Society for the Social Study of Mobile Communications


The Society for the Social Study of Mobile Communication (SSSMC) is intended to facilitate the international advancement of cross-disciplinary mobile communication studies. It is intended to serve as a resource and to support a network of scholarly research as to the social consequences of mobile communication.




Wednesday, October 29, 2014

CFP: International Conference on Location-based Social Media Data

International Conference on Location-based Social Media Data
March 13-14, 2015,  Athens, Georgia, USA

Second Call for Papers

In the era of big data, increasingly sizeable datasets come from social media, particularly location-based social media, in the form that is widely known as user-generated contents. Many social media datasets are made available at the finest spatial and temporal scales. The availability of such data creates unprecedented opportunities for researchers to uncover what were previously hidden in the era of small data. What kind of new research questions may be addressed with the available social media data? What are the social, ethical, and political implications of the wide use of social media platforms and the availability of such data? Particularly, what can geographers, GIScientists, and social scientists in general, contribute in response to the unique research opportunities and challenges with social media data?

This conference is designed to bring together researchers from various fields and perspectives to share ideas and findings of their research related to social media data. The aim is to provide a forum for participants to reflect upon what has been accomplished and to discuss what can be pursued in the future. We look forward to your participation!

Submission
You are invited to submit full papers (5000 words) or extended abstracts (1200-1500 words) at https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=iclsm2015. Example topics include, but are not limited to, the following:

Theories and Data Models for Social Media Data
  • GIS representation and data structure for social media data
  • Theoretical models of social media data in geographic, temporal, and social dimensions
  • Open GIS in the big data era
  • Scalability issues with social media data
  • Data quality and representativeness of social media data


Analysis and Applications
  • Applications of social media data and analysis in any field of study
  • Social media data mining
  • Social or complex network analysis
  • Fractal or scaling analysis of big data
  • Big data analytics and place sentiments
  • Human mobility and spatial interaction


Geovisualization for Social Media Data
  • Geovisualization of social media data in space, time, and social dimensions
  • Visual analytics tools for social media data
  • Exploratory and visual data mining of social media data
  • Agent-based simulations of human mobility and interaction patterns


All submissions will be peer-reviewed. Authors of accepted submissions are expected to give oral or poster presentations at the conference. Following the peer-review process, highest quality research papers will be considered for publication in a special issue of Computers, Environment and Urban Systems and possibly an edited book.

You are welcome to organize special sessions. If you would like to organize a special session, please submit a brief proposal with a suggested theme and possible participants (if available).  Proposals or questions about special sessions can be sent to lclsm2015@gmail.com or any one of the conference organizers. The deadline for special session proposals is Nov. 15, 2014.
Student paper competition sessions will be organized, while awards will be made to master’s student papers and doctoral student papers separately.

Important Dates
Nov. 15, 2014: Special session proposals due
Dec. 20, 2014: Full papers due
Jan. 15, 2015: Extended abstracts due
Jan. 30, 2015: Notification of paper acceptance
Mar. 13-14, 2015: Conference


Inaugural “Sports, Communication, and Technology Summit


*Inaugural “Sports, Communication, and Technology Summit” hosted by the
Marist College Center for Sports Communication*
Saturday, March 28, 2015

8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Location: Marist College

The Marist College Center for Sports Communication is pleased to announce its first Summit on Sports, Communication, and Technology. This day-long event will bring together undergraduate students, graduate students, faculty, practitioners, and industry leaders for a robust discussion of and unique skill training in the broadly defined domain of sports communication technology – from video and audio production to sports apps to wearable computing technology at live events. While this event is focused on unique experiences for undergraduate students, there will be important learning endeavors for faculty, graduate students, and those working in the field. We encourage registration and involvement from all groups. The event is open to all those from various and divergent fields with an interest in this topic. To encourage participation, registration is set at $35 for all participants, which goes towards offsetting event costs.

You can register for the event here <http://sportscomm.marist.edu/techregister.html>.

