February 2006
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Editor Login


Convener in chief:


David Lazer
(Methodology, Networked Governance)

Editors:


Stanley Wasserman
(Current Trends, Methodology, Social Networks)

Guy Stuart
(Economic Sociology, Finance)

Allan Friedman
(Simulations)

Nathan Eagle
(Technology, Social Computing, Powerlaws, Current Trends)

Ben Waber
(Technology, Social Computing)
Ines Mergel
(Knowledge Sharing, Social Computing, Social Software, Current Trends)

Maria Binz-Scharf
(Qualitative Methodology, Knowledge Sharing, eGovernment)

Alexander Schellong
(Admin, eGovernment, Citizen Relationship Management)

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    « How to measure relations: the coming paradigm shift | Main | Snowman and snowdog added to the KSG by PNG Team »

    21 February 2006

    A quick mention of The International Workshop and Conference on Network Science that is coming up in late May. It has a first rate set of folks putting it together (I would note, btw, that a majority of their organizing committee are former presenters in the CCCSN series). There is some support available for doctoral students/postdocs. Here's the blurb on it:

    The International Workshop/School and Conference on Network Science will bring together leading researchers and practitioners in network science - analysts, modeling experts, and visualization specialists with graduate students from many different research areas for interdisciplinary communication and collaboration.

    The primary objective of the Workshop/School and Conference is to facilitate interactions between social and behavioral scientists and the many other disciplines interested in and utilizing network science.

    The event will be held over a two week period at Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, during May 2006. The first week, the Workshop/School, will feature tutorials (which present basic, educational material) focusing on a variety of network science research areas. It aims to present and support experimental, theoretical and applied network research by educating the research community on standard network data, tools, and powerful computational resources. The Conference comprises talks by social and behavioral scientists, information scientists, biologists, statistical physicists, mathematicians and statisticians.

    Registration deadline: April 21, 2006

    Abstract Submission deadline: March 31st, 2006

    Posted by David Lazer at February 21, 2006 7:58 AM