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Volume 17, Issue 3August 2017Special Issue on Argumentation in Social Media and Regular Papers
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SECTION: Special Issue on Argumentation in Social Media
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Argumentation in Social Media
Article No.: 23, Pages 1–2https://doi.org/10.1145/3056539
research-article
Open Access
Debating Technology for Dialogical Argument: Sensemaking, Engagement, and Analytics
Article No.: 24, Pages 1–23https://doi.org/10.1145/3007210

Debating technologies, a newly emerging strand of research into computational technologies to support human debating, offer a powerful way of providing naturalistic, dialogue-based interaction with complex information spaces. The full potential of ...

research-article
Public Access
Using Argumentative Structure to Interpret Debates in Online Deliberative Democracy and eRulemaking
Article No.: 25, Pages 1–22https://doi.org/10.1145/3032989

Governments around the world are increasingly utilising online platforms and social media to engage with, and ascertain the opinions of, their citizens. Whilst policy makers could potentially benefit from such enormous feedback from society, they first ...

research-article
Stance and Sentiment in Tweets
Article No.: 26, Pages 1–23https://doi.org/10.1145/3003433

We can often detect from a person’s utterances whether he or she is in favor of or against a given target entity—one’s stance toward the target. However, a person may express the same stance toward a target by using negative or positive language. Here ...

research-article
An Argumentation Approach for Resolving Privacy Disputes in Online Social Networks
Article No.: 27, Pages 1–22https://doi.org/10.1145/3003434

Preserving users’ privacy is important for Web systems. In systems where transactions are managed by a single user, such as e-commerce systems, preserving privacy of the transactions is merely the capability of access control. However, in online social ...

research-article
A Universal Model for Discourse-Level Argumentation Analysis
Article No.: 28, Pages 1–24https://doi.org/10.1145/2957757

The argumentative structure of texts is increasingly exploited for analysis tasks, for example, for stance classification or the assessment of argumentation quality. Most existing approaches, however, model only the local structure of single arguments. ...

research-article
Experimental Assessment of Aggregation Principles in Argumentation-Enabled Collective Intelligence
Article No.: 29, Pages 1–21https://doi.org/10.1145/3053371

On the Web, there is always a need to aggregate opinions from the crowd (as in posts, social networks, forums, etc.). Different mechanisms have been implemented to capture these opinions such as Like in Facebook, Favorite in Twitter, thumbs-up/-down, ...

research-article
Using Argumentation to Improve Classification in Natural Language Problems
Article No.: 30, Pages 1–23https://doi.org/10.1145/3017679

Argumentation has proven successful in a number of domains, including Multi-Agent Systems and decision support in medicine and engineering. We propose its application to a domain yet largely unexplored by argumentation research: computational ...

SECTION: Regular Papers
research-article
Mitigating Data Sparsity Using Similarity Reinforcement-Enhanced Collaborative Filtering
Article No.: 31, Pages 1–20https://doi.org/10.1145/3062179

The data sparsity problem has attracted significant attention in collaborative filtering-based recommender systems. To alleviate data sparsity, several previous efforts employed hybrid approaches that incorporate auxiliary data sources into ...

research-article
Towards Inferring Communication Patterns in Online Social Networks
Article No.: 32, Pages 1–21https://doi.org/10.1145/3093897

The separation between the public and private spheres on online social networks is known to be, at best, blurred. On the one hand, previous studies have shown how it is possible to infer private attributes from publicly available data. On the other hand,...

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