includes research in new perspectives in social theories, as well as computational algorithms for analyzing social media. ICWSM is a singularly fitting venue for research that blends social science and computational approaches to answer important and challenging questions about human social behavior through social media while advancing computational tools for vast and unstructured data.
ICWSM, now in its seventeenth year, has become one of the premier venues for computational social science, and
previous years of ICWSM
have featured papers, posters, and demos that draw upon network science, machine learning, computational linguistics, sociology, communication, and political science. The uniqueness of the venue and the quality of submissions have contributed to a rapidly growing conference, and a competitive acceptance rate of approximately 20% for full-length research papers published in the proceedings by the
Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI)
ICWSM-2023 will be held from June 5th – 8th at the
St. Raphael Resort and Marina
in Limassol, Cyprus.
Disciplines
Computational approaches to social media research including:
Natural Language Processing
Text / Data Mining
Machine Learning
Image / Multimedia Processing
Graphics and Visualization
Distributed Computing
Graph Theory and Network Science
Human-computer Interaction
Social science approaches to social media research including:
Psychology
Sociology and social network analysis
Communication
Political Science
Economics
Anthropology
Media Studies and Journalism
Digital Humanities
Interdisciplinary approaches to social media research combining computational algorithms and social science methodologies
Topics Include (But Are Not Limited To)
Studies of digital humanities (culture, history, arts) using social media
Psychological, personality-based and ethnographic studies of social media
Analysis of the relationship between social media and mainstream media
Qualitative and quantitative studies of social media
Centrality/influence of social media publications and authors
Ranking/relevance of social media content and users
Credibility of online content
Social network analysis; communities identification; expertise and authority discovery
Trust; reputation; recommendation systems
Human computer interaction; social media tools; navigation and visualization
Subjectivity in textual data; sentiment analysis; polarity/opinion identification and extraction, linguistic analyses of social media behavior
Text categorization; topic recognition; demographic/gender/age identification
Trend identification and tracking; time series forecasting
Measuring predictability of real world phenomena based on social media, e.g., spanning politics, finance, and health
New social media applications; interfaces; interaction techniques
Engagement, motivations, incentives, and gamification.
Social innovation and effecting change through social media
Social media usage on mobile devices; location, human mobility, and behavior
Organizational and group behavior mediated by social media; interpersonal communication mediated by social media
Example Data Sources (Web and Social Media)
Social networking sites (e.g., Facebook, LinkedIn)
Microblogs (e.g., Twitter, Tumblr)
Wiki-based knowledge sharing sites (e.g., Wikipedia)
Social news sites and websites of news media (e.g., Huffington Post)
Forums, mailing lists, newsgroups
Community media sites (e.g., YouTube, Flickr, Instagram)
Social Q&A sites (e.g., Quora, Yahoo Answers)
User reviews (e.g., Yelp, Amazon.com)
Social curation sites (e.g., Reddit, Pinterest)
Location-based social networks (e.g., Foursquare)
ICWSM-2023 Keynotes
new
The Shortcut - Why Intelligent Machines do not Think Like Us
by Nello Cristianini
Abstract:
The key to address our social anxieties in the face of Intelligent Machines is understanding how they “think”, what we can expect of them, and what can be the consequences of the specific type of intelligence that they exhibit, and the specific position we have chosen for them in our global data infrastructure, particularly web and social media. In order to do that, we will examine the fundamental steps that took us to the present form of AI, in particular the idea of the Shortcut. This will allow us to consider what we can expect from modern AI, and how we can manage our relation with it. (This talk will be based on the book
“The Shortcut” by Nello Cristianini
).
Bio:
Nello Cristianini is a Professor of Artificial Intelligence at the University of Bath, and a researcher in many areas of Artificial Intelligence, including machine learning theory, natural language processing, social implications of AI, philosophical foundations of AI, computational social science. He is the author of “The Shortcut” published by CRC Press (2023).
Digital Inequality During COVID-19 Lockdowns
by Eszter Hargittai
Abstract:
Rarely is access to information as important as during a global health crisis. During the initial COVID-19 lockdowns, at a time when information could mean the difference between life and death, information inequalities were of paramount significance. Drawing on national survey data collected in the early days of the pandemic in three countries (US, Italy, Switzerland), this talk shares how people’s digital privilege related to their knowledge and misconceptions about the virus with consequences for whether they stayed safe during lockdowns.
