Monday, February 11, 8-4:30pm
Digital Technology Center, Walter Library
University of Minnesota, Twin Cities (East Bank Campus)
The Networks and Neighborhoods in CyberSpace symposium convenes researchers, designers, community activists, policy makers and others from across the university and beyond for a multidisciplinary discussion and networking around how we perceive and construct networks of people, information and resources to solve complex problems.
The Call for Proposals for $250,000 grants to fund interdisciplinary research will be explained at the Symposium.
The following questions will guide our format of interactive question-driven panels and demonstrations/interest clusters.
* How are new forms of connectivity reshaping relationships among people and organizations and transforming the processes of discovery, learning, and communication?
* What are the cognitive, educational, ethical, commercial, social and political implications of intersecting physical and virtual spaces (e.g., cyberspace communities and physical neighborhoods)? Across languages and cultures?
* How can research relationships in academic settings such as the University of Minnesota be better facilitated and structured by modern technologies?
Event is FREE and open to the public. Registration has now closed. No on-site registration.
Symposium conveners:
- Christine Greenhow (Chair), Learning Technologies, College of Education + Human Development
- Ann Hill Duin, Academic & Distributed Computing Services, Office of Information Technology
- Linda Jorn, Digital Media Center, Office of Information Technology
- Joanna O’Connell, Spanish & Portugese Studies, College of Liberal Arts


