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Cyber-Social Learning Systems Workshop 1


   Workshop Report   

August 29-30, 2016

Fairmont Olympic Hotel
Seattle, WA, United States



Event Contact

Ann Drobnis
adrobnis@cra.org


Event Type

2016 Events, 2016 Visioning Activities


Event Category

CCC

Overview

Over the last decade, we have made enormous progress establishing scientific and engineering principles for cyber-physical systems (CPS). We are now on the threshold of a world of physical systems that are deeply computational, dynamic, learning, and connected at all scales, yielding radical improvements in physical systems properties.

The next major frontier in science and engineering research and development is the integration of cyber-physical with human and social systems and phenomena across all major sectors and at all scales. Closing the loop from sensing to performance at all scales will give rise to cyber-social learning systems.

This first workshop, in a series of three workshops on cyber-social learning systems, focused on crosscutting basic science and engineering research challenges, grounded in the realities of sectors including health and healthcare, communities, and education. Specific objectives included:

1. Expand the community interested in cyber-social learning systems research and development, as established by earlier (2013 and 2015) NSF­-funded Learning Health System workshops, to include the broader CISE and NSF community and participants from major sectors beyond health and healthcare.

2. Explore issues involved in, and develop an initial rationale (to be refined in subsequent workshops) for, cyber-social systems research and development by producing sector-­specific scenarios that illustrate how cyber-­social learning systems theory, technology, and practice could address underperformance in these sectors to yield major improvements in the function and performance of major societal systems.

3. Develop an initial agenda for basic and applied research in cyber-­social learning systems (to be refined in subsequent workshops), integrating basic research in computing, engineering, and the social sciences, with applied research in multiple sectors, in part building on results from the 2013 and 2015 workshops.

This is part of a workshop series – view the series page.

Agenda

August 29, 2016 (Monday)

07:30 AM BREAKFAST | The Garden Room
08:15 AM Welcome and Introductions: Framing the Contours of CSLS | The Metropole Room

Participant Lightning Slides

Kevin Sullivan, University of Virginia
Charles Friedman, University of Michigan
Beth Mynatt, CCC / Georgia Tech

09:15 AM Short Talks and Discussion: Opening Perspectives on CSLS | The Metropole Room

Moderator: Charles Friedman
William Rouse, Stevens Institute of Technology (Learning in Complex Systems)
William Griswold, University of California, San Diego (It’s All About the People)
Elizabeth Churchill, Google (Full-Stack Infrastructure for CSLS)
William Scherlis, CMU (Abstraction and Trust)

10:15 AM BREAK
10:45 AM Short Talks and Discussion: The Edge of CSLS | The Metropole Room

Moderator: Kevin Sullivan
Tarek Abdelzaher, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign (Social Sensing)
Jim Spohrer, IBM (Artificial Intelligence)
Lori Clarke, Umass, Amherst (Trustworthy CSLS)
Ben Shneiderman, University of Maryland (Design Tools for Governance)
John Seely Brown, USC (Learning and Unlearning in these Exponential Times)

12:15 PM WORKING LUNCH | The Garden Room
01:15 PM Short Talks and Discussion: Three Domains; Health, Education, and Communities | The Metropole Room

Moderator: Beth Mynatt
Jonathan Silverstein, Joseph H. Kanter Foundation (Health)
Stephanie Teasley, University of Michigan (Education)
Jennifer Clark, Georgia Institute of Technology (Communities)

02:15 PM Cross-Disciplinary Discussion Groups

Group 1 Slides

Group 2 Slides

Group 3 Slides

Group 4 Slides

Group 5 Slides

Group 6 Slides

03:30 PM BREAK
04:00 PM Discussion Group Summaries
06:30 PM DINNER | The Garden Room

August 30, 2016 (Tuesday)

07:30 AM BREAKFAST | The Garden Room
08:15 AM “Game Reset” Plenary Talk | The Metropole Room
08:45 AM Game Reset Discussion Groups

Game Reset Discussion Group Topics

10:15 AM BREAK
10:45 AM Discussion Group Summaries

Cyber-Human Ecosystem

Trustworthiness of / Trust in CSLS

Architecture & Infrastructure

 

12:00 PM WORKING LUNCH | The Parliament Room
01:00 PM Discussion Groups: Emergent Topics
02:00 PM Discussion Group Summaries
02:30 PM BREAK
02:45 PM Closing Panel and Discussion | The Metropole Room

Moderator: Kevin Sullivan
Mary Czerwinski, Microsoft Research
Susan Graham, University of California, Berkeley
Rahul Basole, Georgia Institute of Technology
Lise Getoor, UC Santa Cruz

04:00 PM Conclusion and Next Steps | The Metropole Room
Participants
Members of the Executive Committee plus General Planning Committee:

Executive Committee 

Annie Anton, Georgia Tech

Elizabeth Churchill, Google

Ann Drobnis, CCC Director

Charles Friedman, University of Michigan, co-chair

William Rouse, Stevens Institute

Joshua C. Rubin, University of Michigan

Ben Shneiderman, University of Maryland

Kevin Sullivan, University of Virginia, co-chair

General Planning Committee 

Charlie Catlett, Argonne National Laboratory

Lori Clarke, University of Massachusetts

William Griswold, University of California, San Diego

Deborah Johnson, University of Virginia

Beth Mynatt, CCC and Georgia Tech

Jonathan Silverstein, Joseph H. Kanter Foundation

William Stead, Vanderbilt University

William Scherlis, CMU

Stephanie Teasley, University of Michigan

 

Logistics

The Computing Community Consortium (CCC) will cover travel expenses for all participants who desire it. Participants are asked to make their own travel arrangements to get to the workshop, including purchasing airline tickets. Following the symposium, CCC will circulate a reimbursement form that participants will need to complete and submit, along with copies of receipts for amounts exceeding $75.

In general, standard Federal travel policies apply: CCC will reimburse for non-refundable economy airfare on U.S. Flag carriers; and no alcohol will be covered.

For more information, please see the Guidelines for Participant Reimbursements from CCC.

Additional questions about the reimbursement policy should be directed to Ann Drobnis, CCC Director (adrobnis [at] cra.org).

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