European Social Networks Conference

Transcription

European Social Networks Conference
Program
European Social Networks Conference
Barcelona, July 1-4, 2014
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Dear participant,
Below you will find the program of the European Social Networks Conference 2014 in Barcelona
and practical information concerning accommodation, transport, places to eat, things to do, etc.
In the appendix, you will find a number of maps of the university campus to help you find your
way. This program may be subject to change - it will be updated and last-minute changes will be
announced on site. Please check our conference website www.eusn.org for the latest
information.
Some things you should know:
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Like at the Sunbelt conferences, participants often hop sessions to catch papers of interest - this
is fully accepted. Consequently, all presentations are to start and stop at the intended times.
Some sessions are organized; others are not. In the latter case, the last presenter is chair. Please
check the program - it might be you! Session chairs are responsible for keeping time...
If you present, please load your presentation on the desktop computer before your session
starts. If you need your own laptop, connecting it will be in your presentation time.
If you present a poster, please be present on site 10 minutes before the session starts.
If you have any questions, please seek out the organizers or assistants (the latter recognizable by
the conference t-shirts they wear). They will be happy to help you.
We are happy to hosting you in Barcelona! Best wishes,
The conference organizers,
José Luis Molina and Miranda Lubbers
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The conference organizers wish to thank Álvaro Fernández and Victoria Reyes García (ICTA) for provision of
detailed travel and practical information, Paula Escribano (Dept. of Anthropology) for her help with the
author index, and Laura Calvet (ICTA), Florencia del Castillo (Dept. of Archeology), Marta Lobato, Dan
Rodríguez, and Beatriz Patraca (Dept. of Anthropology) for contributing information about places to eat and
things to do.
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General program overview
Tuesday,
July 1st
8.30 – 11.30
Workshops
(lunch box)
Wednesday,
July 2nd
8.30 – 11.30
Workshops
11.40-13.20
Paper sessions
12.15 – 15.15
Workshops
Thursday,
July 3rd
8.30 -9.50
Paper sessions
Friday,
July 4th
Coffee/tea
Coffee/tea
10.10 – 11.30
Paper sessions
10.10 – 11.30
Paper sessions
Coffee/tea
Coffee/tea
11.50 – 13.10
Paper sessions
11.50 – 13.10
Paper sessions
LUNCH BREAK
LUNCH BREAK
8.50 -9.50
Paper sessions
LUNCH BREAK
14.50-16.30
Paper sessions
16.00 –
19.00
Workshops
15.30 –
19.00
Presentation new
Coffee/tea
books CIS
16.50 – 18.30
- Mesa
Hispana – Paper sessions
Business
meeting
15.20 –
16.50
Poster
session
14.40 –
16.10
Discussion
Ethics and
SNA
17.00 – .15 Welcome
17.15-17.30 Award
announcements
17.30 - 18.45 Keynote
address Ulrik Brandes
19.00 Shuttle to BCN
20.00 Banquet
5
14.40 – 16.20
Paper sessions
Coffee/tea
16.40 – 18.20
Paper sessions
Workshop program - July 1 and 2
Previous registration is required, see www.eusn.org.
