Workshop on Online Misinformation- and Harm-Aware Recommender Systems (OHARS) at RecSys 2020

OHARS 2020


Artificial Intelligence



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Workshop on Online Misinformation- and Harm-Aware Recommender Systems (OHARS 2020)
Co-located with ACM RecSys 2020
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Submission deadline: ***13th July, 2020 (abstracts by 6th July)***
Workshop date: September 25, 2020
Website: https://ohars-recsys2020.isistan.unicen.edu.ar
AIM AND SCOPE
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Social media platforms have become an integral part of everyday life and activities of most people, providing new forms of communication and interaction. These sites allow their users to share information and opinions as well as to promote the formation of links and social relationships. One of the most valuable features of social platforms is the potential for the dissemination of information on a large scale. Recommender systems play an important role in this process as they leverage on the massive user-generated content to assist users in finding relevant information as well as establishing new social relationships.
As mediators of online information consumption, recommender systems are both affected by the proliferation of low-quality content in social media, which hinders their capacity of achieving accurate predictions, and, at the same time, become unintended means for the amplification and massive distribution of online harm. Some of these issues stem from the core concepts and assumptions recommender systems are based on. In their attempt to deliver relevant and engaging suggestions about content/users, recommendation algorithms are also prone to introduce biases.
Harnessing recommender systems with misinformation- and harm-awareness mechanisms become essential not only to mitigate the negative effects of the diffusion of unwanted content, but also to increase the user-perceived quality of recommender systems. Novel strategies like the diversification of recommendations, bias mitigation, model-level disruption, explainability and interpretation, among others, can help users in performing informed decision making in the context of online misinformation, hate speech and other forms of online harm.
TOPICS OF INTEREST
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The aim of this workshop is to bring together a community of researchers interested in tackling online harms and, at the same time, mitigating their impact on recommender systems. We will seek novel research contributions on misinformation- and harm-aware recommender systems. The main objective of the workshop is to further research in recommender systems that can circumvent the negative effects of online harms by promoting recommendation of safe content and users.
We solicit contributions in all topics related to misinformation- and harm-aware recommender systems, focusing on (but not limited to) the following list:
* Reducing misinformation effects (e.g. echo-chambers, filter bubbles).
* Hate speech detection and countermeasures.
* User/content trustworthiness.
* Bias detection and mitigation in data/algorithms.
* Fairness and transparency in recommendations.
* Explainable models of recommendations.
* Dataset collection and processing.
* Design of specific evaluation metrics.
* Applications and case studies of misinformation- and harm-aware recommender systems.
SUBMISSION AND SELECTION PROCESS
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We will consider five different submission types, all following the new single-column format ACM proceedings format: regular (max 14 pages), short (between 4-8 pages), and extended abstracts (max 2 pages), excluding references. Authors of long and short papers will also be asked to present a poster.
* Research papers (regular or short) should be clearly placed with respect to the state of the art and state the contribution of the proposal in the domain of application, even if presenting preliminary results. Papers should describe the methodology in detail, experiments should be repeatable, and a comparison with the existing approaches in the literature should be made where possible.
* Position papers (regular or short) should introduce novel points of view in the workshop topics or summarize the experience of a researcher or a group in the field.
* Practice and experience reports (short) should present in detail the real-world scenarios that present harm-aware recommender systems. Novel but significant proposals will be considered for acceptance into this category despite not having gone through sufficient experimental validation or lacking strong theoretical foundation.
* Dataset descriptions (short) should introduce new public data collections that could be used to explore or develop harm-aware recommender systems.
* Demo proposals (extended abstract or poster) should present the details of a prototype recommender system, to be demonstrated to the workshop attendees.
Submissions will be accepted through Easychair: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ohars2020
Each submitted paper will be refereed by three members of the Program Committee, based on its novelty, technical quality, potential impact, insightfulness, depth, clarity, and reproducibility.
In order to generate a strong outcome of the workshop, all long and short accepted papers will be included in the Workshop proceedings, provided that at least one of the authors attends the workshop to present the work. Proceedings will be published in a volume, indexed on Scopus and DBLP.
IMPORTANT DATES
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Abstract submission deadline: July 6th, 2020
Paper submission deadline: July 13th, 2020
Author notification: August 6th, 2020
Camera-ready version deadline: September 3rd, 2020
PROGRAM COMMITTEE CHAIRS
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Daniela Godoy, ISISTAN Research Institute (CONICET/UNCPBA), Argentina
Antonela Tommasel, ISISTAN Research Institute (CONICET/UNCPBA), Argentina
Arkaitz Zubiaga, Queen Mary University of London, UK
CONTACT
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For more information do not hesitate to contact us: ohars2020@easychair.org
Important Note: We are continuously monitoring the COVID-19 situation and considering alternatives to allow for remote participation in both the main RecSys 2020 conference and all its workshops should disruptions still occur in late September.