[Air-L] Engaging Data Forum Call for Papers | Submissions Deadline July 13
Marcus Foth
m.foth at qut.edu.au
Thu Jul 2 14:26:44 PDT 2009
Dear all,
The deadline for submissions to the Engaging Data: First International
Forum on the Application and Management of Personal Electronic
Information is July 13, 2009, 5:00 p.m. EDT (New York).
Please visit http://senseable.mit.edu/engagingdata for further details
on author guidelines for submissions. As a reference, our Call for
Papers is below, in the attachment, and on our website.
Please also distribute this reminder. Thanks!
Best regards,
Caitlin
--------------------------------
Caitlin Zacharias
Engaging Data Conference Coordinator
SENSEable City Laboratory
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Suite 10-400
77 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
T ++1-617-2537926
F ++1-617-2588081
W senseable.mit.edu/engagingdata
E czachar at mit.edu
Apologies if you receive multiple copies. Please distribute!
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * CALL FOR PAPERS * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* *
ENGAGING DATA
First International Forum on the Application and Management of
Personal Electronic Information
Hosted by
SENSEable City Lab, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Oct. 12-13, 2009
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge, MA USA
http://senseable.mit.edu/engagingdata
CALL FOR PAPERS
Over the past decade, the development and use of digital networks has
produced an increasing wealth of new data. Handheld electronics,
locative media, telecommunications networks, and a wide assortment of
tags and sensors are constantly collecting a rich stream of real-time
information on various components of our lives and the environment we
inhabit, including our movements, purchases, social interactions,
Internet activities, and many more.
These data afford a wide range of research opportunities in the social
and natural sciences that will create a multitude of beneficial
information and services. Affected areas range widely and include,
among others, workplace efficiency, traffic management, tourism,
marketing, logistics, e-commerce, entertainment, urban and
architectural planning, disaster response, security, environmental
sustainability, and social interaction.
Advances in this field are progressing cautiously, however, as the
public, commercial and social entities, and the government are only
just beginning to understand this new condition of pervasive sensing
and data mining as well as the associated framework required to manage
it. Conflicting standards on privacy and fear of entering upon
uncharted territories hinder companies, researchers, and others from
engaging in activities that make responsible use of potentially
sensitive data. Moreover, regulation has not kept pace with the
changing digital infrastructure, and as a result different
stakeholders currently face different restrictions on data usage. In
short, we still lack a complete understanding of the societal value in
this data and the influence on society by its use, and much still
remains unexplored.
It is becoming imperative to develop a new framework of standards and
best practices for collecting, storing, analyzing, reporting, sharing,
and protecting valuable electronic data created by new technologies
and services.
The Engaging Data: First International Forum on the Application and
Management of Personal Electronic Information is the launching event
of the Engaging Data Initiative, which will include a series of
discussion panels and conferences at MIT. This initiative seeks to
address the above issues by bringing together the main stakeholders
from multiple disciplines, including social scientists, engineers,
manufacturers, telecommunications service providers, Internet
companies, credit companies and banks, privacy officers, lawyers, and
watchdogs, and government officials.
The goal of this forum is to explore the novel applications for
electronic data and address the risks, concerns, and consumer opinions
associated with the use of this data. In addition, it will include
discussions on techniques and standards for both protecting and
extracting value from this information from several points of view:
what techniques and standards currently exist, and what are their
strengths and limitations? What holistic approaches to protecting and
extracting value from data would we take if we were given a blank slate?
These issues and questions will be addressed through invited talks,
paper presentations, and panel discussions. The forum will serve as a
platform to exchange ideas, discuss the latest developments in this
field, address significant issues, and create visions for the future.
The forum is seeking original contributions in the form of both
position papers and technical papers. Of particular interest are
papers that open new paths for research, express a creative vision for
the future, and contribute to a lively debate.
TOPICS
Papers are solicited that propose principles and approaches to
building a viable social ecosystem for using information mined from
human interactions with digital networks. Each paper must touch on
the technical, security, social, legal/political, and financial
aspects of the issue, although it is expected that papers will
concentrate more on some aspects than on others.
Topics of interest within these aspects include, but are not limited
to, the following:
--Technical--
Uses and concerns associated with data collection and mining:
1. Information mined by an endpoint party to a communication, including:
-Types of information mined from consumer devices by endpoint parties
(e.g. VoIP routers and radio handsets)
-Accuracy and use of location analyses based on IP addresses, Internet
traceroutes, etc.
-Sharing of mined data with third parties
-Methodologies to analyze and visualize this data
2. Collection, storage, and use of information gathered from wireless
networks, including:
-Location-based tracking and other forms of mobile sensing
-Mobile phones, cordless phones, walkie-talkies, wireless microphones
-Femtocells
-RFID systems
-Wi-Fi Networks
-Implications for "white spaces" signal-sensing devices
-Increased personalization of communications (i.e. device is commonly
unique to a particular individual)
-Sharing of data with third parties
3. Collection of information on traffic flow patterns in fixed
networks, including:
-How uses and concerns vary based on whether flows are segregated by
endpoint, time-of-day, bandwidth usage level, application type, etc.
