Monday, April 26, 2010

Early registration for Hypertext 2010 and paper deadline for workshops

Just a reminder that paper deadline for the Hypertext 2010 workshops is April 30, so if you are submitting a paper to a workshop, please follow the workshop's guidelines. Note: the Workshop on Modeling Social Media deadline has passed.

Also early bird registration for Hypertext 2010 is May 5, so please register to get the early bird deal!

1. International Workshop on Modeling Social Media 2010 (MSM'10)

Alvin Chin, Nokia Research Center, Beijing, China.
Contact: alvin.chin (at) nokia.com

Andreas Hotho, University of Wuerzburg, Germany
Contact: hotho (at) informatik.uni-wuerzburg.de

Markus Strohmaier, Graz University of Technology, Austria
Contact: markus.strohmaier (at) tugraz.at

Social media applications such as blogs, microblogs, wikis, news aggregation sites and social tagging systems have pervaded the web and have transformed the way people communicate and interact with each other online. In order to understand and effectively design social media systems, we need to develop models that are capable of reflecting their complex, multi-faceted socio-technological nature. While progress has been made in modeling particular aspects of selected social media applications (such as the architecture of weblog conversations, the evolution of wikipedia, or the mechanics of news propagation), other aspects are less understood.

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2. Rhetorical and Semantic Possibilities of Links: Cultural and Literary Applications of Links


Deena Larsen

Ann-Barbara Graff

Contact: deenalarsen@yahoo.com


Mark Bernstein has written that the link is “the most important new punctuation mark since the comma.” More than that, the link actually conveys meaning. But how do people use links to communicate ideas?

This workshop is designed to uncover the semantic value of the link and its potential rhetorical effects. We want to know what has been the cultural, literary, rhetorical, and semantic impact of the link to date, and what future effects can we anticipate and bring about. We will explore the link in hands-on exercises and examinations of electronic literature and other hypermedia examples. Ideally, the audience will be broad, composed of anyone who wants to develop a further understanding of this tool.

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3. Critical Code Studies


Mark Marino

Contact:
markcmarino@gmail.com


Recent movements in technocultural studies have sent critics “under the hood” of digital texts. This workshop examines the code that produces the creative digital artifacts in order to develop a rich sense of the artistic and social implications of particular coding choices. A primary goal is to develop the ways of speaking about the code to complement the kinds of analyses that have typified Hypertext.

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4. Enhancing Health Data Utilization with Hypertext


Diego Rivera
Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, University of Toronto
Dr. Tammy Sieminowski, Physician

Contact:
riverady@gmail.com


The goal of this workshop is to identify opportunities to use hypertext, annotation, and social computing in making better use of emerging sensor and information technologies in healthcare. We expect that a broad range of research approaches will be relevant to this workshop, with issues including the role of hypertext in the design of EHR systems, and best practices in the design of annotated and hyperlinked health applications.

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