Events Calendar

YINS Distinguished Lecturer Series: Tauhid Zaman

Weekly Seminar
Event time: 
Wednesday, October 26, 2016 - 12:00pm to 1:30pm
Location: 
Yale Institute for Network Science See map
17 Hillhouse Ave, 3rd floor
New Haven, CT 06511
Event description: 

“Finding Online Extremists in Social Networks”

Speaker: Tauhid Zaman

KDD Career Development Professor in Communications and Technology
MIT Sloan School of Management

Talk summary:  Online extremists in social networks pose a new form of threat to the general public.  These extremists range from cyberbullies who harass innocent users to terrorist organizations such as ISIS that use social networks to spread propaganda.  Currently social networks suspend the accounts of such extremists in response to user complaints, but these extremist users simply create new accounts and continue their activities.  In this talk we present a new set of operational capabilities to help authorities mitigate the threat posed by online extremist groups in social networks. Using data from several hundred thousand extremist accounts on Twitter, we develop a behavioral model for these users, in particular what their accounts look like and who they connect with.  This model is used to identify new extremist accounts by predicting if they will be suspended for extremist activity.  We also use this model to track existing extremist users as they create new accounts by identifying if two accounts belong to the same user.  Finally, we use this model as the basis for an efficient policy to search the social network for suspended users’ new accounts.  Our search approach is based on a variant of the classic Polya’s urn setup.  We find a simple characterization of the optimal search policy for this model under fairly general conditions. Our search policy and main theoretical results generalize easily to search problems in other fields.  Joint work with Jytte Klausen and Christopher Marks.

Bio:  Tauhid Zaman is the KDD Career Development Professor in Communications and Technology MIT Sloan School of Management.  He received his BS, MEng, and PhD degrees in electrical engineering and computer science from MIT.   His research interest is in behavioral analytics, with a focus on solving operational problems using behavioral models, modern statistical methods, and network algorithms.  His work has been featured in Wired, Mashable, the LA Times, and Time Magazine.

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