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DECIDE 2.0: a framework for intelligent processing of citizens' opinion in social media

Published: 04 June 2012 Publication History

Abstract

Social media is one of Web 2.0 tools that governments are adopting for interacting with citizens. Through their use, citizens are able to share their views, react to issues of their concern and form opinion. However, despite the infusion of such tools in citizens' lives, governments face several challenges to fully benefit from their adoption. One technical challenge is the lack of automated intelligent tools for processing citizens' opinion in government social media. This paper presents a project - DECIDE 2.0, focusing on the provision of a framework, including a software tool, for overcoming such challenge. The aim of the project is to combine context-based search and argumentation in a collaborative framework for managing (retrieving and publishing) service- and policy-related information in government-use social media tools. For developing the framework, the research work is underpinned by artificial intelligence and software engineering techniques. The developed framework will be applied for the qualitative and quantitative assessment of citizens' opinion on a specific policy issue. A pilot test of the framework is planned to be carried out in collaboration with a local government. The project is executed by two universities in Argentina and Mexico.

References

[1]
Bannister, F., Wilson, D. 2011. O(ver)-Government?: Emerging Technology, Citizen Autonomy and the Regulatory State, Information Polity, vol. 16, no.1, pp.63--79.
[2]
O'Reilly, T. 2010. Government as a Platform. Innovations, vol 6, no.1, pp 13--40.
[3]
DiMaio, A. 2009. Government 2.0: A Gartner Definition. http://blogs.gartner.com/andrea_dimaio/2009/11/13/government-2-0-a-gartner-definition/, last retrieved 28 February 2012.
[4]
Lorenzetti, C., Maguitman, A. A Semi-supervised Incremental Algorithm to Automatically Formulate Topical Queries. Information Science. Elsevier. 179 (12). 2009
[5]
Simari, G., Rahwan, I. (eds), Argumentation in Artificial Intelligence, Springer Verlag, 2009.

Cited By

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  • (2020)A first approach towards integrating computational argumentation in cognitive citiesProceedings of the 13th International Conference on Theory and Practice of Electronic Governance10.1145/3428502.3428506(25-32)Online publication date: 23-Sep-2020
  • (2017)From Open Government to Open CityProceedings of the 10th International Conference on Theory and Practice of Electronic Governance10.1145/3047273.3047384(232-235)Online publication date: 7-Mar-2017
  • (2012)Integrating argumentation technologies and context-based search for intelligent processing of citizens' opinion in social mediaProceedings of the 6th International Conference on Theory and Practice of Electronic Governance10.1145/2463728.2463762(166-170)Online publication date: 22-Oct-2012

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cover image ACM Other conferences
dg.o '12: Proceedings of the 13th Annual International Conference on Digital Government Research
June 2012
324 pages
ISBN:9781450314039
DOI:10.1145/2307729

Sponsors

  • Elsevier
  • iSchool: College of Information Studies, University of Maryland
  • iPAC: Information Policy and Access Center

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Association for Computing Machinery

New York, NY, United States

Publication History

Published: 04 June 2012

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Author Tags

  1. government 2.0
  2. intelligent tools
  3. participation
  4. social medial

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dg.o '12
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  • iSchool
  • iPAC

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Overall Acceptance Rate 150 of 271 submissions, 55%

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Cited By

View all
  • (2020)A first approach towards integrating computational argumentation in cognitive citiesProceedings of the 13th International Conference on Theory and Practice of Electronic Governance10.1145/3428502.3428506(25-32)Online publication date: 23-Sep-2020
  • (2017)From Open Government to Open CityProceedings of the 10th International Conference on Theory and Practice of Electronic Governance10.1145/3047273.3047384(232-235)Online publication date: 7-Mar-2017
  • (2012)Integrating argumentation technologies and context-based search for intelligent processing of citizens' opinion in social mediaProceedings of the 6th International Conference on Theory and Practice of Electronic Governance10.1145/2463728.2463762(166-170)Online publication date: 22-Oct-2012

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