Workshop program
July 1 and 2
Workshops
Room number
Room 213
Room 503 /
Sala de Juntas
Room 214
Tuesday July 1
8.30 - 11.30
Introduction to
Social Network
Analysis
(3 hrs)
Thomas Friemel
Extracting Data
from Online Social
Networks
(6 hrs)
Cristina Pérez-Solà &
Jordi Herrera
Introduction to
Social Network
Analysis with R
(6 hrs)
Michal Bojanowski
(503)
Tuesday July 1
12.15 - 15.15
Theory and Methods
for Social Network
Analysis
(3 hrs)
Filip Agneessens
Tuesday July 1
16.00 - 19.00
Exponential Random
Graph Models
(ERGMs) using statnet
(3 hrs)
Martina Morris &
Steven Goodreau
Analysis of
Longitudinal Social
Network Data using
RSiena
(6 hrs)
Tom Snijders
(Sala de Juntas)
Wednesday July 2
8.30 - 11.30
Temporal
Exponential Random
Graph Models
(TERGMs) for
dynamic network
modeling in statnet
(3 hrs)
Martina Morris &
Steven Goodreau
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Personal Network
Analysis with R
(6 hrs)
Raffaele Vacca
Workshop program
July 1 and 2
Workshops
Room number
Room 210
Room 215
Room 204
Tuesday July 1
8.30 - 11.30
Tulip – where Social
Network Analysis
meets with Visual
Analytics
(6 hrs)
Bruno Pinaud &
Guy Melançon
Mixed Methods
Research in Social
Networks
(6 hrs)
Elisa Bellotti &
Betina Hollstein
Visualización
con Pajek
(in Spanish)
(3 hrs)
Alejandro Arnulfo Ruiz
Leon & Nina Ines Jung
Tuesday July 1
12.15 - 15.15
Tuesday July 1
16.00 - 19.00
Analysis of Multiple
Networks with
algebra and
`multiplex´
(3 hrs)
Antonio Rivero Ostoic
Wednesday July 2
8.30 - 11.30
Analysis of Large TwoMode Networks using
Pajek
(3 hrs)
Vladimir Batagelj
Visual Network
Research:
Using Net-Map and
Vennmaker
(6 hrs)
Markus Gamper,
Jennifer Hauck,
Michael Schönhuth &
Martin Stark
EgoNet Data Collection,
Visualization and
Analysis in Personal
Networks Research
(3 hrs)
Alejandro GarcíaMacías & Judith
Pampalona-Tarrés
visone
Part IGeneral Introduction
(3 hrs)
Jürgen Lerner &
Uwe Nagel
visone
Part IINetwork Ensembles
(3 hrs)
Jürgen Lerner &
Uwe Nagel
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List of workshops
Workshop title
Instructor(s)
Date and time
Introduction to Social Network Analysis (3 hrs)
Thomas Friemel
Tue 8.30-11.30
Theory and Methods for Social Network
Analysis (3 hrs)
Filip Agneessens
Tue 12.15-15.15
Mixed Methods Research in Social Networks
(6 hrs)
Elisa Bellotti & Betina
Hollstein
Tue 8.30-11.30 & 12.15-15.15
Introduction to Social Network Analysis with R
(6 hrs)
Michal Bojanowski
Tue 8.30-11.30 & 12.15-15.15
Personal Network Analysis with R (6 hrs)
Raffaele Vacca
Tue 16.00-19.00 & Wed 8.30-11.30
Exponential Random Graph Models (ERGMs)
using statnet (3 hrs)
Martina Morris & Steven
Goodreau
Tue 16.00-19.00
Temporal Exponential Random Graph Models
(TERGMs) for dynamic network modeling in
statnet (3 hrs)
Martina Morris & Steven
Goodreau
Wed 8.30-11.30
Analysis of Longitudinal Social Network Data
using RSiena (6 hrs)
Tom Snijders
Tue 16.00-19.00 & Wed 8.30-11.30
Analysis of Multiple Networks with algebra
and `multiplex´ (3 hrs)
Antonio Rivero Ostoic
Tue 16.00-19.00
Analysis of Large Two-mode Networks using
Pajek (3 hrs)
Vladimir Batagelj
Wed 8.30-11.30
Extracting Data from Online Social Networks
(6 hrs)
Cristina Pérez-Solà & Jordi
Herrera
Tue 8.30-11.30 & 12.15-15.15
EgoNet - Data Collection, Visualization and
Alejandro García-Macías &
Analysis in Personal Networks Research (3 hrs) Judith Pampalona-Tarrés
Tue 12.15-15.15
Visual Network Research: Using Net-Map and
Vennmaker (6 hrs)
Markus Gamper, Jennifer
Hauck, Michael Schönhuth
& Martin Stark
Tue 16.00-19.00 & Wed 8.30-11.30
Tulip -- where Social Network Analysis meets
with Visual Analytics (6 hrs)
Bruno Pinaud & Guy
Melançon
Tue 8.30-11.30 & 12.15-15.15
visone workshop. Part I - General introduction
(3 hrs)
Jürgen Lerner & Uwe Nagel
Tue 16.00-19.00
visone workshop. Part II - Network Ensembles
(3 hrs)
Jürgen Lerner & Uwe Nagel
Wed 8.30-11.30
Visualización con Pajek (in Spanish) (3 hrs)
Alejandro Arnulfo Ruiz
Leon & Nina Ines Jung
Tue 8.30-11.30
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Special session - Tuesday July 1, 15.30 - 19.00
"Mesa Hispana: The Development of Social Network Analysis in Latin America"
(in Spanish)
Chairs: Isidro Maya-Jariego & Daniel Holgado, Universidad de Sevilla
Location: Sala de Graus, indicated with 8 on Map 7.
