We are leading a workshop intended for researchers engaged in social network research, as part of the HICSS conference, Jan 7, 2008 in Hawaii (http://www.hicss.hawaii.edu/hicss_41/).
We have a flexible workshop format, and invite your participation. In a workshop, we can talk about techniques, we can look at particular data sets, and we can discuss a larger research agenda in this area.
Please let us know if you are interested in participating, and in which way.
For anyone interested in participating, we would like a short statement of interest or position that we can share with participants prior to the workshop. We would like to collect these by July 15.
Social Network Analysis (Workshop Half-Day)
Leader: Jeff Nickerson and Kylle Lyytinen
Social network analysis has been an important part of sociology and anthropology for decades. Recently, physicists and computer scientists have begun developing new approaches to analyzing such networks. Information systems researchers have become interested also, with an increasing number of papers appearing in IS journals and conferences. This workshop is devoted to cross-disciplinary research on social network analysis, focused on questions such as the following:
* How should machines be portrayed in social networks? As nodes? As links? As a different kind of node?
* How can hierarchical graph structures be used to portray social networks which contain organizations, individuals, and systems?
* To what extent does wireless communication change our social nets?
* How does social behavior emerge out of new forms of connection?
Research making use of computational methods ' such as simulation ' are welcome. Collaborations between groups using computational, experimental, and field methods is also encouraged.
Email: [email protected]