Bio:
Eszter Hargittai is Professor and holds the Chair of Internet Use and Society at the Institute of Communication and Media Research of the University of Zurich. She is Fellow of the International Communication Association and an External Member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. Hargittai's research looks at how people may benefit from or be left behind as a result of their varied digital media skills and uses. Her work has received awards from several professional associations. Her latest book is Connected in Isolation: Digital Privilege in Unsettled Times published by The MIT Press in 2022.
Research on Wikipedia Reading and Writing: a Random Walk
Adamic-Glance Plenary Talk
by Robert West
Bio:
Robert West is a tenure-track assistant professor of computer science at EPFL (the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne), where he heads the Data Science Lab (dlab). His research aims to make sense of large amounts of data by developing and applying algorithms and techniques in natural language processing, machine learning, and computational social science. Typically, the data he works with is generated by humans (e.g., natural language or behavioral traces), and frequently it is collected on the Web (e.g., using wikis, online news, social media, server logs, online games). Bob received his PhD in Computer Science from Stanford University (2016), his MSc from McGill University (2010), and his undergraduate degree from Technische Universität München (2007). He is a Wikimedia Foundation Research Fellow, an Associate Editor of ICWSM and EPJ Data Science, and a co-founder of the Wiki Workshop and the Applied Machine Learning Days. His work has won several awards, including best/outstanding paper awards at ICWSM’21, ICWSM’19, and WWW’13, a Google Faculty Research Award, a Facebook Research Award, and the ICWSM’22 Adamic–Glance Distinguished Young Researcher Award.
Stay tuned
More coming soon...
Attending ICWSM-2023
new
The 17th International Conference on Web & Social Media will be hosted at the
St. Raphael Resort and Marina
in Limassol, Cyprus, from June 5th to June 8th, 2023.
Please reserve before May 6, 2023.
St. Raphael Resort & Marina
Amathus Avenue 502
4534 Pyrgos, Limassol, CYPRUS
Click on the link below to book your reservation at the conference special rate:
Please note that all guestrooms are non-smoking and the group rate is on a bed and breakfast basis. For any other requests or inquiries, please enter this information within the appropriate request boxes during the reservation process or call or email the hotel directly at +357 25 834 200 -
reservations@straphael.com
For those attendees driving to the hotel, free parking is available.
For more information about the venue, transportation, and conference logistics, click
here
ICWSM Code of Conduct
All persons, organizations and entities that attend AAAI conferences and events are subject to the standards of conduct set forth on the
AAAI Code of Conduct for Events and Conferences.
AAAI expects all community members to formally endorse this code of conduct, and to actively prevent and discourage any undesired behaviors. Everyone should feel empowered to politely engage when they or others are disrespected, and to raise awareness and understanding of this code of conduct. AAAI event participants asked to stop their unacceptable behavior are expected to comply immediately. Sponsors are also subject to this code of conduct in their participation in AAAI events.
Additionally, participants are encouraged to be courteous when sharing screen captures and photographs of conference events. Seek permission when possible and respect requests to take down images if those featured ask.
Concerns around code of conduct or inclusion may be sent to
icwsm23@aaai.org
. If you have any concerns or items to report, please reach out to the General Chair, Jahna Otterbacher.
Registration
new
ICWSM-23 Registration
We are excited to welcome everyone back to a fully in-person ICWSM this year! It is extremely important to the health and sustainability of our community that we “get back to normal” and resume our annual face-to-face meeting, strengthening our ICWSM community both scientifically and socially.
For this reason, all accepted papers to the technical program must be presented by one of its authors in person at the conference.
Workshops and Tutorials held in-person will also be streamed virtually. Workshops and Tutorials that are virtual-only will not be available in-person and must be attended virtually. Please contact the respective organizers for any further information.
In addition, we will be offering a limited virtual experience via Zoom exclusively for participants from developing countries (please see the
list of eligible countries here
). Participants will be able to follow the ICWSM Technical Program, with the ability to interact via the Zoom chat. Please complete our
application form
should you wish to apply for complementary virtual participation.
AAAI ICWSM-23 registration site
Register at the following link:
The ICWSM-23 technical conference registration fee includes admission to the Workshop/Tutorial Day, all technical sessions, and access to the electronic version of the ICWSM-23 Conference Proceedings.
ICWSM-23 Registration Fees
Early Registration Deadline:
May 5
passed
Standard Registration - Technical Program
$625
now $725
AAAI Member
$360
now $410
AAAI Student Member
$735
now $835
Non-member
$420
now $500
Non-member Student
Silver Registration - Technical Program
Includes discounted conference registration, plus a one-year online new or renewed membership in AAAI.
$724
now $824
Silver Regular
$409
now $459
Silver Student
Workshop / Tutorials
ICWSM-23 workshops and tutorials will be held on Monday, June 5th, just prior to the technical conference. Please also note that some sessions may only be offered virtually. Technical registrants may sign up for any combination of workshops and/or tutorials on June 5th as part of their technical registration. For those wishing to attend only the Workshop/Tutorial Day, a Workshop/Tutorial Day Only registration is offered. PARTICIPANTS SHOULD NOT SIGN UP FOR CONCURRENT EVENTS, so please consult the schedule carefully before making your selections.
In-Person and Virtual Workshop/Tutorial Day Only:
$75 Regular
$50 Student
Registration / Proof of Student Status
Students will be required to submit proof of student status during the registration process.
Refund Requests
The deadline for refund requests is May 17, 2023. All refund requests must be made in writing to AAAI at
icwsm23@aaai.org
. A $100 processing fee will be assessed for all refunds.
Visa Information
During the registration process, you will be able to request a visa letter. The letter will be automatically generated and available to you along with the registration confirmation.
Workshops Schedule
Full-Day Workshops:
Disrupt, Ally, Resist, Embrace (DARE): Action Items for Computational Social Scientists in a Changing World
Organizers:
Kokil Jaidka
Eni Mustafaraj
David Schoch
, and
Kenny Joseph
Images in Online Political Communication (PhoMemes 2023)
Organizers:
Cody Buntain
Erik Bucy
Keng-Chi Chang
Jungseock Joo
Navin Kumar
, and
Dhavan Shah
Half-Day Workshops:
Data for the Wellbeing of Most Vulnerable
Organizers:
Kyriaki Kalimeri
Yelena Mejova
, and
Daniela Paolotti
Novel Evaluation Approaches for Text Classification Systems (NEATCLasS)
Organizers:
Björn Ross
Roberto Navigli
Agostina Calabrese
, and
Sheikh Muhammad Sarwar
Mediate 2023: News Media and Computational Journalism Workshop
Organizers:
Talia Tseriotou
Dina Pisarevskaya
Elena Kochkina
Marya Bazzi
Maria Liakata
, and
Arkaitz Zubiaga
TrueHealth 2023: Combating Health Misinformation for Social Well-being
Organizers:
Gabriella Pasi
Rishabh Upadhyay
, and
Marco Viviani
Tutorials Schedule
Prevalence Estimation in Social Media Using Black Box Classifiers
Abstract:
Many problems in computational social science require estimating the proportion of items with a particular property. This counting task is called prevalence estimation or quantification. Frequently, researchers have a pre-trained classifier available to them. However, it is usually not safe to simply apply the classifier to all items and count the predictions of each class, because the test dataset may differ in important ways from the dataset on which the classifier was trained, a phenomenon called distribution shift. In addition, a second type of distribution shift may occur when one wishes to compare the prevalence between multiple datasets, such as tracking changes over time. To cope with that, some assumptions need to be made about the nature of possible distribution shifts across datasets, a process that we call extrapolation.
This tutorial will introduce an end-to-end framework for prevalence estimation using black box (pre-trained) classifiers, with a focus on social media datasets. The framework consists of a calibration phase and an extrapolation phase, aiming to address the two types of distribution shifts described above. We will provide hands-on exercises that walk the participants through solving a real world problem of quantifying positive tweets in datasets from two separate time periods. All datasets, pre-trained models, and example codes will be provided in a Jupyter notebook. After attending this tutorial, participants will be able to understand the basics of the prevalence estimation problem in social media, and construct a data analysis pipeline to conduct prevalence estimation for their projects.
Organizers:
Siqi Wu
, and
Paul Resnick
Computational Approaches to Studying Anti-Social Behaviour in Social Media
Abstract:
In less than a generation, social media has moved into the center of modern life. It has altered many aspects of our daily lives, from how we form and maintain social relationships to how we discover, access and share information online. However, the same platforms have also given way to troublesome anti-social behaviours such as online trolling, cyberbullying, and expressions of hate speech. In some online communities, what is commonly referred to as ‘anti-social’ may be a communal norm and a way to socialize. However, that is not the case in most online communities where such behaviour may negatively affect the overall group cohesion and may have psychological and emotional consequences for individual social media users.
This tutorial will demonstrate how to use automated content analysis to detect and study anti-social behaviours in social media. The session will introduce and discuss advantages and disadvantages of two common approaches often used to detect instances of ‘anti-social’ behaviour in online discourse: lexicon-based and machine learning approaches. As part of the hands-on part, the tutorial will introduce Communalytic, a new online research tool for studying online communities. The participants will then use Communalytic to analyze a sample dataset using a toxicity analysis.
Organizers:
Anatoliy Gruzd
, and
Philip Mai
Collecting and Sharing Twitter Data for Academic Research: A hands-on tutorial using twarc2 and the Social Media Archive at ICPSR (SOMAR)
Abstract:
This hands-on tutorial will walk participants through the data lifecycle of a social media data research project. Participants will learn how to collect data from Twitter using the twarc2 command line tool, how to share Twitter data using the Social Media Archive at ICPSR, and how to “hydrate” Twitter data shared by other researchers. After completing this tutorial, participants will be able to collect or reuse social media data in their own projects and share that data with others to verify, reproduce, and extend their work.
Organizers:
Anmol Panda
, Marley Kalt, and
Libby Hemphill
A hitchhiker’s guide to user-centric browsing data
Cancelled
Abstract:
Digital traces come in two rather different forms, depending on whether they are venue-centric or user-centric. Venue-centric data consists of everything users did on a given site or platform in a given context (e.g. all ‘stop the steal’ tweets published on Twitter over a certain period). User-centric data consists of everything a certain population of users did in a given context (e.g. monitoring data from wearable devices for a set of people who agreed to share their data for a specific research). Venue-centric data typically is massive, anonymous and full of blind spots, when user-centric data typically is more scarce but richer in external knowledge about people involved (social demographics but also possibly complementary survey data) and more thorough (because they are not limited to what people did on a specific platform). The aim of the present tutorial is to introduce researchers to opportunities and challenges associated with using user-centric data for research on web behavior, showing focusing on a specific kind of such data, namely browsing trace data collected via passive metering devices installed on personal mobile and laptops supplemented with extra survey data. We aim at presenting both methods (starting from data cleaning and preprocessing to data analysis and statistical modeling) and potential research questions (in terms of broad social science interests) that are specially relevant to user-centric browsing data.
Organizers:
Denis Bonnay
, and
Juhi Kulshrestha
Data Challenge
ICWSM-2023 is hosting the fourth ICWSM data challenge with the goal of bringing together researchers to analyze and understand emerging societal issues. The data challenge is a space where researchers can exchange ideas, discuss ongoing work, and foster collaboration, grounded on open data. This year’s data challenge theme is
Dynamics of social data: Temporal characteristic of social tasks.
Visit the
ICWSM-2023 Data Challenge Website
for more details.
Important Dates
Data Challenge opens:
Feb 15th, 2023
Paper Submission Deadline:
April 1, 2023 (AoE)
Data Challenge notification:
May 1, 2023
ICWSM Data Challenge Full-day Workshop:
June 5, 2023
Abeer Aldayel, Debora Nozza, and Steve Wilson
(ICWSM-2023 Data Challenge Chairs |
data.challenge@icwsm.org
Scholarships & Grants
new
ICWSM Scholarships
We are pleased to announce the availability of a number of scholarships to help support student attendance at ICWSM-23. These scholarships are made possible through the engagement with, and kind contribution of, AAAI and our company sponsors.
