Program
Detailed Program
Tuesday, 7 February
14.30 Tutorial #2: Percolation on complex networks Slides Python notebooks
Filippo Radicchi, Indiana University, USAWednesday, 8 February
9.40 Keynote talk: The social dimensions of human-centered AI (Chair: Mariano Beiró)SlidesFosca Giannotti, Scuola Normale Superiore Pisa, Italy
Talk Session #1: Economic and Financial Networks (Chair: Viktoriya Semeshenko)
11.30 Wealth distribution on a dynamic complex network Gustavo Kohlrausch, UFRGS, Brazil (Slides) 11.50 Exploring Informative Scales of Labor Networks in Argentina Sergio De Raco, IIEP (UBA-CONICET), Argentina (Slides) 12.10 Effects of mobility-based dependency networks on economic resilience Takahiro Yabe, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
Talk Session #2: Mobility and Computational Social Science 1 (Chair: Luca Pappalardo)
15.10 Can crowdsourcing rescue the social marketplace of ideas? Taha Yasseri, University College Dublin, Ireland (Slides) 15.30 Quantifying biobank impact Rodrigo Dorantes-Gilardi, Northeastern University, USA (Slides) 15.50 Natural language processing for understanding classroom dynamics Bernardo Garcia-Bulle Bueno, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA (Slides) 16.10 From networks to flows: Using flow maps to understand mobility patterns in cattle trade Ronaldo Menezes, University of Exeter, England (Slides)
Talk Session #3: Mobility and Computational Social Science 2 (Chair: Rodrigo Castro)
17.00 Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Chile’s Internal Migration Erick Elejalde, L3S Research Center, Germany 17.20 Authority without Care: Moral Values behind the Mask Mandate Response Kyriaki Kalimeri, ISI Foundation, Italy 17.40 Quantifying individual uncertainty in decision-making: Unrelated preferences for degree programs reduce students’ first-year retention in higher education Joselina Davyt, UDD, Chile 18.00 Digital cities and COVID-19: modeling the impact of non-pharmaceutical interventions Alberto Aleta, BIFI, Univ. de Zaragoza, Spain
Thursday, 9 February
Talk Session #4: Opinion Dynamics (Chair: Pablo Balenzuela)
9.40 Self-induced consensus formation among Reddit users on the GameStop short squeeze Giulio Cimini, Università di Roma Tor Vergata & Centro Ricerche Enrico Fermi, Italy 10.00 Modelling how social network algorithms can influence opinion polarization Guilherme Ferraz de Arruda, Centai Institute, Italy (Slides) 10.20 From subcritical behavior to a correlation-induced transition in rumor models Guilherme Ferraz de Arruda, Centai Institute, Italy (Slides) 10.40 Cooperation in costly-access environments Carlos Gracia-Lázaro, BIFI, Univ. de Zaragoza, Spain (Slides)
Talk Session #5: Epidemics (Chair: Yamir Moreno)
11.30 The different effects of non-pharmaceutical interventions in epidemic models based on networks versus mixing matrices Alberto Aleta, BIFI, Univ. de Zaragoza, Spain 11.50 Global misinformation spillovers in the online vaccination debate before and during COVID-19 Kyriaki Kalimeri, ISI Foundation, Italy 12.10 Assessing the effectiveness of perimeter lockdowns as a response to epidemics at the urban scale: the case of Madrid Alfonso de Miguel Arribas, BIFI, Univ. de Zaragoza, Spain (Slides) 12.30 Modeling the spatiotemporal epidemic spreading of multiple virus strains Wesley Cota, IMT/USP & FMB/UNESP, Brazil
15.10 Poster session
List of acepted posters
Talk Session #6: Network Neuroscience (Chair: Pablo Balenzuela)
16.30 Unconsciousness reconfigures modular brain network dynamics Sofia Morena del Pozo, DF-FCEN, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina (Slides) 16.50 Lateralization properties in motor brain networks Juliana Gonzalez-Astudillo, INRIA, France 17.10 Differences in nonlinear correlations between brain regions for patients with multiple sclerosis Marcin Wątorek, Jagiellonian University, Poland (Slides)
Friday, 10 February
Talk Session #7: Network Analysis (Chair: Leonardo Ermann)
9.45 News-sharing on Twitter reveals emergent fragmentation of media agenda and persistent polarization Tomas Cicchini, Instituto de Cálculo (UBA-CONICET), Argentina (Slides) 10.05 Hybridization of Chemoinformatic and Bioinformatic Information Networks for Graph Diffusion of Drug-Target Interactions Bruno Kaufman, Fundación Instituto Leloir, Argentina (Slides) 10.25 Complex networks coarse-graining by Laplacian Renormalization Group Tommaso Gili, Scuola IMT Alti Studi Lucca, Italy 10.45 Identification and Mapping of Vehicle Robbery and Theft in Rio de Janeiro Douglas Ferreira, IFRJ, Brazil
Talk Session #8: Network Dynamics (Chair: José Ignacio Alvarez-Hamelin)
15.05 Influence Maximization in Boolean Networks Filippo Radicchi, Indiana University, USA (Slides) 15.25 Complexity emerges in measures of the marking dynamics in football games Andres Chacoma, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Argentina (Slides) 15.45 Ergodic sets in directed networks: a dynamics-based simplification Erik Hormann, University of Oxford, England 16.05 Dynamics matter: A simulation framework to study diffusion processes on a Dynamic Product Space Tobias Agustín Carreira Munich, ICC (UBA-CONICET), Argentina (Slides)
