Third IEEE Workshop on Human-in-the-loop Methods and Human-Machine Collaboration in Big Data

Event Dates

Dec 09, 2019 - Dec 09, 2019

Location

Los Angeles, CA

Submission Deadline

Oct 07, 2019

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The Third IEEE Workshop on

Human-in-the-loop Methods and Human-Machine Collaboration

in Big Data (IEEE HMData 2019) co-located with IEEE Bigdata 2019

Los Angeles, Dec. 9th (Tentative)

https://humanmachinedata.org

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Overview

Human power is a key factor to maximize the impact of bigdata

technologies. This workshop addresses human-in-the-loop

approaches in bigdata lifecycle – in collecting, processing, analyzing,

utilizing, archiving and disposing them. The purpose of this workshop

is to give excellent opportunities for students, researchers and

practitioners to identify important research problems and exchange

their ideas on human-in-the-loop in the bigdata context. To make

the workshop an attractive place for those people, we solicit

practitioner papers as well as research papers, in order to facilitate

discussion among researchers who know solutions and practitioners

who know problems. We also would like to make the place valuable

for young researchers. All papers accepted for the workshop will be

included in the Workshop Proceedings published by the IEEE

Computer Society Press, made available at the Conference.

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Topics

This workshop covers a wide range of human-related topics in the

bigdata context, such as crowdsourcing, collaborative recommendation,

crowdsensing, workflow model for humans and machines, incentives,

human-assisted bigdata analysis, bigdata-human interaction,

supporting tools for humans in human-in-the-loop systems, security

and privacy in human-machine collaboration , human factors and

ELSI (ethical, legal and social issues) in human-in-the-loop systems,

and human-machine collaboration in real-world problems.

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Keynote

Michael Bernstein (Stanford University)

Bio: Michael Bernstein is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science

at Stanford University, where he is a member of the Human-Computer

Interaction group. His research focuses on the design of social

computing and crowdsourcing systems. Michael’s research has

received awards at premier computing venues, and he has been

recognized with an NSF CAREER award and an Alfred P. Sloan

Fellowship. His Ph.D. students have gone on both to industry (e.g.,

Adobe Research, Facebook Data Science, entrepreneurship) and

faculty careers (e.g., Carnegie Mellon, UC Berkeley). Michael holds a

bachelor’s degree in Symbolic Systems from Stanford University, as well

as a master’s degree and a Ph.D. in Computer Science from MIT.

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Important Dates (Tentative)

Oct 7 (Mon), 2019: Due date for workshop papers submission

Nov 1 (Fri), 2019: Notification of paper acceptance to authors

Nov 15 (Fri), 2019: Camera-ready of accepted papers

Dec 9-12, 2019: Workshops

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Submission

All submissions must be submitted electorically through CyberChair

(to be open soon). Please prefix your submission category such as

[Research Paper] to the Title of Paper field in the submission page.

For example, if you would like to submit a project-in-progress paper

“Crowd-centric Approach to Digital Archive Maintenance,” you have

to put “[project-in-progress paper] Crowd-centric Approach to Digital

Archive Maintenance” into the Title of Paper field.

All papers accepted for the workshop will be included in the Workshop

Proceedings published by the IEEE Computer Society Press, made

available at the Conference.

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Submission Categories

Research Papers (*) (long presentation): They report significant and

original results relevant to the scope of this workshop. We solicit

innovative or thought-provoking work but they do not necessarily

have to reach the level of completion. The expected length is between

4 and 6 pages. The maximum length is 10 pages, though the paper

should be commensurate with the size of the contribution.

Practitioner papers (*)(long presentation): They present interesting

problems that require human-in-the-loop solutions in a variety of

application domains, or present the interesting results of applying

existing human-in-the-loop solutions to their domains. The expected

length is between 4 and 6 pages. The maximum length is 10 pages,

though the paper should be commensurate with the size of the contribution.

Project-in-progress papers (short presentation): They present the goals,

challenges, and preliminary results of research or real-world projects

in progress. The maximum length is 3 pages.

(*) Some of the papers submitted to the research or practitioner paper

categories may be accepted as project-in-progress papers and allotted

to short presentation slots.

Format:

Papers should be formatted to IEEE Computer Society Proceedings

Manuscript Formatting Guidelines in the IEEE Bigdata 2019 CFP page

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Organization

Chairs

Senjuti Basu Roy (NJIT)

Alex Quinn (Purdue University)

Atsuyuki Morihsima (Univesity of Tsukuba)

Program Committee (to be extended)

Mohammad Allahbakhsh (University of New South Wale)

Yukino Baba (University of Tsukuba)

Wolf-Tilo Balke (Technische Universitaet Braunschweig)

Adam Bradley (Amazon)

Daniel Barowy (Williams College)

Cinzia Cappiello (Politecnico di Milano)

Marina Danilevsky (IBM Research – Almaden)

Ujwal Gadiraju (L3S Research Center)

Panos Ipeirotis (New York University)

Vana Kalogeraki (Athens University of Economics and Business)

Dongwon Lee (Penn State)

Satoshi Oyama (Hokkaido University/RIKEN AIP)

Nobuyuki Shimizu (Yahoo!Japan Research)

Elena Simperl (University of Southampton)

Yu Suzuki (Gifu University)

Keishi Tajima (Kyoto University)

Saravanan Thirumuruganathan (QCRI)

Demetris Zeinalipour (University of Cyprus)

Jing Zhang (Nanjing U. of Science & Technology)

Yudian Zheng (Twitter)

Contact

hmdata.chairs@gmail.com