Re: Call for Proposals for Politics and Computational Social Science APSA Pre-conference

SZ
Steinert-Threlkeld, Zachary
Tue, Apr 4, 2023 3:47 AM

The previous announcement contained an incorrect link.  Please use this announcement.

PaCSS 2023: Call for Proposals

We are pleased to announce that the sixth annual Politics and Computational Social Science (PaCSS) conference will take place August 30, 2023. UCLA will host this year’s conference, with in-person events in Los Angeles, California (US). Because of the potential financial, logistical or health-related reasons making in-person attendance challenging, participants can join in a hybrid format (in-person or virtually) while presenters will join in-person.

We hope that you will join us to share your work and support the continued growth of our diverse, interdisciplinary community of people working in industry, academia, government and nonprofits.

To submit your work for consideration at PaCSS 2023, please complete this formhttps://forms.gle/bvVtqjmxrhQGJjRdA by Friday, May 19.  Submissions should include an abstract for a single proposed talk; the program committee will organize accepted submissions into panels. To get a sense of the breadth and diversity of content presented at PaCSS, you may wish to take a look at the PaCSS 2022 programhttps://cssh.northeastern.edu/nulab/pacss/.

Please email politics.css@gmail.commailto:politics.css@gmail.com with any questions.

About PaCSS
The data and methodologies available to social scientists have exploded with the emergence of archives of digital data collection, large scale online experimentation, and innovative uses of simulation. The analysis of these data requires more complex methodological approaches and greater computational complexity than the approaches that have dominated the study of politics for the last 50 years.

The analysis of digital data offers the potential for rich insights into society at scale, but it also introduces new ethical and infrastructural challenges. In parallel, the information and communication technologies that have driven this data revolution are also driving changes in politics, around the world, that require study.

In order to understand the political world, it is increasingly important to gain access to the political communication and behavior occurring online. PaCSS, started in 2018 with about 150 attendees, offers a forum for computational social science research in this emerging space. Examples of relevant topics/approaches include: analysis of social media; text analysis; use of finely granular geographic data; and large scale online experimentation. Deeply committed to elevating the voices and work of populations which are underrepresented in computational spaces, PaCSS actively seek, welcome, and encourage people from all fields, industries, backgrounds, experiences, and identities to submit their work and attend.

PaCSS 2023 is co-chaired by Jennifer Pan and Zachary C. Steinert-Threlkeld, with support from David Lazar and Sarah Shugars.

--
Zachary Steinert-Threlkeld (he, him)
Assistant Professor of Public Policy
Luskin School of Public Affairs
University of California – Los Angeles
www.zacharyst.comhttp://www.zacharyst.com; @ZacharyST

From: Steinert-Threlkeld, Zachary zst@luskin.ucla.edu
Date: Monday, April 3, 2023 at 12:40 PM
To: epsa-info-list@epsanet.org epsa-info-list@epsanet.org
Subject: Call for Proposals for Politics and Computational Social Science APSA Pre-conference

We are pleased to announce that the sixth annual Politics and Computational Social Science (PaCSS) conference will take place August 30, 2023. UCLA will host this year’s conference, with in-person events in Los Angeles, California (US). Because of the potential financial, logistical or health-related reasons making in-person attendance challenging, participants can join in a hybrid format (in-person or virtually) while presenters will join in-person.

We hope that you will join us to share your work and support the continued growth of our diverse, interdisciplinary community of people working in industry, academia, government and nonprofits.

To submit your work for consideration at PaCSS 2023, please complete this formhttps://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfq2Zw6kS1SVCDl7tvWyeZXf65vUtWZcZITixXO4f330VNn1g/viewform?usp=sf_link by Friday, May 19.  Submissions should include an abstract for a single proposed talk; the program committee will organize accepted submissions into panels. To get a sense of the breadth and diversity of content presented at PaCSS, you may wish to take a look at the PaCSS 2022 programhttps://cssh.northeastern.edu/nulab/pacss/.

Please email politics.css@gmail.com with any questions.

About PaCSS

The data and methodologies available to social scientists have exploded with the emergence of archives of digital data collection, large scale online experimentation, and innovative uses of simulation. The analysis of these data requires more complex methodological approaches and greater computational complexity than the approaches that have dominated the study of politics for the last 50 years.

The analysis of digital data offers the potential for rich insights into society at scale, but it also introduces new ethical and infrastructural challenges. In parallel, the information and communication technologies that have driven this data revolution are also driving changes in politics, around the world, that require study.

In order to understand the political world, it is increasingly important to gain access to the political communication and behavior occurring online. PaCSS, started in 2018 with about 150 attendees, offers a forum for computational social science research in this emerging space. Examples of relevant topics/approaches include: analysis of social media; text analysis; use of finely granular geographic data; and large scale online experimentation. Deeply committed to elevating the voices and work of populations which are underrepresented in computational spaces, PaCSS actively seek, welcome, and encourage people from all fields, industries, backgrounds, experiences, and identities to submit their work and attend.

PaCSS 2023 is co-chaired by Jennifer Pan and Zachary C. Steinert-Threlkeld, with support from David Lazar and Sarah Shugars.

