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Web Science Albert- Ludwigs - Universität zu Freiburg SS 2013

Web Science Albert- Ludwigs - Universität zu Freiburg SS 2013. Prof. Dr. Peter Fischer Prof Dr. Dr. h.c . Günter Müller Dr. Rafael Accorsi. Organisational. Admission: Generally: First-come, first-serve (according to waiting list registration)

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Web Science Albert- Ludwigs - Universität zu Freiburg SS 2013

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  1. Web ScienceAlbert-Ludwigs-Universitätzu FreiburgSS 2013 Prof. Dr. Peter Fischer Prof Dr. Dr. h.c. Günter Müller Dr. Rafael Accorsi

  2. Organisational • Admission: • Generally: First-come, first-serve (according to waiting list registration) • Attendance/topic preferences today (no response –> end of waiting list) • Topic Assignment • Preliminary Today • Finalized end of week • Time slots: • Introduction lecture April 23rd, 13:00 • Two presentation slots July 10th/17th, 9:00 – 15:00

  3. Game rules • Participation in all sessionsismandatory • Submission ofwrittenreport (5-10 pages DIN A4, 12 pt., single-spaced, two-column) by June 8th, 2013 • Oral presentationofeachparticipant (English or German) • Presentation 40 mins, discussionandquestions 10 mins; • Note thatpresentationshavetobe in PPT(X), PDF, ODF andneedtofollowtheformattemplateprovidedtoyou • Final presentationsneedtobesubmittedby • June 26th (firstsession) • July 3rd (secondsession) ; • Participation in discussionsandthequalityofquestionsraisedis also partofthe final grade assigned • The final grade iscomposed 75% oral presentation plus participation in discussionsand 25% writtenreport English preferred for presentation, but not mandatory – slides MUST be in English

  4. What's important for the presentation 1 • Make the presentation a cohesive and compelling story ... • Well-designed structure that enables the audience to follow the flow and argumentation • … which gets its points across ... • Many presentations are overloaded by formulae that remain unintelligible in the course of an oral presentation • Focus on several main points that you want to make sure will stick with the audience • … while not limiting itself to trivialities • While not overloading the presentation with formulae, it should still satisfy academic levels • Time management • 40 mins for presentation (without intervention by questions) can be adequately planned ahead • Convince by appealing and consistent visual presentation • Use the pre-defined slide templates and use bullets, fonts, bars, etc. in a consistent way • Do not overload the slides with info – the slides are meant as support for the oral presentation! • The presentation should look good so that the audience loves to look at the slides! 2 3 4 5

  5. Topics – First Session • 1) Community detectionOverview of community detection methods and comparison [1,2] • 2) Identifying influentialsMethods and techniques for identifying influentials in social networks [3-5] • 3) User behaviorUnderstanding user behavior in social networks and classifying users [6,7] • 4) Facebook: Profiles and ApplicationsUser profiling and detection of malicious applications [8,9] • 5) Classical e-commerceKnowing and profiling the customers in e-commerce, and analyzing their behavior [10,11] • 6) Social networks as means for organizing illegal actionsInfrastructures of social networks as means of organizing illegal actions (riots, revolution) [12-14]

  6. Topics – Second Session • 1) Identifying spammersMethods and algorithms to identify and target spammers [15-18] • 2) Spammers behaviorInvestigation of spammers’ behavior, micro world and their tactics [19-21] • 3) Identifying personality traits through social networksIdentification and prediction of personality characteristics from public data on social media [22-24] • 4) Tweets and privacyDetecting and preventing privacy leaks in twitter [25,26] • 5) De-AnonymizingSocial NetworksMethods to trace and link users in social networks [27,28] • 6) Smart Grid PrivacyMethods to violate and protect users’ privacy in Smart Grids [29,30]

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