Student Travel Grant
The student travel grant assists student participants both with travel to Limassol, Cyprus, as well as with conference expenses (such as housing, local transportation to/from the airport, conference registration, etc.). Please note that it intends to subsidize student participation in ICWSM-23, but does not intend to cover all travel and conference expenses. The final amount will vary depending on the cost of the travel, the available funds, and the number and type of applicants. The eligibility of this travel grant includes both active student program enrollment and physical presence at ICWSM-23 or any of the associated workshops.
ICWSM 2023 Student Travel Grant application form (Deadline: March 31):
Virtual Grant for Underrepresented Groups
The virtual grant provides complimentary conference registration for virtual participants who are from underrepresented groups and/or regions. Please find the AAAI list of developing countries here:
Note that this virtual grant is not limited to students, it is open to anyone from underrepresented groups (e.g., women, persons with disabilities, etc.) and/or regions (e.g., African countries). There are no conditions for accepting this grant. We only ask that you attend the event and enjoy the sessions. We would, of course, also be happy if you decide to join our ICWSM and Computational Social Science community.
Virtual Participation application form (Deadline: March 31):
ICWSM Awards
ICWSM Adamic-Glance Distinguished Young Researcher Award
This annual award is presented to a young researcher who has distinguished themself through innovative research in the area of social computing/computational social science in the early stage of their independent research career. The award is named after
Lada Adamic
and
Natalie Glance
, two outstanding researchers who have made significant contributions to the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media (ICWSM) in particular and social computing/computational social science in general. The ICWSM research community at large has greatly impacted this field, through identifying the connections between online digital behaviors and critical societal questions and issues. From misinformation and fake news to how we can use social media and social networks to gain insight into political polarization, mental health, and social movements, the range of topics addressed by the community is continuously expanding. We want to recognize and celebrate the young researchers who are making these contributions today.
The award was established in 2021, at the 15th anniversary mark of the
AAAI ICWSM conference
. Prior winners of the award are
Dr. Tanu Mitra
(2021) and
Dr. Robert West
(2022).
Nomination Process and Eligibility
Self-nominations, nominations, and letters of support are elicited. ICWSM strongly encourages individuals from underrepresented groups in research (based on gender identity, race, ethnicity, geographical location, etc.) to self-nominate, and urges the wide community to nominate young researchers who have distinguished themselves for their creativity and rigor in identifying and addressing important research topics of societal impact. Nominations are open from February 1st to March 1st 2023. Use this
Google Form
for submission.
Eligibility Criteria
The award is open to individuals who:
Have received their PhD within the past 7 years. Career interruptions and other special circumstances will be considered and should be mentioned in the nomination justification document.
Perform research that is recognizably within the broad field of social computing/computational social science in terms of their thematic and methodological approaches.
Have published their research in the top venues for social computing or computational social science, including active participation in ICWSM.
As long as a candidate is eligible based on the three criteria above, they will be considered even if they were nominated or self-nominated in prior years.
Selection Process
The selection committee consists of three to five members and is appointed by the AAAI ICWSM Steering Committee Chair. The committee solicits self-nominations, nominations, and letters of support from the social computing/computational social science community. The selection is based on the impact of the candidate's work in the field: in identifying significant new problems, creating promising new ideas, paradigms, and tools related to data-driven understanding of human behavior, which may be quantitative or qualitative in nature. Depth and impact are valued over breadth of contribution for this award. A strong regard for considering the ethical aspects of the data/methods used in social computing/computational social science is expected of the research record of the nominees.
The
nomination form
asks the following questions:
Nominator’s information (name, affiliation, email, a link to their webpage).
Nominee’s information (name, affiliation, email, year of PhD, a link to their webpage that contains additional information, for example their CV/resume).
A one-page statement explaining why the nominee deserves the award in question, especially highlighting the novelty and strength of their contributions in the area of computational social science / social computing, and providing evidence of their academic and societal impact. A second page can be included to contain information about career interruption or any special considerations.
Citations for up to three representative publications and/or links to other artefacts documenting the contribution or impact.
Note for letters of support:
The form makes it easy to submit letters of support from people other than the nominators or self-nominators. Such individuals will not need to complete the details of the nomination, they will simply upload their letter.
Form accessibility:
The nomination form requires Google authentication. If for any reason this is a problem for the nominator, please send the nomination materials via email to:
adamic-glance-award@icwsm.org
Conflict of interest:
The awards committee takes conflict of interest seriously. If an nominated individual is a former or current collaborator of one or more of the committee members, such member(s) recuse themselves from evaluating and voting on these nominations.
