Web Science Trust

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

The Web Science Trust is a joint effort originally started between MIT and University of Southampton to bridge and formalize the social and technical aspects of the World Wide Web. The Trust now coordinates a set of international "WSTnet Laboratories" that include many of the top academic research groups in this emerging area.

It was first announced at MIT on November 2, 2006 as the Web Science Research Initiative (WSRI), changing its name in 2009 to the Web Science Trust.[1] Tim Berners-Lee is leading the program that also aims to attract government and private funds, and is now involved in creating new undergraduate and graduate curricula. Given the similarities between Web Science and Information Science, Web Science overlaps with the interests of the ISchool movement [2], particularly in the United States, but focuses more specifically on the Web itself.

Some initial areas of interest are:

  • Social Networks
  • Collaboration
  • Understanding online communities
  • Analyzing the human interactions inherent in social media
  • Developing "accountability" and other mechanisms for enhancing privacy and trust on the Web.

Contents

[edit] Key Personnel

Directors

[edit] Conferences

The first Web Science conference (WebSci09: Society on Line) was sponsored in part by WSRI and was held in Greece in March 2009. The conference had over 300 registrants from a number of fields including computing, social science, law, economics, philosophy, psychology. The second conference was held in Raleigh-Durham co-located with WWW 2010, and the third was held in Koblenz Germany.

Web Science conferences
Conference Date Place Keynote speakers registrants
ACM WebSci'11 - International Conference on Web Science 2011 14-17 June Germany Koblenz, Germany Barry Wellman, Jaime Teevan
Web Science 2010 26 & 27 April United States Raleigh, North Carolina, USA Sir Tim Berners-Lee, Jennifer Chayes, Melissa R. Gilbert
Web Science 2009 18–20 March Greece Athens, Greece Noshir Contractor, Nigel Shadbolt, Jacques Bus, Sir Tim Berners-Lee 300+

[edit] See also

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] External links

[edit] References


Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Interaction
Toolbox
Print/export
Languages