15.30 - 16.00: New publications of the Centre for Sociological Research (Centro de Investigaciones
Sociológicas, CIS)
Félix Requena Santos, President of the Center for Sociological Research (CIS), will present the classical texts
by Wasserman and Faust, and Kadushin, recently translated into Spanish for the first time. José Luis Molina,
Verónica de Miguel and Isidro Maya-Jariego, collaborators of this edition, will comment the books. These
books will be available for purchasing during the conference.
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Análisis de redes sociales. Métodos y aplicaciones, por Wasserman, Stanley; Faust, Katherine.
Comprender las redes sociales. Teorías, conceptos y hallazgos, por Kadushin, Charles.
16.00 - 18.00: The Development of Social Network Analysis in Latin America
Ignacio Ramos, Carlos Contreras, & Alejandro García-Macías
México: Un eje central en el desarrollo de las redes hispanas.
Jorge Palacio & Gabriel Vélez-Cuartas
Colombia: Expansión e irrupción en el campo global.
Eduardo Marques, Renata Bichir & Encarnación Moya
Notas sobre el análisis de redes sociales en Brasil.
José Manuel Gaete
De la investigación social a la técnica profesional: Una crónica histórica del ARS en Chile (1995-2014)
Laura Teves y Lorena Pasarín
Argentina: Entre la desconfianza metodológica y la aplicación a problemas sociales.
Alejandro Ruiz & Nina Inés Jung
Semblanza de Jorge Gil Mendieta.
18.00 - 19.00: Ibero-American Business Meeting (to start a new regional conference series in Latin America
in 2015)
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Paper sessions - July 2 and 3
Wednesday
July 2
Paper sessions - 1
(Chairs: Mark Tranmer & Francesca
Pallotti)
Multilevel networks
Knowledge
Networks in Scientific
Research I
Network Perspectives and
Applications in Criminology I
Room
11.40 - 12.00
211
Organizations as network
nodes: A new multilevel
framework. Mark Tranmer,
Francesca Pallotti and
Alessandro Lomi
212
Brokering between
policy makers and
academics: a space
between fields? Moira
Faul
Sala de Graus
Computer-assisted personal
interviewing and the
visualization of personal
networks: the case of young
cannabis users. Marieke
Vlaemynck
12.00 - 12.20
Using multilevel
exponential random graph
models to study the
interdependence of the
covert and overt and the
social and functional.
Johan Koskinen, Rachel
Stevenson, Gemma
Edwards, Kathryn Oliver,
Chiara Broccatelli and
Garry Robins
Comparing fields of
sciences: the network of
collaborations to research
projects in Italian
academia. Luigi Guadalupi,
Elisa Bellotti and Johan
Koskinen
Testing experience
sampling across
organizational boundaries
under uncertain
conditions. Paola Zappa
and Alessandro Lomi
Belief Networks in
Interdisciplinary
Scientific Teams.
Lorien Jasny
Personal Networks and
victimization. Gerald
Mollenhorst, Christofer
Edling and Jens Rydgren
The importance of the
international mobility
of scientists in the
creation of knowledge
networks. Pedro
Videira
Personal networks and
desistance in the transition
to adulthood. Joel Martí,
Eugenia Albani and José Cid
Authorship networks
in Happiness
Research: A
Bibliometric Study.
