Inaugural Award Recognizes Paper鈥檚 Lasting Impact on Mental Health Research
Inaugural Award Recognizes Paper鈥檚 Lasting Impact on Mental Health Research
Work from 麻豆区 Tech鈥檚 Munmun De Choudhury done nearly a decade ago, however, is holding up. In fact, she and her co-authors from Microsoft Research were just awarded the inaugural Web Science Trust Test of Time Award.
Presented at the , being held this week in Barcelona, Spain, the award recognizes the lasting impact of the team鈥檚 2013 paper .
鈥淲hen we wrote this paper, little did we know what it meant for times to come. We are energized more than ever before to see how this work can push the boundaries of population mental health,鈥 De Choudhury, an associate professor in the School of Interactive Computing, said in a tweet on June 26.
The award was announced during the conference鈥檚 opening session. Dame Wendy Hall, Web Science Trust executive director, made the announcement saying that it was difficult at first to choose from among all the groundbreaking papers presented over the last decade at the Web Science Conference.
鈥淏ut the trustees felt that this paper captured an important analysis of nearly 70,000 user posts to develop a novel social media depression index鈥攈elping us to understand more about the society that we shape (and that shapes us) through the Web.
鈥淭he paper has been well-cited, and the issue of mental health certainly retains much relevance today,鈥 said Hall.
The paper, written by De Choudhury, Scott Counts, and Eric Horvitz, was first presented at the 2013 ACM Web Science Conference in Paris, France. As part of the recognition of the work鈥檚 impact, De Choudhury is re-presenting the award-winning paper, and discussing its impact, during an online keynote presentation, June 29, at 9:45 a.m. EDT (3:45 p.m. CEST).
The Web Science Trust is a UK charity promoting the understanding of the web, through education and research in the discipline of web science.