default search action
5th WebSci 2013: Paris, France
- Hugh C. Davis, Harry Halpin, Alex Pentland, Mark Bernstein, Lada A. Adamic:
Web Science 2013 (co-located with ECRC), WebSci '13, Paris, France, May 2-4, 2013. ACM 2013, ISBN 978-1-4503-1889-1 - Hans Akkermans, Rena Bakhshi:
Toward a next generation of network models for the web. 1-10 - Jisun An, Daniele Quercia, Meeyoung Cha, P. Krishna Gummadi, Jon Crowcroft:
Traditional media seen from social media. 11-14 - Jisun An, Daniele Quercia, Jon Crowcroft:
Why individuals seek diverse opinions (or why they don't). 15-18 - Stéphane Bernard Bazan, Michalis Vafopoulos:
The web science curriculum at work: the digital economy master program at USJ-Beirut. 19-23 - Andreas Birkbak:
From networked publics to issue publics: reconsidering the public/private distinction in web science. 24-32 - Julien Cojan, Elena Cabrio, Fabien Gandon:
Filling the gaps among DBpedia multilingual chapters for question answering. 33-42 - Mathieu d'Aquin, Alessandro Adamou, Stefan Dietze:
Assessing the educational linked data landscape. 43-46 - Munmun De Choudhury, Scott Counts, Eric Horvitz:
Social media as a measurement tool of depression in populations. 47-56 - Anca Dumitrache, Paul Groth, Peter van den Besselaar:
Identifying research talent using web-centric databases. 57-60 - Fabian Eikelboom, Paul Groth, Victor de Boer, Laura Hollink:
A comparison between online and offline prayer. 61-64 - Gemma Fitzsimmons, Mark J. Weal, Denis Drieghe:
On measuring the impact of hyperlinks on reading. 65-74 - Tim Davies, Mark Frank:
'There's no such thing as raw data': exploring the socio-technical life of a government dataset. 75-78 - Richard William Fyson, Simon J. Coles, Les Carr:
AltOA: a framework for dissemination through disintermediation. 79-88 - Ming Gao, Ee-Peng Lim, David Lo:
R-energy for evaluating robustness of dynamic networks. 89-98 - Paul Gaskell, Frank McGroarty, Thanassis Tiropanis:
An investigation into correlations between financial sentiment and prices in financial markets. 99-108 - Marie Joan Kristine Gloria, Dominic DiFranzo, Marco Fernando Navarro, Jim Hendler:
The performativity of data: reconceptualizing the web of data. 109-117 - Derek Greene, Pádraig Cunningham:
Producing a unified graph representation from multiple social network views. 118-121 - Nana Baah Gyan, Victor de Boer, Anna Bon, Chris J. van Aart, Hans Akkermans, Stéphane Boyera, Max Froumentin, Aman Grewal, Mary Allen:
Voice-based web access in rural Africa. 122-131 - Scott A. Hale, Helen Z. Margetts, Taha Yasseri:
Petition growth and success rates on the UK No. 10 Downing Street website. 132-138 - Harry Halpin:
Does the web extend the mind? 139-147 - Bernhard Haslhofer, Werner Robitza, François Guimbretière, Carl Lagoze:
Semantic tagging on historical maps. 148-157 - Sebastien Heymann, Bénédicte Le Grand:
Towards a redefinition of time in information networks? 158-161 - Clare J. Hooper, Georgeta Bordea, Paul Buitelaar:
Web science and the two (hundred) cultures: representation of disciplines publishing in web science. 162-171 - Shu Huang, Wei Peng, Jingxuan Li, Dongwon Lee:
Sentiment and topic analysis on social media: a multi-task multi-label classification approach. 172-181 - Hugo C. Huurdeman, Anat Ben-David, Thaer Samar:
Sprint methods for web archive research. 182-190 - Ricardo Kawase, Bernardo Pereira Nunes, Eelco Herder, Wolfgang Nejdl, Marco Antonio Casanova:
Who wants to get fired? 191-194 - April Kontostathis, Kelly Reynolds, Andy Garron, Lynne Edwards:
Detecting cyberbullying: query terms and techniques. 195-204 - Jérôme Kunegis, Marcel Blattner, Christine Moser:
Preferential attachment in online networks: measurement and explanations. 205-214 - Jared Lorince, Peter M. Todd:
Can simple social copying heuristics explain tag popularity in a collaborative tagging system? 215-224 - Yuqing Lu, Lei Zhang, Yudong Xiao, Yangguang Li:
Simultaneously detecting fake reviews and review spammers using factor graph model. 225-233 - Catherine C. Marshall, Frank M. Shipman III:
Experiences surveying the crowd: reflections on methods, participation, and reliability. 234-243 - Antoine Mazières, Samuel Huron:
Toward Google borders. 244-247 - Panagiotis Takis Metaxas, Eni Mustafaraj:
The rise and the fall of a citizen reporter. 248-257 - Elaheh Momeni, Gerhard Sageder:
An empirical analysis of characteristics of useful comments in social media. 258-261 - Natalya Fridman Noy, Jonathan Mortensen, Mark A. Musen, Paul R. Alexander:
Mechanical turk as an ontology engineer?: using microtasks as a component of an ontology-engineering workflow. 262-271 - Andrea Giovanni Nuzzolese, Valentina Presutti, Aldo Gangemi, Alberto Musetti, Paolo Ciancarini:
Aemoo: exploring knowledge on the web. 272-275 - Derek O'Callaghan, Derek Greene, Maura Conway, Joe Carthy, Pádraig Cunningham:
Uncovering the wider structure of extreme right communities spanning popular online networks. 276-285 - Souneil Park, Minsam Ko, Jaeung Lee, Aram Choi, Junehwa Song:
Challenges and opportunities of local journalism: a case study of the 2012 Korean general election. 286-295 - Christopher Phethean, Thanassis Tiropanis, Lisa J. Harris:
Rethinking measurements of social media use by charities: a mixed methods approach. 296-305 - Daniel Preotiuc-Pietro, Trevor Cohn:
Mining user behaviours: a study of check-in patterns in location based social networks. 306-315 - Daniele Quercia:
Don't worry, be happy: the geography of happiness on Facebook. 316-325 - Sarvapali D. Ramchurn, Trung Dong Huynh, Matteo Venanzi, Bing Shi:
Collabmap: crowdsourcing maps for emergency planning. 326-335 - Tushar Rao, Saket Srivastava:
Modeling movements in oil, gold, forex and market indices using search volume index and Twitter sentiments. 336-345 - Bernhard Rieder:
Studying Facebook via data extraction: the Netvizz application. 346-355 - Richard Rogers:
Debanalizing Twitter: the transformation of an object of study. 356-365 - Robert Sanderson, Paolo Ciccarese, Herbert Van de Sompel:
Designing the W3C open annotation data model. 366-375 - Johannes Schantl, Rene Kaiser, Claudia Wagner, Markus Strohmaier:
The utility of social and topical factors in anticipating repliers in Twitter conversations. 376-385 - Frank M. Shipman III, Catherine C. Marshall:
Are user-contributed reviews community property?: exploring the beliefs and practices of reviewers. 386-395 - Elizabeth Sillence, Claire Hardy, Pamela Briggs:
Why don't we trust health websites that help us help each other?: an analysis of online peer-to-peer healthcare. 396-404 - Lisa Thomas, Pamela Briggs, Linda Little:
Location tracking via social networking sites. 405-412 - Diego Torres, Hala Skaf-Molli, Pascal Molli, Alicia Díaz:
BlueFinder: recommending wikipedia links using DBpedia properties. 413-422 - Wouter van Atteveldt, Tamir Sheafer, Shaul R. Shenhav:
Automatically extracting frames from media content using syntacting analysis. 423-430 - Chiel van den Akker, Ardjan van Nuland, Lourens van der Meij, Marieke van Erp, Susan Legêne, Lora Aroyo, Guus Schreiber:
From information delivery to interpretation support: evaluating cultural heritage access on the web. 431-440 - Markel Vigo, Simon Harper:
Considering people with disabilities as überusers for eliciting generalisable coping strategies on the web. 441-444 - Christopher Wienberg, Melissa Roemmele, Andrew S. Gordon:
Content-based similarity measures of weblog authors. 445-452 - Michael Yip, Nigel Shadbolt, Craig Webber:
Why forums?: an empirical analysis into the facilitating factors of carding forums. 453-462 - Aristea-Maria Zafeiropoulou, David E. Millard, Craig Webber, Kieron O'Hara:
Unpicking the privacy paradox: can structuration theory help to explain location-based privacy decisions? 463-472 - Antonio Lieto, Fabiana Vernero:
Unveiling the link between logical fallacies and web persuasion. 473-478 - Henry S. Thompson, Jonathan Rees, Jeni Tennison:
URIs in data: for entities, or for descriptions of entities - A critical analysis. 479-482
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.