The International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media (ICWSM) is a forum for researchers from multiple disciplines to come together to share knowledge, discuss ideas, exchange information, and learn about cutting-edge research in diverse fields with the common theme of investigating the interplay of web and society. This overall theme includes research on new perspectives in social theories, as well as computational algorithms for analyzing digital traces of human activities or behaviors in social settings. ICWSM is a singularly fitting venue for research that blends social science and computational approaches to answer important and challenging questions about human social behavior through online traces while advancing computational tools for vast and unstructured data.

ICWSM, now in its nineteenth year, has become one of the premier venues for computational social science and social computing.

Previous years

of ICWSM have featured papers, posters, and demos that draw upon a wide spectrum of disciplines from computational sciences (e.g., network science, artificial intelligence, machine learning, test/data mining, natural language processing, image/multimedia processing, human computer interaction) to social sciences (e.g., sociology, communication, political science, anthropology, psychology, economics, digital humanities). Note that papers focusing solely on the advancement of algorithmic components, or which use Web data only as an artifact (for instance, in method evaluation) are out of scope. Ideal submissions should speak to research questions of societal relevance.

We invite original work that utilizes diverse digitally mediated data sources such as web navigation traces, traces from apps, social media traces, data from online platforms such as microblogs (e.g., X/ formerly Twitter), wiki-based knowledge sharing sites (e.g., Wikipedia), online news media (e.g., Huffington Post), forums, mailing lists, newsgroups, community media sites (e.g., YouTube, Instagram), Q&A sites (e.g., Quora, Stack Overflow), user review sites (e.g., Yelp, Amazon.com), search platforms and social curation sites (e.g., Reddit, Pinterest). Adapting to our continuously evolving field, we are open to new forms of technologically mediated human or society-related data sources (e.g., mobility traces, satellite data) and methods that advance our understanding of society and the influence of the web on it.

The uniqueness of the venue and the quality of submissions have contributed to a rapidly growing conference, and a competitive acceptance rate of approximately 20 to 30% for full-length research papers published in the proceedings by the Association for the

Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI)

.

ICWSM-2025 will be held from June 23 - 26, 2025, in Copenhagen, Denmark.

Topics include (but are not limited to):

  • Analysis of the relationship between social media and mainstream media
  • Qualitative and quantitative studies of online platforms
  • Subjectivity in textual data; sentiment analysis; polarity/opinion/stance identification and extraction, linguistic analyses of human behavior on the web
  • Information retrieval on online platforms
  • Credibility of online content
  • Measuring predictability of real-world phenomena based on digital trace data, e.g., spanning politics, finance, and health
  • Social network analysis; communities identification; expertise and authority discovery
  • Trust; reputation; recommendation systems
  • Text categorization; topic recognition; demographic/gender/age identification
  • Privacy and security on the web
  • Trend identification and tracking; time series forecasting for web data
  • New web applications; interfaces; interaction techniques
  • Engagement, motivations, incentives, and gamification on the web
  • Social innovation and effecting change through the web
  • Psychological, personality-based, and ethnographic studies of web-based platforms
  • Studies of digital humanities (culture, history, arts) using online traces
  • Internet usage on mobile devices; location, human mobility, and behavior
  • Organizational and group behavior mediated by web technology; interpersonal communication mediated by web and social media

Senior Program Committee

Abeer ALDayel

Abhijnan Chakraborty

Adam Dunn

Adriana Iamnitchi

Afra Mashhadi

Aledavood Talayeh

Andreas Kaltenbrunner

Andreas Spitz

Arkaitz Zubiaga

Aron Culotta

Ashton Anderson

Benjamin D. Horne

Bernie Hogan

Björn Ross

Bogdan State

Brian Keegan

Ceren Budak

Chiara Boldrini

Cody Buntain

Davide Proserpio

Despoina Chatzakou

Diana Maynard

Doina Caragea

Ehsan Ul Haque

Ehsan-Ul Haq

Emilio Ferrara

Emma Spiro

Emőke-Ágnes Horvát

Eni Mustafaraj

Faezeh Ensan

Florian Meier

Fred Morstatter

Gareth Tyson

Gianmarco De Francisci Morales

Giovanni Luca Ciampaglia

Haewoon Kwak

Hemank Lamba

Hemant Purohit

Ingmar Weber

Jahna Otterbacher

Jalal Mahmud

Jiebo Luo

Jisun An

Juergen Pfeffer

Juhi Kulshrestha

Kiran Garimella

Kokil Jaidka

Koustuv Saha

Kristina Gligorić

Kyumin Lee

Leto Peel

Lisette Espin-Noboa

Loren Terveen

Luca Maria Aiello

Luca Rossi

Ludovico Boratto

Lydia Manikonda

Mainack Mondal

Marcos Oliveira

Markus Strohmaier

Martin Saveski

Matteo Magnani

Mattia Samory

Mauricio Gruppi

Michele Coscia

Mikko Kivelä

Muhammad Imran

Nir Grinberg

Nishanth Sastry

Onur Varol

Oren Tsur

Orestis Papakyriakopoulos

Pablo Aragón

Palakorn Achananuparp

Piotr Sapiezynski

Renaud Lambiotte

Rossano Schifanella

Sabirat Rubya

Sabrina Gaito

Saeideh bakhshi

Salvatore Giorgi

Sanja Scepanovic

Sarah M. Preum

Savvas Zannettou

Scott Counts

Shruti Phadke

Siqi Wu

Soroush Vosoughi

Stefan Feuerriegel

Subhayan Mukerjee

Tim Althoff

Tim Weninger

Tiziano Piccardi

Tyler Derr

Usman Naseem

Vincent Traag

Wei Ai

Yelena Mejova

Zhijun Yin