Call for Papers

First International Workshop on Social Computing, Behavioral Modeling, and
Prediction

Sedona, Arizona (the Grand Canyon State)
April 1 - 2, 2008

Sponsored by Air Force Research Laboratory/II
Proceedings published by Springer

Social computing is concerned with the study of social behavior and social
context based on computational systems. Behavioral modeling reproduces the
social behavior, and allows for experimenting, scenario planning, and deep
understanding of behavior, patterns, and potential outcomes.  The pervasive
use of computer and Internet technologies provides an unprecedented
environment of various social activities.  Social computing facilitates
behavioral modeling in model building, analysis, pattern mining, and
prediction. Numerous interdisciplinary and interdependent systems are
created and used to represent the various social and physical systems for
investigating the interactions between groups, communities, or
nation-states. This requires joint efforts to take advantage of the
state-of-the-art research from multiple disciplines, social computing, and
behavioral modeling in order to document lessons learned and develop novel
theories, experiments, and methodologies in terms of social, physical,
psychological, and governmental mechanisms.  The goal is to enable us to
experiment, create, and recreate an operational environment with a better
understanding of the contributions from each individual discipline, forging
joint interdisciplinary efforts.

This workshop is interdisciplinary and provides a platform for researchers,
practitioners, and graduate students from sociology, behavioral science,
computer science, psychology, cultural study, information systems,
operations research to share, exchange, learn, and develop preliminary
results, new concepts, ideas, principles, and methodologies, aiming to
advance and deepen our understanding of social and behavioral computing and
evaluation in help critical decision and policy making.  The program will
include invited speakers from government, industry, and academia, as well as
research presentations and discussions.

Papers or abstracts are solicited on research issues, theories, and
applications. Topics of interests include, but are not limited to,
* Psycho-cultural situation awareness
* Group formation and evolution
* Cultural patterns and representation
* Social conventions and social contexts
* Causal, and non-linear relationships
* Modeling, projection, and forecasting
* Social network analysis and mining
* Group interaction and collaboration
* Group representation and profiling
* Influence process and recognition
* Public opinion representation
* Search, data, and inference
* Simulation methodology
* Tools
* Metrics and evaluation
* Case study
* Data collection and benchmarks
* Model and analysis complexity Paper Format and Submission

A paper or extended abstract (maximum 8 pages, shorter submissions are also
welcome, in single column) should be submitted in PDF. Format instructions
and a Word template from Springer can be found at the workshop website
http://www.public.asu.edu/~huanliu/sbp08.

Papers should be submitted at http://www.easychair.org/SBP08/

Questions and inquiries are welcome. Please sent them to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Important Dates
 Paper Due:          November 5, 2007
 Notification:   November 26, 2007
 Camera-Ready:   December 10, 2007

Workshop Organizers
 Huan Liu, John Salerno, and Michael Young

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