-Optical and non-optical networks
-Broadband networks
-Personal area networks (PAN), Local-area networks (LAN), Wide-area
networks (WAN), etc.
4. Information collection inside the network
-Packet inspection, e.g. collection of IP addresses, HTTP cookies, etc.
-Significance of IPv6 in providing static IP addresses that may be
specific to particular devices and/or their locations
5. Soundness of data
-Veracity, completeness, etc. of data collected from multiple
perspectives, e.g. multiple sensors and/or points inside the network
-Algorithms and other tools to deal with incomplete, contradictory,
and incorrect data
6. Data protection
-Effectiveness and adequacy of encryption, anonymization, aggregation,
hashing algorithms, and level of accuracy of information at ensuring
customer privacy
-Metadata standards and preservation formats
--Financial--
1. Business and incentive models/structures
--Security--
Social issues associated with data collection and mining:
1. Consumers and Privacy
-Privacy concerns and countervailing interests concerning the
authentication of electronic identities and transactions
-Consumer awareness, e.g. how common it is for people to read privacy
policies
-Consumer access to, control of, and awareness of information
collected about them
-Ethical considerations and implications of data mining for both
individuals and society
-Social norms and expectations of privacy
Legal and political issues associated with data collection and mining:
1. Standards for protecting and extracting value from data
-Strengths and limitations of existing standards
-"Blank slate," holistic approaches to protecting and extracting value
from data
-Applicability of set standards, e.g. EC Data Protection Directive, to
the US, developed vs. developing countries, globally
2. E-government services
-Appropriateness of permitting private entities preferential rights of
access or redistribution of such data
-Conformity with citizen expectations and assurances of the privacy of
such data
3. Legal and regulatory concerns
-Requirements, if any, for prior review and approval of proposed
collection and use of data (IRB, etc.)
-Acceptable methods of obtaining consent for the use of various types
of information
-Requirements of consent from parties related to the information, e.g.
from only one party related to the information or from all parties
related to the information
-Responsibilities to disclose mining of information (who must disclose
such activities and to whom must disclosure be made, e.g. direct
customer of service, correspondents of direct customer, etc.)
-Role of regulation in the exposure of information collected on
network activities
4. Risk and Mitigation
-Evaluation and mitigation of risks of research, government, and
commercial activities involving data collection and mining
-Methods of risk avoidance
AUTHOR GUIDELINES
Position papers must be 4-6 pages in length, technical papers 6-8
pages in length. Papers must be written in English and follow the
standard IEEE format (two-column, single-spaced, 10-point font, on US
Letter size paper). Please submit papers in PDF format. Templates can
be found under: http://www.ieee.org/web/publications/pubservices/confpub/AuthorTools/conferenceTemplates.html
Each submitted paper will be peer-reviewed in a double-blind fashion.
Please remove any mention of author names and affiliations in the
entire submission, and if referencing previous work of the authors,
use the third person. Papers will be evaluated according to
originality, relevance, technical soundness, significance, and clarity.
At least one author must register for the conference to have the paper
published in the proceedings.
The most exceptional papers in each category will be presented at the
conference and published in the conference proceedings. All papers
will be handled electronically and should be submitted online via
EDAS. Please visit senseable.mit.edu/engagingdata for further details.
IMPORTANT DATES
Deadline for submission of full papers: July 13, 2009
Notification of acceptance: August 10, 2009
Camera-ready papers due: August 31, 2009
Early registration: August 31, 2009
Conference dates: October 12-13, 2009
GENERAL CHAIRS AND PROGRAM COMMITTEE
General Chairs
Carlo Ratti, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Assaf Biderman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Technical Contributions Co-Chairs
Alex (Sandy) Pentland, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
David Lazer, Harvard University
Program Committee
Ben Adida, Harvard University
Albert-László Barabási, Northeastern University
Dirk Brockmann, Northwestern University
John Clippinger, Harvard University
Alissa Cooper, Center for Democracy and Technology
Simon Davies, Privacy International
Laura DeNardis, Yale University
William Dutton, University of Oxford
Deborah Estrin, UCLA
Marcus Foth, Queensland University of Technology
Dean Gallant, Harvard University
Myron Gutmann, University of Michigan
Gary King, Harvard University
John Krumm, Microsoft Research
William Lehr, MIT
Marc Rotenberg, EPIC
Karen Sollins, MIT
Rebecca Wright, Rutgers University
Jonathan Zittrain, Harvard University
For questions regarding paper submissions, please contact Caitlin
Zacharias: czachar at mit.edu.
SENSEable City Laboratory
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Suite 10-400
77 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
T ++1-617-2537926
F ++1-617-2588081
W senseable.mit.edu/engagingdata
E senseable-data at mit.edu
--
Dr Marcus Foth
Senior Research Fellow
Institute for Creative Industries and Innovation
Queensland University of Technology (CRICOS No. 00213J)
Victoria Park Rd, Brisbane QLD 4059, Australia
Phone +61 7 313 x88772 - Fax x88238 - Office K506, KG
m.foth at qut.edu.au - http://www.urbaninformatics.net/
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