=Paper= {{Paper |id=Vol-2182/paper_1 |storemode=property |title= SW4SG 2018: Semantic Web for Social Good Workshop |pdfUrl=https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2182/paper_1.pdf |volume=Vol-2182 }} == SW4SG 2018: Semantic Web for Social Good Workshop == https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2182/paper_1.pdf
                    Semantic Web for Social Good
K. Krasnow Waterman1, Deborah L. McGuinness2, and James A. Hendler3

. 1 Decentralized Information Group, Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence
       Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA
       kkw@mit.edu

. 2 Tetherless World Constellation and Department of Cognitive Science, Rensselaer
       Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY, US, dlm@cs.rpi.edu

. 3 Institute for Data Exploration and Applications, Tetherless World Constellation and
        Department of Cognitive Science, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY,
        US, hendler@cs.rpi.edu

1 Description
Many of the Social Good topics can benefit from the sort of unplanned, cross-
domain, rapid-prototyping analysis that Linked Data makes possible. We’ve
learned that measuring topics like poverty, health, economic opportunity and
equality can be substantially more nuanced by considering broader categories of
data than organizations traditionally collect for their own use. Past conferences
have had individual presentations on topics that involve Semantic Web for Social
Good. This workshop is intended to present multiple topics, to better identify
intersections, overlaps, opportunities for accelerated advancement, and
opportunities for shared abstractions.

Motivation: Whether it’s called Social Good, Social Innovation, or even Social
Entrepreneurship, there is a rising tide of interest in how data supports substantial
change for the good of the planet and the people. Governments, NGO’s, and
academic disciplines such as political science, economics, and an array of hard
sciences have long been in the business of collecting as well as analyzing the
numbers associated with their highest priorities. Today, there are “B Corporations”
(non-profits certified to meet a set of rigorous social & environmental standards),
sustainability and charitable departments within traditional (“C”) corporations, and
even business school entrepreneurship departments focusing on recognizing and
impacting social change.

Official commitments to address the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
alone are estimated at 140 Billion USD annually across a 15-year horizon
(approximately $4.2 Trillion USD over the life of the program) and are expected
to continue to grow.ii At the same time, 60% of surveyed public company CEOs
identified sustainability as important to their investors and 75% of surveyed
                           iii
investment managers agreed.

With this alignment of corporate, finance, governmental, and NGO pressure for
results, it is anticipated that significant funding will be deployed to better
understand the problems, their causes and correlations, and the progress to their
resolution. Many of the active ISWC community members already have done
                                                 iv
work in or presented on a Social Good topic; we believe most will be interested
in understanding the confluence of these topics and the beginning development of
best practices.

Program Chairs:

K. Krasnow Waterman is a Visiting Scientist at the Decentralized Information
Group, Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology where she has focused on policy reasoning over data
transactions. In her academic life, she has also been Lecturer and Entrepreneur in
Residence in the Eller College of Management and Assistant Dean in the College
of Law, both at the University of Arizona, more than twenty years apart. The
diversity of these appointments reflect the diversity of her professional life outside
academia, where she managed technology at JP Morgan; was a trial attorney in
private practice and government; was the inception Chief Information Officer of a
counter-terrorism data analytics facility established by the White House
immediately following 9/11; returned to Wall Street to run large data-driven
programs for Citi and TIAA; and most recently was a partner in a private equity
firm. She was the inception Chair of the American Bar Association’s Committee
on Artificial Intelligence and Robotics. She has been a speaker in industry venues
such as TTI/Vanguard, Enterprise Data World, and Institutional Investor; she has
also published and spoken in traditional peer-reviewed environments such as IEEE
and AAAI.

Deborah L. McGuinness is the Tetherless World Senior Constellation Chair and
Professor of Computer and Cognitive Science. She is also the founding director of
the Web Science Research Center at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Deborah has
been recognized with awards as a fellow of the American Association for the
Advancement of Science (AAAS) for contributions to the Semantic Web,
knowledge representation, and reasoning environments and as the recipient of the
Robert Engelmore award from Association for the Advancement of Artificial
Intelligence (AAAI) for leadership in Semantic Web research and in bridging
Artificial Intelligence (AI) and eScience, significant contributions to deployed AI
applications, and extensive service to the AI community. Deborah is a leading
authority on the semantic web and has been working in knowledge representation
and reasoning environments for over 30 years. Deborah's primary research thrusts
include work on semantically-enabled schema and data integration, ontologies,
open linked data, data science, and foundational knowledge representation and
reasoning to support a wide range of informatics and analysis efforts. Prior to
joining RPI, Deborah was the acting director of the Knowledge Systems, Artificial
Intelligence Laboratory and Senior Research Scientist in the Computer Science
Department of Stanford University, and previous to that she was at AT&T Bell
Laboratories.

James Hendler is the Director of the Institute for Data Exploration and
Applications and the Tetherless World Professor of Computer, Web and Cognitive
Sciences at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute(RPI). He also serves as (acting) Chair
of the Board of Trustees and Director of the UK’s charitable Web Science Trust.
Hendler has authored over 250 technical papers in the areas of Semantic Web,
artificial intelligence, agent-based computing, open data systems and high
performance processing. One of the originators of the “Semantic Web,” Hendler
was the recipient of a 1995 Fulbright Foundation Fellowship, is a former member
of the US Air Force Science Advisory Board, and is a Fellow of the American
Association for Artificial Intelligence, the British Computer Society, the IEEE and
the AAAS. He is also the former Chief Scientist of the Information Systems Office
at the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and was
awarded a US Air Force Exceptional Civilian Service Medal in 2002. The former
editor-in-chief of IEEE Intelligent Systems, he is also the first computer scientist
to serve on the Board of Reviewing editors for Science. In 2010, Hendler was
named one of the 20 most innovative professors in America by Playboy magazine
and was selected as an “Internet Web Expert” by the US government. In 2012, he
was one of the inaugural recipients of the Strata Conference “Big Data” awards for
his work on large-scale open government data, and he is a columnist and associate
editor of the Big Data journal. In 2013, he was appointed by the governor as the
Open Data Advisor to New York State.

Program Committee:

John Breslin, Director, TechInnovate and Senior Lecturer, Electrical & Electronic
Engineering, National University of Ireland (NUI), Galway

Edward Curry, Lecturer, Informatics, National University of Ireland (NUI),
Galway NUI Galway; Research Leader, Insight Centre for Data Analytics; and
Investigator, LERO The Irish Software Research Centre

Lalana Kagal, Principal Research Scientist, Decentralized Information Group and
Internet Policy Research Initiative, Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence
Laboratory (CSAIL), Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Mayan Kejriwal, Research Scientist, Center on Knowledge Graphs, Information
Sciences Institute, University of Southern California

Hemant Purohit, Assistant Professor, Information Sciences & Technology
Department; Lead, Humanitarian, Semantics, and Informatics Lab, George Mason
University

Pedro Szekeley, Research Associate Professor and Project Leader, Center on
Knowledge Graphs, Information Sciences Institute, University of Southern
California

Amar Viswanathan, Research Assistant, Computer Science, Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute




i This list of 20 Sustainable Development Goal “Targets” was prioritized from the 169 total by a group of 85 world
experts in a study performed by Jeff Leitner, a member of our committee. See, “Where to Start with the SDG’s”,
published in OECD: Development Matters (July 21, 2017) at https://oecd-development- matters.org/2017/07/20/where-
to-start-with-the-sdgs/
ii “Development Aid Rises Again in 2016”, OECD (Paris,11Apr 2017) (See,charts, pp.8&9,confirming spend over
$140B in 2015 and estimating over $150B in 2016) http://www.oecd.org/dac/financing-sustainable-
development/development-finance-data/ODA-2016-detailed-summary.pdf
iii D. Kiron, G. Unruh, N. Kruschwitz, et al., “Corporate Sustainability at a Crossroads: Progress Towards Our
Common Future in Uncertain Times”, MIT Sloan Management Review in Cooperation with BCG (23 May 2017) (See,
Executive Summary, #3: Corporate Sustainability Hits the Mainstream) https://sloanreview.mit.edu/projects/corporate-
sustainability-at-a-crossroads/
iv See, notes, infra and, eg, H.Halping & F. Bria, “Crowdmapping Social Digital Innovation with Linked Data,” 12th
EWSC (Portoroz, 2015) (https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2950955 )