2023 Awards Committee
Brooke Foucault Welles (Northeastern University)
Bernie Hogan (University of Oxford)
Eni Mustafaraj (Wellesley College)
Jason R.C. Nurse (University of Kent)
Tanu Mitra (University of Washington)
Award recipients will be joining the award selection committee within two years of their award win, to replace members who rotate off the committee.
Contact the committee:
adamic-glance-award@icwsm.org
Award Ceremony
The award will be presented annually during the AAAI ICWSM conference. The awardee will be given the opportunity to give a plenary talk at the next year conference and announce the new recipient. Each recipient will be listed with a citation for their award on the ICWSM Adamic-Glance Distinguished Young Researcher Award web page. Financial support for attending the conference will be provided.
Organizing Committee
Jahna Otterbacher
General Chair
Miriam Redi
Program Co-Chair
Robert West
Program Co-Chair
Kiran Garimella
Program Co-Chair
Styliani Kleanthous
Workshops Co-Chair
Oren Tsur
Workshops Co-Chair
Minsu Park
Workshop Co-Chair
Gianluca Demartini
Tutorial Co-Chair
Dakuo Wang
Tutorial Co-Chair
Srijan Kumar
Tutorial Co-Chair
Kokil Jaidka
Dataset Co-Chair
Michael Sirivianos
Dataset Co-Chair
Francielle Vargas
Dataset Co-Chair
Siqi Wu
Dataset Co-Chair
Abeer Aldayel
Data Challenge Co-Chair
Steven Wilson
Data Challenge Co-Chair
Debora Nozza
Data Challenge Co-Chair
Kyriakos Kyriakou
Web Co-Chair
Pınar Barlas
Web Co-Chair
Savvas Zannettou
Publicity Co-Chair
Tun LU
Publicity Co-Chair
Kalia Orphanou
Local Co-Chair
Evgenia Christoforou
Local Co-Chair
Neil Shah
Sponsorship Co-Chair
Hemank Lamba
Sponsorship Co-Chair
Orestis Papakyriakopoulos
Diversity & Inclusion Chair
Maria Kasinidou
Student Scholarship Chair
Xiaojuan Ma
Global Equity Chair
Editors-in-Chief
Yu-Ru Lin
Daniele Quercia
Meeyoung Cha
Steering Committee
Ingmar Weber
Jeff Hancock
Kate Starbird
Ceren Budak
Fred Morstatter
Jürgen Pfeffer
Yu-Ru Lin
Munmun De Choudhury
Rumi Chunara
Aron Culotta
Brooke F. Wells
Daniele Quercia
Meeyoung Cha
Jason Nurse
Afra Mashhadi
Kenny Joseph
Ella Haig
Diyi Yang
Yelena Mejova
Jisun An
Luca Maria Aiello
Tanu Mitra
Program Committees
Senior Program Commitee
Pablo Aragon
Siqi Wu
Andreas Spitz
Jeremy Blackburn
Savvas Zannettou
Arkaitz Zubiaga
Giovanni Luca Ciampaglia
Kokil Jaidka
Michele Coscia
Aron Culotta
Martin Saveski
Renaud Lambiotte
Sarita Schoenebeck
Sanja Scepanovic
Walid Magdy
Tyler Derr
Hemant Purohit
Tim Althoff
Gianmarco De Francisci Morales
Kenneth Joseph
Xing Xie
Oren Tsur
Ingmar Weber
Emre Kiciman
Tim Weninger
Haewoon Kwak
Luca Rossi
Afra Mashhadi
Koustuv Saha
Emma Spiro
Hemank Lamba
Daniel Romero
Juhi Kulshrestha
Palakorn Achananuparp
Subhayan Mukerjee
Cody Buntain
Mainack Mondal
Soroush Vosoughi
Rossano Schifanella
Shaomei Wu
Jisun An
Program Commitee