Tahereh Dehdarirad,
Mireia Yter and José
Antonio Rodríguez
Mapping the social
landscape: Roads to
Happiness. José A.
Rodríguez
Personal networks and
violence in Venezuela. Ellen
Vandenbogaerde
(Chairs: Ellen Vandenbogaerde &
Marieke Vlaemynck)
(Chair: Filipa Ribeiro)
12.20 - 12.40
12.40 - 13.00
13.00 - 13.20
13.20-14.40
A theoretical and
methodological blueprint
for studying community
social capital as the
intersection of personal
and organizational
networks. Jordi Comas,
Carl Milofsky and Brandn
Green
LUNCH BREAK
10
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Wednesday
July 2
Paper sessions - 1
Room
11.40 - 12.00
Qualitative and Mixed
Methods Studies I
(Chairs: Mireia Bolibar &
Dafne Muntanyola)
Interlocking
Directorates and Elite
Networks I
Networks and Meaning
(Chair: Gabriel Velez Cuartas)
(Chairs: Julian Cardenas &
Josep Rodríguez)
201
Using qualitative research to
understand complex social
interactions – the case of
student learning in
longitudinal integrated
placements. Fabian Held,
Michele Daly and Chris
Roberts
Two methods, one sample.
Measuring egocentric
networks using name
generator and contact diary
methods. Éva Huszti and
Beáta Dávid
202
Cooperative
Interlocks: The
Regulatory Outcomes
of Multistakeholder
Networks. Lasse
Henriksen
203
Relational discourse
analysis: interruptions
and accounts of action in
a political debate. Jan
Fuhse
How does the
network structure
affect firm
performance and
innovation incentives
in transition
countries? The case of
Armenia. Tatevik
Poghosyan
Measuring policy
controversy with
Discourse Network
Analysis: the abortion
debates in Belgium
(1972-1990) revisited.
Allan Muller
12.20 - 12.40
What’s in a hub? A
comparative case study of
national and regional
organisations. Kathleen
Sheehan
The economic elite
and the control of
public savings in
Morocco. Mohamed
Oubenal and
Abdellatif Zeroual
12.40 - 13.00
Online visual evaluation: the
social network of design
students viewing the work of
their peers. Sian Joel-Edgar
Interlocks of Business
and Politics and State
Capitalism in
contemporary Russia.
V. Popov
Shifting discourses of the
European Central Bank
and the Federal Reserve
System: Exploring
structural space in
semantic networks.
Adina Nerghes, Peter
Groenewegen and Iina
Hellsten
Socio-Semantic Network
Analysis for Impact
Assessment. Jana
Diesner, Jinseok Kim and
Andrew Higgins
13.00 - 13.20
Recruiting procedures in local
politics and the participation
of the migrant population.
First results of a Process NetMap analysis. Noemi Carrel
Families United:
Kinship Ties and
Similarity of Political
Donation among
Business Groups in
Taiwan. Zong-Rong
Lee
Struggle for Meanings in
the Arts: Sociosemantic
Network Analysis of St.
Petersburg Artistic
Communities. Nikita
Basov, Wouter de Nooy
and Aleksandra Nenko
13.20-14.40
LUNCH BREAK
12.00 - 12.20
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Wednesday July 2
Paper sessions - 2
Computational
Statistical Advances in
SNA
Knowledge Networks in
Scientific Research II
(Chair: Filipa Ribeiro)
Network Perspectives and
Applications in Criminology
II
(Chair: Alberto Caimo)
(Chairs: Ellen Vandenbogaerde &
Marieke Vlaemynck)
Room
14.50 - 15.10
211
Social networks and
opinion spreading:
studying possible
scenarios through
agent-based
modeling. Javier
Alvarez-Galvez
212
Footprints of Innovation.
Comparing R&D Actors and
Dynamics by Patent Data.
