Program 31th of May
Location: School of Mathematical Sciences, Queen Mary University. Maths Lecture Theatre (ground floor)
Timing: 09:00-17:00
Program
Timing: 09:00-17:00
Program
09:00
09:30 09:40 09:50 10:00 10:10 10:20 10:30 10:40 10:50 11:00 11:30 11:40 11:50 12:00 12:10 12:20 12:30 12:40 12:50 13:00 14:30 15:00 15:30 16:00 16:30 17:00 |
Hamish Gibbs Joseph Bradley Henrique M. Borges Andrew Renninger Elisabetta Salvai Yu Tian Cheick Tidiane Ba Elohim Reis Yueting Han Yuhan Li Yin-Cong Zhi Fernando Diaz-Diaz S. Quintero Suarez Runyue Wang R. Nartallo-Kaluarachchi Marta Niedostatek Pasquale Casaburi Hanlin Sun Miriam Redi, Wikimedia Federico Levi, Nature Christos Ellinas, Nodes&Links Naomi Arnold, NEU London and Ben Steer, Pometry |
Light breakfast
Contributed talks session #1 Impact of federated data with local differential privacy for human mobility modelling Cluster-driven momentum and reversal How social rewiring preferences bridge polarized communities Understanding spatial mismatch with embeddings and transformer models Toward fairness in network algorithms: rankings by biased random walks Structural balance and random walks on complex networks with complex weights Investigating shocking events in the Ethereum stablecoin ecosystem through temporal multilayer graph structure Dynamics of key players in the ecosystem of dark web markets Modelling and predicting online vaccination views using bow-tie decomposition Coffe break Contributed talks session #2 Protection degree and migration in the stochastic SIRS model: a queueing system perspective Multimorbidity Modelling via Bayesian Multi-Output Regression on Graphs Local balance reveals major historical events in signed networks of international relations The bureaucratic politics of networks: the effects of patronage on decentralised environmental governance Global topological synchronisation of weighted simplicial complexes Broken detailed balance and entropy production in complex directed networks Mining higher-order triadic interactions Resilience of mobility network to dynamic population response across COVID-19 interventions: evidences from Chile and Spain Triadic percolation induces dynamical topological patterns in higher-order networks Lunch break Invited talks session #1 Research Science for free knowledge Editing and disseminating high-visibility science at Nature Coffee Break Invited talks session #2 NetSci into the wild - a startup story From paper to product: what to do next with the cool library you have created Closing and best presentation award |