ID :
172669
Sun, 04/03/2011 - 09:08
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Shortlink :
https://oananews.org//node/172669
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Qatar Computing Research Institute (QCRI) Hosts International Social Networking Roundtable
Doha, April 02 (QNA) - A panel of 29 renowned scientists from 16 countries is meeting today and tomorrow in Doha to discuss how social networking can be improved for users in the Arab world at the "Research on Arabic Social Networks: The Spring of All Changes" roundtable sponsored by Qatar Computing Research Institute (QCRI), a member of Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development. One-fourth of all social networking is done in the Arab world. The visiting scientists are exchanging ideas on why social networking is prevalent in Arab culture and what can be done to improve it from a scientific point of view.
"With all the focus on the role social networking has played in the Spring revolutions, understanding social networking from a technological point of view raises new data management and social computing challenges," said Dr. Sihem Amer-Yahia, a senior research scientist at Yahoo! Research in Barcelona, Spain, and the chair of the social networking roundtable. "We are witnessing large data volumes produced at unprecedented rates and the need to analyze social media is growing."
Dr. Kareem Darwish of QCRI agreed: "Social networking, as embodied by Facebook and Twitter, played a vital role in the wave of change in the Middle East, where the ability to communicate, share, organize, publicize, and mobilize suddenly became possible." According to Darwish, recent events raise interesting questions about social networking that QCRI can explore, such as: How do people find each other, and how can computer science facilitate people discovery? Who has authority in the social network? How does the social networking word-of-mouth travel across the network? How much does social networking activity spill into real life?
"Information on the social Web is massive and is characterized by a combination of factual data, such as scientific publications, and opinion data in the form of user-generated tags, ratings, and reviews," added Amer-Yahia. "Users are both content providers and content consumers. Accounting for their preferences and biases is key to the effective exploration of social content and a building block for region-specific research."
The roundtable brings together renowned scientists from both academia and industry involved in research and development in the fields of social networking, social computing, and their applications. The panel s make-up reflects QCRI s interdisciplinary approach, applying computational thinking to scientific disciplines outside pure computing, such as linguistics, communications, biology, and engineering.
Conference attendees include representatives of University of California Santa Barbara, Yahoo! Research, Columbia University, ETH Zurich, Max-Planck Institute, Google, HP Social Computing Laboratory, Microsoft Research, IBM Almaden, Boston University, Telefonica, Aljazeera, and QCRI. (QNA)