Florian Windhager, Lukas
Zenk and Michael Smuc
Sala de Graus
Covert networks: theories
and applications of
network analysis. Kathryn
Oliver, Nick Crossley,
Gemma Edwards, Johan
Koskinen and Martin
Everett
15.10 - 15.30
Efficient estimation
algorithms for
Bayesian exponential
random graph
models. Alberto
Caimo.
Analyzing the reference
universes to understand
overlap between knowledge
networks and social
networks in science.
Beatrice Milard and Delio
Lucena
Anti-trafficking efforts in
EU: A network
perspective. Riccardo De
Vita and Jean-Pierre Gauci
15.30 - 15.50
Prototyping networks
through archetypes.
Giancarlo Ragozini and
Maria Rosaria
D'Esposito
Trends in interregional
scientific collaboration in
Europe: Moving centers or
fixed pattern? Adam Ploszaj
and Dorota CelinskaJanowicz
Framing the Intersections:
Operational Intelligence,
Law Enforcement and
Network Science. Dan
Mazare
15.50 - 16.10
Applying latent
variable methods to
bipartite networks.
Isabella Gollini
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16.10 - 16.30
Coincidence analysis
to study networks in
photographic
collections. Modesto
Escobar
Analysis of scientific
collaboration and academic
performance. Evidence from
the co-authorship network
of the Italian statisticians.
Domenico De Stefano,
Vittorio Fuccella, Maria
Prosperina Vitale and
Susanna Zaccarin
Knowledge creation in
higher education: beyond
collaboration networks.
Filipa M. Ribeiro and
Miranda Lubbers
16.30 - 16.50
COFFEE/TEA
12
Historical Network
Research I (continues after
coffee break)
The Cobden-Chevalier
effect: Evaluating the
causal effect of the Most
Favoured Nation clause in
presence of Network
Interferences. Luca De
Benedictis and Silvia Nenci
Wednesday July 2
Paper sessions - 2
Migration, Mobility and
Transnational Networks I
(Chairs: Basak Bilecen & Markus
Gamper)
Room
14.50 - 15.10
201
A social and spatial
network approach to
migrant mobility and
transnationalism.
Raffaele Vacca, Giacomo
Solano, José Luis Molina
and Miranda Jessica
Lubbers
15.10 - 15.30
Relationships with
Spaniards in the personal
networks of immigrants
in endogamous and
exogamous couples: The
extent of relational
integration. Verónica de
Miguel-Luken, Miranda J.
Lubbers, Dan RodríguezGarcía and Miguel SolanaSolana
Role of media in
providing transnational
social support.
Rajalakshmi Kanagavel
15.30 - 15.50
15.50 - 16.10
Integrated kinship and
mobility networks: a
West African case study.
Klaus Hamberger and
Karin Sohler
16.10 - 16.30
Transnational Support of
Ethnic Germans - A
Visual Network
Approach. Markus
Gamper
16.30 - 16.50
COFFEE/TEA
Interlocking
Directorates and
Elite Networks II
(Chairs: Julian Cardenas &
Josep Rodríguez)
202
Procedures to
address the core of
economic power in
interlocking
directorates
application to the
Spanish continuous
market in 2013. Iago
Santos Castroviejo
Networks of
corporate directors
as a mean to
manage external
dependencies of
Chinese listed firms.
Iwona Sulinska
The structure of
ethnic social capital:
two-mode analysis
of interlocks among
immigrant
organizations.
Matteo Gagliolo
Networking the Environment I
(Chairs: Isabel Díaz Reviriego, Laura Calvet
Mir, Matthieu Salpeteur & Victoria Reyes
García)
203
Assessing biases in sampling
methods for documenting
seed exchange networks. A
case study from Northern
Cameroon. Jean Wencelius,
Mathieu Thomas, Pierre
Barbillon and Eric Garine
Good year, bad year:
changing strategies, changing
networks? A two year study
of seed acquisition in
Northern Cameroon. Chloe
Violon, Mathieu Thomas and
Eric Garine
Social networks, seed system
resilience and agrobiodiversity conservation in
two cases study from India.