--

Zachary Steinert-Threlkeld (he, him)

Assistant Professor of Public Policy

Luskin School of Public Affairs

University of California – Los Angeles

www.zacharyst.comhttp://www.zacharyst.com/; @ZacharyST

The previous announcement contained an incorrect link. Please use this announcement. PaCSS 2023: Call for Proposals We are pleased to announce that the sixth annual Politics and Computational Social Science (PaCSS) conference will take place August 30, 2023. UCLA will host this year’s conference, with in-person events in Los Angeles, California (US). Because of the potential financial, logistical or health-related reasons making in-person attendance challenging, participants can join in a hybrid format (in-person or virtually) while presenters will join in-person. We hope that you will join us to share your work and support the continued growth of our diverse, interdisciplinary community of people working in industry, academia, government and nonprofits. To submit your work for consideration at PaCSS 2023, please complete this form<https://forms.gle/bvVtqjmxrhQGJjRdA> by Friday, May 19. Submissions should include an abstract for a single proposed talk; the program committee will organize accepted submissions into panels. To get a sense of the breadth and diversity of content presented at PaCSS, you may wish to take a look at the PaCSS 2022 program<https://cssh.northeastern.edu/nulab/pacss/>. Please email politics.css@gmail.com<mailto:politics.css@gmail.com> with any questions. About PaCSS The data and methodologies available to social scientists have exploded with the emergence of archives of digital data collection, large scale online experimentation, and innovative uses of simulation. The analysis of these data requires more complex methodological approaches and greater computational complexity than the approaches that have dominated the study of politics for the last 50 years. The analysis of digital data offers the potential for rich insights into society at scale, but it also introduces new ethical and infrastructural challenges. In parallel, the information and communication technologies that have driven this data revolution are also driving changes in politics, around the world, that require study. In order to understand the political world, it is increasingly important to gain access to the political communication and behavior occurring online. PaCSS, started in 2018 with about 150 attendees, offers a forum for computational social science research in this emerging space. Examples of relevant topics/approaches include: analysis of social media; text analysis; use of finely granular geographic data; and large scale online experimentation. Deeply committed to elevating the voices and work of populations which are underrepresented in computational spaces, PaCSS actively seek, welcome, and encourage people from all fields, industries, backgrounds, experiences, and identities to submit their work and attend. PaCSS 2023 is co-chaired by Jennifer Pan and Zachary C. Steinert-Threlkeld, with support from David Lazar and Sarah Shugars. -- Zachary Steinert-Threlkeld (he, him) Assistant Professor of Public Policy Luskin School of Public Affairs University of California – Los Angeles www.zacharyst.com<http://www.zacharyst.com>; @ZacharyST From: Steinert-Threlkeld, Zachary <zst@luskin.ucla.edu> Date: Monday, April 3, 2023 at 12:40 PM To: epsa-info-list@epsanet.org <epsa-info-list@epsanet.org> Subject: Call for Proposals for Politics and Computational Social Science APSA Pre-conference We are pleased to announce that the sixth annual Politics and Computational Social Science (PaCSS) conference will take place August 30, 2023. UCLA will host this year’s conference, with in-person events in Los Angeles, California (US). Because of the potential financial, logistical or health-related reasons making in-person attendance challenging, participants can join in a hybrid format (in-person or virtually) while presenters will join in-person. We hope that you will join us to share your work and support the continued growth of our diverse, interdisciplinary community of people working in industry, academia, government and nonprofits. To submit your work for consideration at PaCSS 2023, please complete this form<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfq2Zw6kS1SVCDl7tvWyeZXf65vUtWZcZITixXO4f330VNn1g/viewform?usp=sf_link> by Friday, May 19. Submissions should include an abstract for a single proposed talk; the program committee will organize accepted submissions into panels. To get a sense of the breadth and diversity of content presented at PaCSS, you may wish to take a look at the PaCSS 2022 program<https://cssh.northeastern.edu/nulab/pacss/>. Please email politics.css@gmail.com with any questions. About PaCSS The data and methodologies available to social scientists have exploded with the emergence of archives of digital data collection, large scale online experimentation, and innovative uses of simulation. The analysis of these data requires more complex methodological approaches and greater computational complexity than the approaches that have dominated the study of politics for the last 50 years. The analysis of digital data offers the potential for rich insights into society at scale, but it also introduces new ethical and infrastructural challenges. In parallel, the information and communication technologies that have driven this data revolution are also driving changes in politics, around the world, that require study. In order to understand the political world, it is increasingly important to gain access to the political communication and behavior occurring online. PaCSS, started in 2018 with about 150 attendees, offers a forum for computational social science research in this emerging space. Examples of relevant topics/approaches include: analysis of social media; text analysis; use of finely granular geographic data; and large scale online experimentation. Deeply committed to elevating the voices and work of populations which are underrepresented in computational spaces, PaCSS actively seek, welcome, and encourage people from all fields, industries, backgrounds, experiences, and identities to submit their work and attend. PaCSS 2023 is co-chaired by Jennifer Pan and Zachary C. Steinert-Threlkeld, with support from David Lazar and Sarah Shugars. -- Zachary Steinert-Threlkeld (he, him) Assistant Professor of Public Policy Luskin School of Public Affairs University of California – Los Angeles www.zacharyst.com<http://www.zacharyst.com/>; @ZacharyST