Abeer ALDayel
Abhishek Ray
Aiping Xiong
Akshith Ullal
Aleksandra Urman
Alexander Liu
Alexandre Bovet
Alexandros Efstratiou
Alexey Malyshev
Alexi Quintana Mathe
Allison Morgan
Amanda Hughes
Amir Karami
Andres Abeliuk
Andrew Beers
Anjalie Field
Anmol Panda
Antonis Papasavva
Arshia Arya
Ashish Sharma
Barry Bradlyn
Bing He
Brianna Dym
Byoungjip Kim
Carlos Toxtli
Changtao Zhong
Charalampos Chelmis
Chen Wang
Chiara Boldrini
Chiyu Zhang
Cristina Menghini
David Corney
David Holtz
Deepak Kumar
Desheng Hu
Despoina Chatzakou
Diego Saez-Trumper
Dominik Baer
Dong Nguyen
Ehsan-Ul Haq
Ellen Simpson
Emily Tseng
Farshad Kooti
Faysal Hossain Shezan
Flavio Figueiredo
Francesco Pierri
Galen Weld
Gareth Tyson
Gaurav Verma
Gianluca Stringhini
Hamidreza Alvari
Hans Hanley
Ihab AbuHilal
Indira Sen
Isaac Johnson
Jacob Thebault-Spieker
Jalehsadat Mahdavimoghaddam
Jamie Mahoney
Joel Nishimura
Joobin Gharibshah
Joshua Uyheng
Julie Jiang
Kai-Cheng Yang
Kareem Darwish
Kaylea Champion
Keiichi Ochiai
Keith Burghardt
Kristen Engel
Kristina Gligoric
Kunihiro Miyazaki
Laura Dilley
lele sha
Li Qiwei
Lingzi Hong
Lisa Friedland
Lisette Espin Noboa
Luc Rocher
Lucas Oliveira
Manas Gaur
Manoel Horta Ribeiro
Marco Brambilla
Marco Viviani
Maria Antoniak
Marianne Aubin Le
Mark Whiting
Matthew Facciani
Matthew Mauriello
Michael Sirivianos
Mikey Cohen
Minje Choi
Mirco Schoenfeld
Mirko Marras
Morgan Frank
Neil Johnson
Nicholas Vincent
Noveen Sachdeva
Orestis Papakyriakopoulos
Patrick Gildersleve
Pedro Vaz-de-Melo
Ponnurangam Kumaraguru
Priyanka Sinha
Qiwei Han
Rahul Singh
Raiyan Abdul Baten
Rakibul Hasan
Régis Ebeling
Reid Priedhorsky
Rishabh Misra
Ryota Kobayashi
Sabirat Rubya
Sagar Joglekar
Saket Gurukar
Sameera Horawalavithana
Sanjana Mendu
Satrio Yudhoatmojo
Shangbang Long
Shangbin Feng
Sharath Chandra Guntuku
Sho Tsugawa
Shreyansh Bhatt
Sohyeon Hwang
Song Jiang
Stefan Feuerriegel
Stevie Chancellor
Suhang Wang
Teng Ye
Thomas Davidson
Tiziano Piccardi
Tomu Tominaga
Tuğrulcan Elmas
Tuan-Anh Hoang
Tunazzina Islam
Usman Naseem
Veniamin Veselovsky
Vibhor Agarwal
Viktor Pekar
Vipul Raheja
Weizhi Meng
Wenqi Wei
Xingzhi Guo
Yelena Mejova
Yichen Wang
Yifang Ma
Yilei Zeng
Yiming Liao
Yingjie Li
Yonas Mitike Kassa
Youssef Al Hariri
Yu Tian
Yunhe Feng
Yuying Zhao
Zhengxiong Li
Zhijun Yin
Zhuoran Lu
Zijian Wang
Previous ICWSMs
Boulder, U.S. (2007)
Seattle, U.S. (2008)
San Jose, U.S. (2009)
Washington D.C., U.S. (2010)
Barcelona, Spain (2011)
Dublin, Ireland (2012)
Boston, U.S. (2013)
Ann Arbor, U.S. (2014)
Oxford, U.K. (2015)
Cologne, Germany (2016)
Montreal, Canada (2017)
Stanford, U.S. (2018)
Munich, Germany (2019)
Virtual Conference (2020)
Virtual Conference (2021)
Atlanta, Georgia and Online (2022)
Top ICWSM papers by citation (Google Scholar h5)
AAAI Digital Library
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