Computational Social Science Conference: innovative methods, research workflows and data stewardship

Date: 28/Oct/2024 Time: 09:30 - 29/Oct/2024 Time: 17:00

Place:

Sala d’Actes, Vèrtex (VX), Campus Nord de la UPC, Plaça d’Eusebi Güell, 6, Les Corts, 08034 Barcelona, Spain

2024-10-28 09:30:00 2024-10-29 17:00:00 Europe/Madrid Computational Social Science Conference: innovative methods, research workflows and data stewardship For details, click on the following event link: https://www.bsc.es/news/events/computational-social-science-conference-innovative-methods-research-workflows-and-data-stewardship ---

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Social science is more critical than ever before to address today’s complex local and global problems. With the generation of vast amounts of data and the recent growth of computational methods and computational capacity, social science is undergoing a transformation similar to the one that physics and biology underwent years ago. In the social sciences, however, the inherent complexity of human subjects makes objectivity, repeatability and universality more difficult, compared to many of the natural sciences. Additionally, much data is sensitive, proprietary or insufficiently curated and remains difficult to access and reuse. It has now been about 15 years since the paper on Computational Social Science (Life in the Network: the coming age of computational social science, Lazer et al 2009) was published. How has the field evolved since then? What are the opportunities and challenges? This conference will focus on two important aspects of computational social sciences: (1) new research in the field and 2) enabling data policies and access. 

The conference brings together the communities involved: the domain and the data experts. The first day will be dedicated to new methods at the cutting edge of advanced computational social science (CSS). The second day will explore enablers for CSS, focussing on data policies, data access, data stewardship, and the attendant technologies and standards.  An important topic throughout the conference will be the issue of transparency and reproducibility and how this can be demonstrated in CSS.  Possible outcomes of the conference will be a policy paper and a research paper collection to sustain conversations between researchers in CSS and the technologies that enable this research.

The event is planned as an in-person participation only. 

Organisers

Barcelona Supercomputing Center: https://www.bsc.es/

CODATA: https://codata.org/

Fundació La Caixa: https://lacaixafoundation.org/

Registration

https://bit.ly/RegistrationCSSconference2024

Venue

Sala d’Actes, Vèrtex (VX), Campus Nord de la UPC, Plaça d’Eusebi Güell, 6, Les Corts, 08034 Barcelona, Spain

Programme Outline

Note: All times CEST – local time on Barcelona. Abstracts and information about the speakers. 

28 October, Monday

09:30-09:45 Welcome, opening remarks – Mercè Crosas, Barcelona Supercomputing Center; CODATA President

09:45-10:45 Keynote David Lazer, Northeastern University 

Chair: Mercè Crosas

10:45-11:15 Coffee break

11:15-12:45 Session 1: Data Science and AI for Social Science 

Chair: Ana Sofia Cardenal, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya 

  • Hannes Mueller, IAE (CSIC) and the Barcelona School of Economics
  • Enhancing Disaster Response with AI-Powered Social Media Analytics: Insights from the TEMA Project, Shaily Gandhi, University of Salzburg
  • Speaker, TBC

12:45-14:00 Networking Lunch

14:00-15:30 Session 2: Complexity Science for Social Science 

Chair: Laia Castro Herrero, University of Barcelona

  • Language Understanding as a Constraint on Consensus Size in LLM Societies, David Garcia, University of Konstanz
  • Chico Camargo, University of Exeter
  • Chasing the Unicorn: Reflections on the Training of Computational Social Scientists, Marga Torre, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid

15:30-16:00 Coffee break

16:00-17:00 Lightning talks

Chair: TBC

Speakers: TBC

17:00 Wrap-up Day 1 – Mercè Crosas

17:15-19:00 Reception

Option – 18:00 Visits to Mare Nostrum, TBC, registration only

 

29 October, Tuesday

09:30-11:00 Session 3: Policies and technical advances to maximise access

Chair: Elena Rovenskaya, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis

  • Stefano Iacus, Harvard University
  • Putting the A back in FAIR: Approaches to finally solving the Access problem, Darren Bell, UK Data Service

11:00-11:30 Coffee break

11:30-13:00 Session 4: Data description for AI and machine analysis

Chair: Simon Hodson, CODATA

  • Gyorgy Gyomai, OECD
  • Elena Simperl, King’s College London
  • Dimensions of AI Readiness – New Methods and Architectures, Christine Kirkpatrick, San Diego Supercomputer Center

13:00-14:00 Networking Lunch

14:00-15:30 Session 5: Provenance, lineage and reproducibility

Chair: Steven McEachern, UK Data Service

  • Tony Ross-Hellauer, Know Center Austria
  • FAIR Digital Objects for Reproducible Computational Processing, Carole Goble, University of Manchester
  • Workflow programming support for Computational Sciences, Rosa Badia, Barcelona Supercomputing Center  

15:30-16:00 Coffee break

16:00-17:00 Closing talk and discussion OR a closing panel

Chair: Christine Kirkpatrick

17:00 Adjourn

Note that the programme outline will continue changing; kindly revisit this page for an up-to-date agenda for the conference, including information about confirmed speakers.