Datasets, Language Resources and Algorithmic Approaches on Online Wellbeing and Social Order in Asian Languages

Notification Due

Jun 25, 2026

Final Version Due

Dec 30, 2024

Submission Deadline

Jul 15, 2024

The phenomenal growth of social media platforms has resulted in their becoming ubiquitous in the sense that now almost everyone on the planet is using or is being affected by content on social media platforms. Social media platforms have become so influential that they are not only affecting individual thoughts and behaviours but also guiding collective behaviours of groups and societies. There are now innumerable instances of hate speech, abusive content, cyberbullying, misogyny, fake news and disinformation etc. on social media platforms. Such content can severely impact our emotions, mental health, and well-being. The spread of hate speech, misinformation, fundamentalist propaganda, religious hate campaigns etc. on social media platforms can be furthermore dangerous as it could disturb the social order and harmony. The hateful and targeted campaigns can affect social structures and institutions, values, and norms. Therefore, it is extremely important that such content is identified and appropriately dealt with. However, due the huge volume and speed of creation of such content, it can only be done by using sophisticated computational methods that can automatically detect and identify harmful content. Taking into account the fact that the social media is accessible in large number of languages across the world, the task becomes more challenging.

Availability of enough and suitable data and resources is a fundamental requirement towards this endeavour. Asia, being the largest continent, embraces diverse cultures, ethnicities and languages. There are around 2300 languages spoken in Asia. Though there has been substantial research on the abovementioned aspects in the English language, research in Asian languages is still in infancy. The limited or availability of no datasets and resources in these languages is a primary reason for this. This special issue aims to bring together contributions that advance the research in the area of computational methods for automatic detection and identification of harmful content on the social media platforms, such as those reporting:

Algorithmic approaches

Computational resources

Datasets

Dictionaries and Lexicons

Software Resources

Contributions that report novel methods and techniques, datasets and application of various state of the art methods for different tasks in the social media text analytics, including those in low resource languages are also welcome. Though the main focus area of the special issue is on the analysis of the textual content, studies and resources that report multimodal data (with text being the major part) will also be considered.

Topics of Interest

The special issue invites original, unpublished contributions on datasets (elicitation, processing, annotation) and resources (corpora, lexica, database, ontologies, computational approaches, and methodologies) on the following non-exhaustive list of indicative topics:

Aggression and Abusive Content detection

Cognitive Analytics of Social Media Services

Collective Idea Generation and Opinion Dynamics

Depression Intensity Estimation

Detection of Hate Speech, Profanity, Hostility, Cyberbullying

Disinformation, Misinformation, Fake News and Rumours

Emotion analysis, Emotional conversation generation

Fraud detection in online social network

Making online environments safer

Personality trait assessment

Polarization in online discussions

Protecting Children from abusive content

Racial and targeted abuse detection

Religious abuse and bias detection

Sentiment Analysis

Sexism and Misogynistic attitude detection

Social Alignment Contagion in Online Social Networks

Social biases in online texts

Social Perception and Social Influence in social media

Suicide Ideation detection in the Online Environment

Violent Incident detection