The summit will consist of the following events:

*Undergraduate Case Study Competition*

Student groups of up to six will present a solution to a case that will be assigned approximately two months in advance of the event (the beginning of the spring semester). This case will ask students to solve a problem/quandary in sports using communication technology. The solution can come in a variety of forms: a concept or research paper, a campaign, software, an app, or any other format that best provides a solution to the presented problem. At the symposium, students groups will give a ten minute presentation to the audience and panel of judges on their solution. At the conclusion of group presentations, judges will ask questions to participants. Awards will be given to the winning three groups. More information about the case, including specific guidelines and rules, will be given to teams upon registration and the assignment of the project.

*Panel Discussion*

The symposium will feature a panel of leading professionals, innovators, and scholars in a discussion of a vital topic in the sports, communication, and technology space. Attendees will be able to ask questions of the panelists after the presentation. This year’s panel will focus on communication technology for the in-arena experience. The panel will focus on ways interactive technology , from smart devices to video boards, have enriched fan experiences at live sporting events and ways that sport producers are enhancing these technologies to keep up with/surpass the at-home viewing experience. Panelists will address successes, challenges, and possible future evolution.

*Lunch and Keynote Speaker*

Lunch will be provided for all registered attendees. A keynote speaker (to be named) will address the assembly during the lunch period. Additionally, Marist College Center for Sports Communication faculty will discuss the Center’s research agenda in and highlight their student/faculty research collaborations.


*Hands-on Tutorials*
In 45-minute sessions, professors and practitioners will provide tutorials on relevant sports communication technology. These sessions will offer attendees hands-on experience in some form of sports communication technology, particularly ones that might fall outside of traditional
classroom instruction. Sessions will fall into one of the following categories, all as pertinent to sport: video/editing application, web development/design, mobile technology, and social media technology. Several sessions will run concurrently, and each will be limited to approximately 20 students per session. There will be three 45-minute sessions, allowing students to try three different tutorials if they wish. There will be a signup page for each session, allowing for students to sign up in advance and plan their afternoon.

*Workshops*

In these sessions, student groups will be able to workshop projects and concepts with application to sport media and communication. Examples could include web stories, apps, websites, software, digital productions, hardware, and social media productions, among others. Students will receive feedback and assistance from experts such as faculty, industry professionals, and potential users. These workshops will allow for student developers to present their ideas to experts and receive feedback and constructive critique toward improving these products. Student groups must submit a request in advance for these workshops, as there will be limited spots available.

*Faculty/Industry Expert Volunteers*

There are several opportunities for faculty and industry experts to volunteer for various tasks at the summit. These primarily include tutorial session leader/assistant and workshop panelist. If you have a particular area of expertise in sports, communication, and technology, please contact any of the summit organizers (listed below) to inquire about volunteering. You may also indicate this on the registration form. All assistance is greatly appreciated and will help make for a more robust learning experience for summit attendees.

For more information about the summit, please contact Keith Strudler, director of the Marist College Center for Sports Communication, at Keith.Strudler@marist.eduor (845) 575-3506, Ryan Rogers at Ryan.Rogers@marist.edu, or Tim Mirabito at Tim.Mirabito@marist.edu.

Monday, October 27, 2014

CFP: International Conference on Computational Social Science


CALL FOR ABSTRACTS

International Conference on Computational Social Science
Finlandia Hall, Helsinki, Finland, 8-11 June 2015

WEBSITE

http://www.iccss2015.eu/

IMPORTANT DATES

Deadline for abstract submission: 15 November 2014
Opening of registration: 15 January 2015
Conference dates: 8-11 June 2015

EVENT OVERVIEW

The conference will bring together scientists from different areas to meet and discuss problems on social systems and dynamics, as well as research questions motivated by large datasets, either extracted from real applications (e.g. social media, communication systems), or created via controlled experiments.