Federica Ravera, Mauricio
Bellon, Unai Pascual, Adam
Drucker, Irene Iniesta-Grandia
and Laura Calvet-Mir
The Decline of
The social diffusion pathways
National Corporate
of sorghum varieties and
Networks: The Case associated knowledge in the
of Norway. Sigmund Mount Kenya region. Vanesse
Grønmo and Trond
Labeyrie, Joseph Ireri Kamau
Løyning
and Christian Leclerc
Comparing power
Interactions between human
systems: Latin
and plant properties in plant
America and Europe. circulation networks. A case
Julian Cardenas and
study from Vanua Lava,
José A. Rodríguez
Vanuatu (South Pacific).
Mathieu Thomas, Pierre
Barbillon and Sophie Caillon
13
Wednesday July 2
Paper sessions - 3
Algorithms I
(Last presenter is chair)
Knowledge Networks in
Scientific Research III
Historical Network
Research I
(Chair: Filipa Ribeiro)
(Chairs: Matthias Bixler, Florian
Kerschbaumer & Martin Stark)
Room
16.50 - 17.10
211
Hierarchical link
clustering of
networks
Jernej Bodlaj and
Vladimir Batagelj
212
Advance use of SciMAT
through its API. Manuel
Jesus Cobo Martín,
María Gutiérrez Salcedo,
M.A. Martínez, Antonio
López-Herrera and
Enrique Herrera-Viedma
Sala de Graus
Plague and Position: The
Black Death and the
Emergence of the
Medieval Hansa. Bernd
Wurpts and Katherine
Stovel
17.10 - 17.30
Egocentric
Decompositions of
Social Network
Graphs Using
Dominating Sets
Moses Boudourides
and Sergios Lenis
Scientific collaboration
in Brazilian Health
Informatics community.
Roberto Baptista,
Anderson Hummel,
Fabio Teixeira and Ivan
Pisa
Exploring the
Relationships among the
People of Medieval
Scotland. Cornell Jackson
17.30 - 17.50
Network group
discovery by
hierarchical label
propagation
Lovro Šubelj and
Marko Bajec
Co-authorship
strategies and patterns
in international and
national journals. Beata
Lopaciuk-Gonczaryk
17.50 - 18.10
A seed-centric
algorithm for
community
detection in
multiplex networks
Manel Hmimida and
Rushed Kanawati
Ego-centered
association rules
based on bipartite
graph.
Raffaele Miele and
Giuseppe Giordano
A network intervention
on scientific networks:
design and reactions.
Raffaele Vacca,
Christopher McCarty,
Michael Conlon and
David Nelson
Collaboration reels:
evolution of university
collaboration network.
Michal Bojanowski
SNA applied to financial
agents at the service of
municipal and State
taxation systems in Late
Medieval Catalonia. Albert
Reixach and Esther
Redondo
Financial networks and
money-changers in early
modern Castile. David
Carvajal
18.10 - 18.30
22.00 - 24.00
The life cycle of naturalist
networks in early modern
Japan. Xin Xing and Xing Liu
Hospitality Suite
Location: Bar Frankfurt, Vila Universitaria (3 on Map 3)
14
Wednesday July 2
Paper sessions - 3
Online Social
Networks I
Interlocking Directorates
and Elite Networks III
Networks and the Labour
Market
(Chair: Thomas Friemel)
(Chairs: Julian Cardenas &
Josep Rodríguez)
(Chairs: Oriol Barranco, Mireia
Bolibar, Joel Martí, Irene Cruz &
Joan Miquel Verd)
Room
16.50 - 17.10
201
Who is on Facebook?
Determinants of
Social Networking
Site Membership.
Bas Hofstra, Rense
Corten and Frank van
Tubergen
203
Access to Ethnic Social
Capitals in Multicultural
Toronto. Bonnie Erickson
17.10 - 17.30
Facebook
communities, pages
and groups in the
Basque Country.
Alexander Ronzhyn
17.30 - 17.50
Unraveling the social
networking mystery
– What’s behind the
social tie? Cornelia
Reyes Acosta
202
The hidden rules and
open secrets of
corporate governance.