Talk Session #9: Networks Structure and Models (Chair: Rodrigo Castro)
17.00 Random multi-player games in complex networks Natalia Kontorovsky, Instituto de Cálculo (UBA-CONICET), Argentina (Slides) 17.20 Scale-Free Network without a Power-Law Degree Distribution Xiangyi Meng, Northeastern University, USA 17.40 Analytic solution for the spectral density and localization properties of complex networks Jeferson Dias da Silva, UFRGS, Brazil (Slides)
Accepted posters
#3 Centrality-Based Ranking of Paired Comparison Yang Li, Florida Atlantic University, USA
#9 A graph complexity measure based on the spectral analysis of the Laplace operator Diego Martín Mateos, CONICET, Argentina
#11 Dynamics of the Ising model over highly connected random graphs with arbitray degree distribution Leonardo Ferreira, UFRGS, Brazil
#17 Study of patient transfers during the COVID-19 pandemic using complex networks Tomas Cicchini, Instituto de Cálculo (UBA-CONICET), Argentina
#18 Distributed Self-healing under restricted communication: the effect on spatial damages Jaeho Kim, JAIST, Japan
#21 Identifying vaccine-mechanism bias in mathematical models of vaccine impact: the case of tuberculosis Mario Tovar Calonge, BIFI, Univ. de Zaragoza, Spain
#25 A Manifold Minimization Principle for Physical Networks Xiangyi Meng, Northeastern University, USA
#26 COVID-19 spreading under containment actions Fernando Ezequiel Cornes, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina
#30 On the intricacies of per individual cellular network datasets generation Anne Josiane Kouam, INRIA, France
#31 Migration Reframed? Multilingual analysis on the stance shift in Europe during the Ukrainian crisis Sergej Wildemann, L3S Research Center, Germany
#33 Framework for developing quantitative agent-based models based on qualitative expert knowledge: an organised crime use-case Frederike Oetker, University of Amsterdam, Computational Science Lab, Netherlands
#40 Where the Landlords Are: Identification of Regions and Megaregions through Networks of Rental Ownership Benjamin Preis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
#49 Reconstructing social sensitivity from evolution of content volume in Twitter Sebastian Pinto, DF-FCEN, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina
#54 Attraction by ingroup coherence drives the emergence of ideological sorting Lucía Pedraza, IFIBA (UBA-CONICET) & DF-FCEN-UBA, Argentina
#60 Urban segregation patterns for non-homogeneous community linkages Victoria Eugenia Arcon, IC-FCEN, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina
#64 Integration of bio-medical information in a multimodal complex network for gene-disease prioritization Ingrid Heuer, DF-FCEN, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina
#65 The Complex Network Analysis of Power Grid: A Case Study of the Argentinian Network and its Vulnerability Ayelén Bargados, UBA & Fundación Observatorio PyME, Argentina
#72 Rumor-telling activity in polarized opinion networks Hugo Maia, Universidade Federal de Viçosa, Brazil
#76 The topology of the skill relatedness network of technologies Sergio Palomeque, FCE, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina
#80 Tailoring Benchmark Graphs to Real-World Networks for Improved Prediction of Community Detection Performance Catherine Schwartz, Johns Hopkins University, USA
#86 Theoretical frameworks for the SIRS model in complex networks with different localization patterns José Carlos de Moraes Silva, Universidade Federal de Viçosa, Brazil
#92 Normal intracranial encephalographic activity: oscillations, scale-free behavior and neural network classification Juan Martín Tenti, INIFTA, Argentina
#94 Outbreak diversity in epidemic waves propagating through distinct geographical scales Guilherme Costa, Universidade Federal de Viçosa, Brazil
#53 Workers positional power. An input-output relations study Deborah Noguera, IIPPyG (UNRN), Argentina
#98 Two-prey-one-predator system: coexistence of sheep, guanaco, and puma in the Patagonia region Jhordan Silveira de Borba, UFRGS, Brazil
#100 Spreading processes in intermittent networks Juliane Teixeira de Moraes, Universidade Federal de Viçosa, Brazil
#101 Brain drain or brain circulation? a study of the academic collaboration network in Uruguay Sergio Palomeque, FCE, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina
#103 Integrating external information into a graph community detection algorithm to achieve high-quality communities Ariel Agustín Berardino, Fundación Instituto Leloir & DF-FCEN-UBA & IFIBA (UBA-CONICET), Argentina
#110 Towards Network-Based Planetary Biosignatures: Atmospheric Chemistry as Unipartite, Unweighted, Undirected Networks Michael Wong, Carnegie Institution for Science, USA
Instructions for oral contributions
Oral contributors will have 15 minutes for presentation, plus 5 minutes for discussion. Presentations have to be sent in PDF format not later than 0.00h of the day of your presentation, using the following Google Form: Oral presentation slides upload. This Google Form allows for your PDF file to be updated many times.
Instructions for poster contributions
The panel space reserved for your poster contribution allows for an A0 vertical/portrait poster (1189mm x 841mm).