Join us on Thursday, 27 November, at 14:30 CET for the International Roundtable on Computational Social Science with @anamacanovic.bsky.social
πΉ Limits to Gender Equity in Science Communication πΉ More info: liu.se/en/article/s...
Join us on Thursday, 27 November, at 14:30 CET for the International Roundtable on Computational Social Science with @anamacanovic.bsky.social
πΉ Limits to Gender Equity in Science Communication πΉ More info: liu.se/en/article/s...
The worldβs first Macroscope is coming to the Netherlands π³π±
NWO just awarded β¬16.8M to build this groundbreaking research infrastructureβco-led by @odissei-soda.bsky.social and CLARIAH, coordinated by @erasmusuniversity.bsky.social
#Research #Innovation
odissei-data.nl/2025/11/03/t...
3) For some reason (likely related to ridiculous under-staffing and underpayment of library workers) it seems next to impossible to get specific editions or translations put on reserve, rather than any old copy that is available
Congrats, Hendrik!
Academia rewards resilience, by which I mean the ability to rewrite the same sentence forever
Thank you for participating in the Measuring Culture workshop funded by the Academy of Sciences in Heidelberg @hadw-bw.bsky.social. It was an incredible experience for me due to all the brilliant people attending. Special thanks to keynote speakers @nehagondal.bsky.social and @olizardo.bsky.social
I am very grateful for two days of stimulating intellectual exchange at our workshop funded by the Cologne International Forum. Special thanks to our keynotes @isabellevdv.bsky.social, @christian.czymara.com, and the organisation by @anamacanovic.bsky.social, @maxpi.bsky.social, and Christof NΓ€gel.
I have two postdoc positions for a computer scientist and a social scientist to work on my ERC-funded project HUMANET Human-Machine Social Systems at LSE. Please read more and apply at jobs.lse.ac.uk/Vacancies/W/.... More information about the project is available at humanet.science.
Only two more weeks left to submit an abstract for our IPODA workshop on combining insights from survey methods and online data sources for research on immigration, public opinion, and crime. π Make sure to check out the call below if you work in these domains!
If you are an early career researcher, please get in touch with us as we can subsidize your travels. We are hosting this workshop with Christof NΓ€gel, @maxpi.bsky.social, and @markwittek.bsky.social with the support from the Cologne International Forum.
The workshop strives to bring together scholars using online and offline data sources to study topics such as political discourse, hate speech, voting, political radicalization, or crime. It will take place in-person at the University of Cologne. We will provide coffee, lunch and dinner on the 28th.
Immigration, Public Opinion, and Crime in the Digital Age - Leveraging online data sources with insights from traditional survey methods How can social scientists leverage the potential of online data sources in the light of lessons learned from survey research and qualitative interviews to inform societal and scientific debates on immigration and crime? In recent years, scholars from various disciplines have shown a growing interest in using online data sourcesβsuch as social media platforms and discussion forumsβto study public opinion and political discourse concerning immigration and crime. The rise of right-wing populist political actors and the increasing threats of political polarization around the globe sparked a novel literature that applies computational methods to analyze public opinion in the digital realm. In parallel, social scientists have been studying political attitudes, voting behavior, radicalization, social movements, polarization, and crime with quantitative and qualitative interviews as well as administrative data for nearly a century. Yet, these strands of literature mainly operate independently and follow different methodological approaches and theoretical frameworks. This workshop aims to bring together scholars from various research communities using online and offline data sources to inform shared research questions concerned with immigration, public opinion, and crime. Presentations may cover topics such as the influence of media coverage of events triggering negative outgroup sentiments (e.g., terror attacks or crime) on political discourse, individual hate speech, crime, and voting behavior, political radicalization on online platforms and in offline spaces, or the influence of political actors on public opinion. We encourage scholars who combine online and offline data or would like to learn more about research paradigms outside of their own research area to send an abstract (max. 750 words) by the 1st of February 2025 to project.publβ¦
If you use online or survey data to study immigration, public opinion, or crime, consider sending an abstract for our workshop on April 28/29 2025 at the University of Cologne. We will have great keynotes by @christian.czymara.com and @isabellevdv.bsky.social! See the call below:
π¨ Exciting news! The call for papers is now OPEN for the 9th Workshop on Online Abuse and Harms (#WOAH2025) at #ACL2025 @aclmeeting.bsky.social in Vienna.
π Submission deadline: March 7, 2025
π Check out the CfP: www.workshopononlineabuse.com/cfp.html
Looking forward to your submissions! π€©
#NLProc
Now letβs peek into the session Science of Scienceπ
@anamacanovic.bsky.social discovered gender differences in media representation of scientific work of Dutch professors.
She shows that women professors are underrepresented in printed media, but not in online media outlets.
#ODISSEI2024
Could you please add me to one of the sociology packs as well? Thank you!
We are hosting the 11th International Conference on Computational Social Science in Sweden
πThe IC2S2'25 website is LIVE, and submissions are OPEN!
πNorrkΓΆping | July 21-24, 2025
Call for Abstracts (until Feb 24)
Call for Tutorials (until Jan 17)
πExplore details & submit: ic2s2-2025.org
A first starter pack on computational social science, that is, researchers who use computational methods (broadly defined) to answer social science questions. It's a vaguely defined field with blurry borders, so it's certainly incomplete; if you want to be on it, let me know! go.bsky.app/PCckf3C
I wrote this paper as an entry level intoduction to various text mining tools and the tasks they can assist social scientists with: www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
As part of NCRM, I am running a 3-day intensive course on Structural Equation Modelling and Causal Inference which takes place online on 8-10 Nov 2023.
Bursaries are available for fees.
Details: www.ncrm.ac.uk/training/sho...
May be relevant for those in sociology, psychology, social sciences
New #rstats package incoming! π
With the fantastic @benguinaudeau.bsky.social and @favstats.bsky.social, I introduce: {atr}
A package to get and post things here on BlueSky!
jbgruber.github.io/atr/index.html
Repost if youβve participated in a Summer Institute in Computational Social Science. Letβs get #SICSS Bluesky going!
The most frustrating thing about working for the oldest social science data archive in the world is knowing how much cool stuff we have that goes unused because people don't know about it. In some cases, making data usable requires more resources than we have (THREAD).
Thank you! It can be so hard to navigate the recent literature, so we hope this will help us all think together about the potential of these models for annotation.
Thank you for sharing! We will soon update our overview to include your newest results as well.
Quote posting this with the preprint link to make sure people can find it: osf.io/preprints/so...
Find our preprint here and let us know what you think! This is very much an ongoing discussion.
osf.io/preprints/so...
We are enthusiastic about what AI can bring to the humanities and to the social sciences. But in order to harness its power, we need to avoid falling for the hype.
At the moment, the models perform better on English-language, and even better if they are fed English prompts about another language.
Not all data can be fed to an API. Sensitive, personal, copyrighted information cannot leave your computer, yet they do constitute a significant portion of what we work on as social scientists.
Not all models are open-source or archived, and as they get updated their results change. This is a major problem for replication, pointed out in this Nature paper: www.nature.com/articles/d41...