Longitudinal analysis of
“old boys networks”
and interlocking
directorates. Elisa
Bellotti, Johan Koskinen,
Moses Boudourides,
Sergios Lenis and Ning
Gao
The political
embeddedness of
economic system: the
effects of politics in the
interlocking
directorates networks
of Spain (1997, 2007,
2010). Rubén Juste
Interlocking
directorates and the
law on gender quotas in
Norway, 2008-2013.
Trond Løyning
17.50 - 18.10
How Authentic is
Online Friendship?
Georgians about
Social Capital via
Social Networks. Lia
Tsuladze
Small Worlds
Characteristics in the
interlocking directors
networks. Sana ElouaerMrizak
Involved ties, the main
reason of the hiring in
social networks. Oriol
Alonso Alsina
18.10 - 18.30
A social network
framework to
analyze the cultural
contents of Kpop
across countries. Ji
Young Park, Ji Young
Kim, Wayne Weiai Xu
and Han Woo Park
Interlocking
directorates and
collusion in the
European chemical
industry, 1960-2000.
Hubert Buch-Hansen
The social networks of
social entrepreneurs.
Jose Luis Molina, Hugo
Valenzuela-García, Marta
María Lobato, Paula
Escribano, Miranda J.
Lubbers and María
Eugenia Santana
22.00 - 24.00
Hospitality Suite
Location: Bar Frankfurt, Vila Universitaria (3 on Map 3)
15
The Positional –
Reticular Method: A
Bridging Proposal
between Relational
Social Capital
Approaches. Alejandro
García-Macías and Carlos
Lozares
Social networks as
strategy for job seeking.
Lídia Yepes
Thursday July 3
Paper sessions - 1
Ethnography and
Social Network
Research
(Chairs: Laura Teves & Eva
Fischer)
Political Networks I:
General call
Entrepreneurs and their
Networks
(Chairs: Karin Ingold and Mark
Lubell)
(Chairs: Judith Pampalona &
Giacomo Solano)
Room
8.30 - 8.50
211
The social mapping
of the Urban Solid
Waste. Juan Nuñez
212
Political Networks and
Cross-border Policy
Governance: Agency,
geography and policy
outcomes. Christophe
Sohn, Dimitris
Christopoulos and Johan
Koskinen
Sala de Graus
Context matters? The
Influence of Microstates
on the Entrepreneur’s
Personal Networks. The
case of Andorra. Judith
Pampalona-Tarrés
8.50 - 9.10
Ethnographical
approach to the
research of
community practices
and behaviours in
motivational online
communities.
Eugenia Kuznetsova
Trust and
Communication in
Cross-Border CounterTerrorism Networks.
Cali Ellis
The use of social
networks for the
business: a comparison
between transnational
and local immigrant
entrepreneurs. Giacomo
Solano
9.10 - 9.30
Social relations in
spaces for
performance: a
comparative study
using SNA and
participant
observation.
Giancarlo Ragozini
and Marco Serino
National Parliamentary
Coordination after
Lisbon: A Network
Approach. Philip Leifeld
and Thomas Malang
Developing Network
Models of
Entrepreneurial
Ecosystems in
Developing Economies.
Daniel Evans and Louis
Boguchwal
9.30 - 9.50
Ethnography and
Social Network
Research. Laura
Teves and Eva Fischer
Network Analysis of
Parliamentary Debates:
A Pilot Study on Two UK
House of Commons
Debates. Zaher Salah,
Frans Coenen and
Davide Grossi
Conditions for and
consequences of
entrepreneurs' social
network change in Dutch
neighborhoods.
Veronique Schutjens,
Gerald Mollenhorst and
Beate Volker
9.50 - 10.10
COFFEE/TEA
16
Thursday July 3
Paper sessions - 1
Network Functionality
Models I (Chairs: Juan Tejada
Ego-centered
Networks
& Elisenda Molina)
(Last presenter is chair)
Room
8.30 - 8.50
201
Diffusion of Behavior in
Network Games
Orchestrated by Social
Learning. Ines Lindner
202
-
8.50 - 9.10
How Much Do We Pay
for Spreading
Information?