PROGRAM CHAIRS

Karen Cook (Stanford)
Santo Fortunato (Aalto University)
Michael Macy (Cornell)

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS

Opening talk by Michael Macy (Cornell)

Lada Adamic (Facebook)
Sinan Aral (MIT)
Albert-Laszlo Barabasi (Northeastern University and CEU)
Nicholas Christakis (Yale)
Robin Dunbar  (Oxford)
Andreas Flache (University of Groeningen)
Dirk Helbing (ETH Zurich)
Matthew Jackson (Stanford)
Jure Leskovec (Stanford)
Alex Pentland (MIT)
Alessandro Vespignani (Northeastern University)
Duncan Watts (Microsoft)

ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

Santo Fortunato (Aalto University),
Aristides Gionis (Aalto),
Heikki Hämmäinen (Aalto),
Kimmo Kaski (Aalto),
Walter Quattrociocchi (IMT Lucca),
Jari Saramäki (Aalto),
Juuso Valimäki (Aalto)

TOPICS OF INTEREST INCLUDE (but are not limited to)
  • Social networks
  • Social contagion
  • Communication dynamics
  • Information diffusion and other spreading phenomena
  • Social influence
  • Crowd-sourcing
  • Popularity dynamics
  • Smart cities
  • Attention economics
  • Social design and user behavior
  • Group formation, evolution and group behavior analysis
  • Human mobility
  • Mobility and context-awareness
  • Economics of trust

SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS

Contributions to the conference have to be submitted via Easychair (www.easychair.org), the name of the event there is IC2S2.

Each submission consists of an extended abstract of max 2 pages (A4). Please give a sufficiently detailed description of your work, put at least one figure, otherwise it will be difficult for the PC to assess its relevance. Short, paper-like abstracts will not be considered. Abstracts do not need to refer to unpublished work. If the work is published or under submission elsewhere it is fine. We want to give to everyone the opportunity to present the most relevant work to the topics of the conference. There will be no proceedings, but we are exploring the possibility of having a special journal issue, where selected contributions will be published. Authors of those contributions would be invited to submit full papers after the conference. Each extended abstract will be reviewed by two PC members. Abstracts can be submitted from September the 15th till November 15th, 2014. We will do our best to have mostly oral presentations of the selected contributions, both plenary and in parallel sessions. However, there will be a poster session as well. During the submission process, you will be asked to specify whether your contribution is intended for a) Plenary session presentation, b) Parallel session presentation or c) Poster session presentation. The final allocation of each contribution will be decided by the Program Committee.

CONTACT

For any question you might have please contact Prof. Santo Fortunato (santo.fortunato@aalto.fi)

CFP: Mobile Gaming in Asia: Politics, Culture and Emerging Technologies

Mobile Gaming in Asia: Politics, Culture and Emerging Technologies

Edited by Dal Yong Jin, Ph.D., Simon Fraser University. To be published by Springer in October 2016

The dramatic improvement of mobile phones, tablets, and game consoles has fundamentally changed our daily lives. While the bite-sized software programs people loaded onto their mobile phones seemed to be frivolous games until several years ago, smartphones and their applications have recently created new capital for information and communication technology corporations and changed the way people communicate. While many countries have invested in mobile industries since the early 21st century, several Asian countries have become some of the centers for mobile technologies and culture with their global smartphone manufacturers, such as Samsung and LG in Korea, HTC in Taiwan, Huawei and Lenovo in China. Although these countries were once lagging behind in the penetration of mobile phones, Asia exists as an interesting test-bed for the future of mobile technology and culture because several Asian countries advance several new mobile games based on their smartphones and application. The recent emergence of the smartphone industry and mobile gaming in Asia can be attributed to favorable information technology policies, severe competition among IT corporations, and enthusiastic mobile game users in the region. Equally important is the role of local smartphone applications, which have provided convenient smartphone platforms for local game users. Asians’ engagement with smartphones and related mobile apps suggest that the smartphone becomes a symbolic and material resource for people’s mobile game lifestyle.

