Recent innovations with Big Data and Artificial Intelligence have created new markets and dramatically increased the importance of data. Despite these social changes, existing economics, market design, management, information systems, engineering, social science, and data science approaches to these new social issues have limitations. New market understanding schemes and solutions for social implementation are needed.
To address these gaps, we propose a special session named “Understanding New Markets by Data Science, Social Science, and Economics” to discuss the processes and interactions among data, humans, and society with researchers from engineering, information systems, data science, social science, management, and economics. The topics to be covered in this session are practical issues for understanding new societies and markets, including analytical work with data and solutions to complex social problems. The session will cover not only cleanly formatted, homogeneous data but also heterogeneous data that influence human behavior, thinking, and intentions across different domains. Discussions will focus on how large-scale data can be used in healthcare, business management, and public systems, as well as discussions of quantitative assessments of what works in these areas and the obstacles to advancing their use. In addition to these research areas, we will explore utilizing large-scale data and designing mechanisms and institutions that consider social and cultural backgrounds across disciplines. We believe that this special session focusing on the new schemes for market understanding and design will be of great significance to academia and society.
We call for anyone interested in the following topics of Cross-disciplinary Data Exchange and Collaboration.
Data-oriented Application Areas
Case Studies on Data Exchange and Collaboration
Data-focused Cognitive Research
Empirical and Comprehension Focused Data Utilization
Market of Data
NLP in Social Science
Paper submissions should be limited to a maximum of ten (10) pages, in the IEEE 2-column format (link), including the bibliography and any possible appendices. Submissions longer than 10 pages will be rejected without review.
Note that all accepted papers will be included in the Proceedings volume in the IEEE Xplore Digital Library. Therefore, papers must not have been accepted for publication elsewhere or be under review for another workshop, conferences or journals.
This special session will also accept paper submissions with online participation in mind.
Ricardo Correa (PhD)
Senior Adviser at Federal Reserve Board
BIOGRAPHY
Timetable is comming soon!
Teruaki Hayashi (PhD)
The University of Tokyo
CV
Teruaki Hayashi is a lecturer at The University of Tokyo. He received his Ph.D. degree in engineering from The University of Tokyo (2017). His research topics are knowledge structuring, data management, retrieval systems, and human behavior modeling, focusing on cross-disciplinary data collaboration in the data ecosystem. He is the coauthor of the book Market of Data (Kindaikagakusha, 2017), and Tools for Activating Data Marketplace (Springer, 2022). He was awarded the Dean's Award by the School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo (2017), an Excellence Award at the 23rd Annual Conference of the Japanese Society of Artificial Intelligence (2018), etc.
Hiroki Sakaji (PhD)
Hokkaido University
CV
Hiroki Sakaji is currently an associate professor at Hokkaido University, Japan. He got the Ph.D. degree in Engineering from the Toyohashi University of Technology (2012). His research interests are related to natural language processing, text mining concerning economics and finance. He served as an area chair of ACL and as PC members of many conferences (ACL, AAAI, IEEE BigData).
Naoki Watanabe (PhD)
Keio University
CV
Naoki is a professor of management science at Keio Business School. He received his Ph.D. in Economics from The State University of New York at Stony Brook (August 2003). His major academic contribution is the application of game theory to patent licensing and information markets. He has published papers on subject experiments in which voting systems and trading mechanisms as well as theoretical research. In practical activities, he has been involved in the planning of personnel algorithms for Japanese manufacturers.
Note: Since we are contacting to other researchers, more program committees will be added to the list.
Dr. Teruaki Hayashi (co-chair)
Email: hayashi -at- sys.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp