A call for papers, with extended submission deadline of 1 February 2010, has been issued for WICOW 2010: The 4th Workshop on Information Credibility on the Web, to be held 27 April 2010 in Raleigh, North Carolina, USA, in conjunction with The 19th International World Wide Web Conference.
Papers are invited on the following topics, which include digital legal information authentication and integrity, legal information behavior, legal rhetoric, and legal communication:
- Information credibility evaluation and its applications
- Web content analysis for credibility evaluation
- Web content quality
- Author’s intent detection
- Content quality and credibility in Web archiving
- Credibility of Web search results
- Search models for trustworthy content on the Web
- Conflicting opinion detection
- News credibility
- Multimedia content credibility
- Credibility evaluation of user-generated content (ex. Wikipedia, Q&A)
- Information credibility evaluation in social networks
- Analysis of information dissemination on the Web
- Spatial and temporal aspects in information credibility on the Web
- Information credibility theory and fundamentals
- Estimation of information age, provenance and validity
- Estimation of author’s and publisher’s reputation
- Sociological and psychological aspects of information credibility estimation
- Users study for information credibility evaluation
- Persuasive technologies
- Information credibility in online advertising
- Web spam detection
- Data consistency and provenance
- Processing uncertain data and information
- Modeling trust on the Web
- Credible interaction on the Web
- Credibility and trust in e-commerce
For more information, please see the call for papers.
Tags: Authentication of digital legal information, ecommerce, ecommerce systems, Electronic commerce, Electronic commerce systems, Integrity of digital legal information, Legal communication, Legal information behavior, Legal rhetoric, Legal social media, Legal social networks, User generated content in legal information, Web 2.0 and law