SCOPE

Despite the significance of smartphones and mobile gaming in both digital economy and youth culture across the globe, there has been a lack of academic literature exploring how mobile phones are integrated into the socio-economic and cultural landscapes of a particular local game context, and how smartphone users engage in the process. This volume looks into a hitherto neglected focus of inquiry, a localized mobile landscape emerging with the smartphone and its apps, with particular reference to Asians’ engagement with mobile gaming. This edited volume focuses on not only the celebratory achievement of local mobile games, but also the significance of the social milieu in the development of Asian mobile gaming culture. It also investigates several dimensions in the growth of mobile game technologies and culture, including government policy through the lens of globalization theory. Although it seeks to identify factors for the growth of local mobile games, it will also critically examine significant conflicts between global and the local forces. Given that users are the primary actors propelling the smartphone era forward, the volume analyzes how smartphones have taken shape within the context of Asia’s particular mobile culture.
We welcome research by emerging Asia-focused or Asian-based scholars whose work has not been published in English.

Possible topics for submissions include but are not limited to:

  • History of the growth of mobile gaming as a regional/global industry, discourse, and media product
  • Critical interpretation of emerging local game industries in Asia
  • Comparative mobile game studies
  • Mobile games and globalization/regionalization
  • Convergent technologies and the impact on established modes of mobile/social game play
  • Government regulations and types of mobile game play
  • Mobile game fandom and free labor
  • Mobile gaming as social technology/media
  • A culturally specific aesthetic to the production and consumption of mobile games
  • New media and experimental mobile gaming
  • Gendered consumption and production of mobile games
  • Mobile gaming and the role of apps
  • Moral panics about mobile gaming (especially among religious communities)
  • Concerns about mobile gaming addiction and consequent policy changes
  • Traditional dominance of the market by Asian developers
  • Unique ways in which specific Asian countries have adopted mobile devices
  • Intellectual property issues particular to the region
  • Tendency for big developers to look to Asia for outsourcing and localization
  • Case studies to gaming in places such as Korea (PC Bangs/StarCraft tournaments etc.)


SUBMISSION 

Please submit proposals of up to 800 words, and a brief (300-word) author bio in an e-mail attachment by 30 May, 2015, to Dal Yong Jin (yongjin23@gmail.com). Authors of accepted proposals will be notified by 15 July, 2015, and invited to submit a full paper by 15 October, 2015. Manuscripts should be no more than 8,000 words, including notes and references, and conform to APA style. All chapters will be subjected to anonymous peer review following submission.


Tuesday, October 21, 2014

CFP: ICA Mobile Pre-Conference

12th ICA Mobile Pre-Conference CALL FOR PAPERS
May 20-21 (1.5 days), 2015.
San Juan, Puerto Rico
Deadline for Abstract Submissions: December 1, 2014.

Communication through mobile media has become central to people’s lives around the world, no matter age, gender, or ethnicity, and is driven by widespread adoption of a repertoire of mobile devices. Usage of mobile media is closely tied to the life circumstances of individuals. The 12th annual ICA Mobile Pre-conference will examine, scrutinize, and reflect upon the influence of this dominant new medium on everyday practices of communication through the theme “From Womb to Tomb: Mobile Research Across Genders, Generations, Ethnicities, Cultures, and Life Stages.

We anticipate a broad range of research topics in mobile communication and welcome extended abstracts based on empirical and/or theoretical work as it relates to: civic engagement, activism and social movements, social media, learning and education, methodologies, international contexts, international development, health, cultural similarities and differences, local culture and heritage, place-based issues, journalism, politics, usability issues, user experiences and perceptions, technologies, interfaces, mobile media histories and archaeology

The pre-conference will include a workshop for emerging scholars to provide a forum where graduate students, new faculty, and early scholars can present and discuss their research with more experienced mobile researchers, thus representing an opportunity to establish and nurture a supportive and integrated community. This pre-conference also features a “best paper” competition, Professor James E. Katz (Boston University) as the closing keynote speaker, and other fun and engaging extra-curricular activities.

Submissions are welcomed from scholars at all stages of their careers and across multiple disciplines related to mobile communication. Submissions should be extended abstracts of no more than 750 words and be completed online through the main website (http://icamobile.org/2015/submissions). The deadline for submissions is 11:59 PM EST on December 1, 2014. Papers will be judged by peer review on criteria of relevance, originality, adequacy of literature review, methodology, legitimacy of conclusions, clarity of presentation, as well as fit with—and contribution to—the conference theme. Notifications of acceptance will be emailed in January 2015.

Monday, October 20, 2014

CFP: Social media and the prospects for expanded democratic participation in national policy-setting

Title: Social media and the prospects for expanded democratic participation in national policy-setting

Date and Venue: April 9, 2015, Boston University, Boston, MA USA
Abstracts Due: November 29, 2014
Decision Date: December 15, 2014

The power of social media appears at times almost limitless. Indeed, when explaining the reasons for ISIL’s surprising success, President Obama included in the list that they had been “savvy in terms of their social media” (CBS 60 Minutes, 9/28/14). Social media have been credited at least in part with not only a catastrophe in Iraq and Syria, but in catalyzing the overthrow of Middle Eastern dictators and helping elect America’s first African-American president. While there is no arguing that social media have affected daily life, their impact on the conduct governance, widely considered, seems slight. This is perhaps surprising since social media offers the promise of expanded participation and more inclusive participation opportunities in governance. That is, not only in creating more responsive policies, but better ones as well. Yet although social media have demonstrated their critical role in electoral politics and many other domains including disseminating political news and information, they have not yet been effectively deployed in helping set national policy. New social media platforms could potentially expand the quality and level of public support in areas such as law enforcement, health, education, and public diplomacy.

To better understand the barriers as well as potential role, both positive and negative, of social media in setting national goals and policies, leading thinkers will be coming to Boston University’s College of Communication on April 9, 2015. With papers having been prepared in advance, the day-long event will allow in-depth analysis of the latest thinking on these issues. In addition, time will be set aside for a mapping exercise to consider what the next steps are in terms of needed future research so that the insights presented at the workshop can help inform other researchers both in the United States and beyond. The papers and discussions from this workshop will be widely disseminated and follow-up meetings with other groups will be held. Depending on the findings presented at the workshop, further steps, such as convening a blue-ribbon panel to advance recommendations may be considered.

The format of the workshop will combine invited and competitively accepted papers. In terms of invited speakers, we have acceptances from professors at Harvard University, Oxford University, George Washington University, University of Washington, Syracuse, Wellesley, Roskilde University, and the Sorbonne, among other academic centers. Moreover, to help assure that innovative thinking and a broad array of perspectives will be included, we are circulating this call for papers. In this way, we will be able to accommodate an additional small number of paper-presenters.

Hence, we are soliciting additional papers on the workshop topic. Although we will consider for inclusion in a broad array of related topics, new and previously unpublished work that goes directly to the question at hand is of most interest to us. Those wishing to be considered as presenters should send an abstract of about 250 words to Dr. Jill Walsh (JillW@BU.edu) no later than November 29, 2014. Notice of acceptance will be given on December 15, 2014. Completed papers will be circulated on March 9, 2015 and will be made available on the Center for Mobile Communication Studies website (http://sites.bu.edu/cmcs/). Due to limited space, the number of participants must be strictly limited.

Co-organizers
James E. Katz, Ph.D., Dr.h.c., is the Feld Family Professor of Emerging Media at Boston University’s College of Communication and director of its Division of Emerging Media Studies. His latest book, The Social Media President: Barack Obama and the Politics of Digital Engagement (2013, Palgrave Macmillan), provides an in-depth exploration of the use and abuse of social media for civic participation at the White House level.

David Karpf, Ph.D., is an Assistant Professor in the School of Media and Public Affairs at George Washington University. His work focuses on strategic communication practices of political associations in America, with a particular interest in Internet-related strategies. Author of The MoveOn Effect: The Unexpected Transformation of American Political Advocacy (2012, Oxford University Press), Karpf highlights the disruptive role that the Internet has played in the advocacy group system and differential partisan adoption of new technologies.

Sunday, October 19, 2014

new book: Living Inside Mobile Social Information

Living Inside Mobile Social Information Volume available free.

A PDF version of papers from our recent workshop is available.

Please contact us at mobicom@bu.edu if you would like to receive a printed copy; we’d be happy to send you a copy.

Kind regards,
James Katz

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

CFP: Private chat to public sphere: Mobile media

CFP: Private chat to public sphere: Mobile media, political participation, and civic activism in Asia

Edited by Ran Wei, Ph.D., University of Caroline
To be published by Springer in January 2016

With increasing personal freedom and faster mobile technologies centered around the smartphone, more and more individuals have the capacity to participate, create and disseminate information, shaping a new public sphere of participatory citizenship or democracies for Asia. As the smartphone gets smarter, communal networks take shape and interact,giving rise to grassroots movements that capture national and even global attention. With more than 2.5 billion users, Asia leads the world in mobile phone population. The increasing saturation of Asian societies by mobile phones with their participatory capacity call for a special volume to explore the mobile phone’s efficacy as a tool for citizen engagement and participation in civic and political affairs, especially in the search for solutions to widespread social problems such as food safety, pollution, government corruption, terrorism, and sectarian violence, and public health risks.

This volume in the Springer series, “Mobile Communication in Asia,” explores how personalized content and the inherent networked nature of the mobile phone lead to positive network effects for public good and fostering social progress. Considering the vast cultural diversity of Asian societies that are shaped by different levels of political, social, economic and religious development, the volume will focus on nuanced investigation and in-depth analysis of the mobile phone and political communication in particular Asian societies, from which it will draw broad themes from local cases and synthesize enduring concepts of global significance. Research is only now catching up with advanced mobile technology, and this book provides the most significant and up-to-date studies on the topic.

We welcome research by emerging Asia-focused or Asian-based scholars whose work has not previously been published in English.

Chapter proposals are needed for topics in the volume including but not limited to:
  • Empirical studies that examine uses of the mobile phone (calling, voicemail, SMS/texting, mobile social media, mobile blogs, mobile Weibo, mobile webchat) to access and share information about public affairs, mobile crises, community events, and the like.
  • How social media transforms at the individual level and at the structural level, leading to mobilization and civic engagement.
  • The bridge between Asian news consumption and political participation (e.g. voting).
  • Creative use of mobile media for consuming news as well as increasing autonomy.
  • The growth of a networked publics among young people through mobile social media.
  • Explorations and theorizing about the technical aspects of mobile media in virtual social movements, from network apps to contents of posts.
  • Implications of mobile media in Asia for citizenship, national identity, social capital, solidarity and empowerment.
  • Research that assesses the effectiveness and outcomes of social movements organized or facilitated by the mobile phone.
  • Enhancement through social media of collective action in both scope and integration into daily life.
  • Mobile media campaigns in specific movements, such as students’ rights and climate change.
  • The implications of the Asian experience for world politics.
  • Mobile campaigns to confront social problems such as food safety, pollution, corruption, and social injustice.
  • Enhancing information and services for public health initiatives.


Please submit proposals up to 800 words, and a brief (300-word) author bio in an e-mail attachment by 15 June, 2015, to wei2@sc.edu. Authors of accepted proposals will be notified by 15 July, 2015, and invited to submit a full paper by 1 October, 2015. Manuscripts should be no more than 9,000 words, including notes and references, and conform to APA style. All chapters will be subjected to anonymous peer review following submission.

The volume editor: Ran Wei is the Gonzales Brothers Professor of Journalism at University of South Carolina, and current Editor-in-Chief of Mass Communication and Society. He earned a B.A. in English Literature and International Journalism from Shanghai International Studies University (China), a M.A. in Journalism Studies at the University of Wales (U.K.), and a Ph.D. in Mass Communication at Indiana University. His research focuses on new media, the processes and effects of media messages in various contexts (political, social, promotional, health and risk) that involve a wide range of media channels and devices (traditional and emerging). He is a pioneering scholar in mobile communication research, with his mobile phone studies being widely cited. He serves on the inaugural board of Mobile Media & Communication, and was a guest editor of Media Asia.

MIT COMMUNICATIONS FORUM

Documentaries, Journalism, and the Future of Reality-Based Storytelling
Raney Aronson, deputy executive producer, FRONTLINE
Katerina Cizek, documentary director
Jason Spingarn-Koff, New York Times Op-Docs editor
Francesca Panetta, Guardian multimedia special projects editor
Moderator: William Uricchio, MIT
Thursday, October 9, 2014
5-7 PM | 66-110