Advantages and
Disadvantages of Node
Selecting by Centralities.
Hamid Zargari Asl and
Homayoun Ebrahimian
Personal networks of
migrants: The forms
of local and nonlocal
ties in a metropolitan
city. Burge Elvan
Erginli
9.10 - 9.30
Communication and
Coordination in Social
Networks: Action as
Signaling Device. Jia-Ping
Huang, Maurice Koster
and Ines Lindner
The longitudinal
change of core
discussion networks.
Julia Koltai, Fruzsina
Albert and Beáta
Dávid
9.30 - 9.50
Influence Aggregation in
Models of Information
Diffusion. Alessio
Muscillo and Juan Tejada
Intra-organisational
networks
Solving the problem
of ineffective
subsidiary: the impact
of intraorganizational
networks. Valentina
Kuskova, Stanley
Wasserman and Irina
Volkova
9.50 - 10.10
COFFEE/TEA
17
Thursday July 3
Paper sessions - 2
Longitudinal Network
Modelling I
(Chair: Tom Snijders)
Political Networks II:
Leadership and
Political Capital (Chair:
Online Social Networks II
(Last presenter is chair)
Dimitris Christopoulos)
Room
10.10 - 10.30
211
Hierarchical multilevel
analysis of network
dynamics: further
developments. Tom
Snijders and Johan
Koskinen
212
Policy Networks and
Performance: The
effect of
implementation
agencies’ position in
policy networks on
performance. Dorine
Boumans
Sala de Graus
The Dynamics of Stack
Overflow Tags Network.
Dominika Czerniawska
and Jacek Szejda
10.30 - 10.50
Continuously or
discretely – how to
analyze continuous
dependent actor
attributes in stochastic
actor-oriented models.
Nynke M. D. Niezink
and Tom A. B. Snijders
Influence of the
dynamic formation of
social networks on the
diffusion processes.
Lourdes Mólera Peris,
Rafael López Serrano,
Pedro Noguera Méndez
and María Semitiel
García
Contributions of
Salivary Hormones to
Selection in Friendship
and Conflict Networks.
Olga Kornienko, Serena
Weren, Claire Yee, Gary
Hill, David Schaefer and
Douglas Granger
The Impact of Social
Networks on
Leadership Behaviour.
Dimitris Christopoulos
Open-coopetition in the
Cloud computing
Industry: the OpenStack
NOVA case. Jose Teixeira
Brokerage and
Entrepreneurship in
Policy Networks: A
Longitudinal Analysis
of Strategic Behavior.
Karin Ingold, Dimitris
Christopoulos and
Manuel Fischer
Reputation in social
media: a semantic
network analysis of
hashtags. Laura Illia,
Elanor Colleoni,
Alessandro Rozza and
Katia Meggiorin
The changing
legitimacy of
economic orders. A
discourse network
analysis of evaluation
of the economy
before and after the
financial crisis.
Sebastian Haunss
Hyperlink Formation in
Social Bookmarking
Systems: Who is Who
Online? Juan D. Borrero,
Gualda Estrella and
Carpio José
10.50 - 11.10
11.10 - 11.30
11.30 - 11.50
COFFEE/TEA
18
Thursday July 3
Paper sessions - 2
Network
Functionality Models
II (Chairs: Juan Tejada &
Social Influence
(Last presenter is chair)
University Networks I micro level
(Chair: Daniel Houben)
Elisenda Molina)
Room
10.10 - 10.30
201
Clustering networks
based on game
theory. Daniel
Gomez and Javier
Castro
202
Social influence on
students' experiences
of the process of
transition into
postgraduate study.
Social influence on
students' experiences
of the process of
transition into
postgraduate study.
Matthew Sitch and
Ruth Lowry
203
Assessing the effect of
student networks on
academic performance.
Maria Prosperina Vitale,
Giovanni C. Porzio and
Patrick Doreian
10.30 - 10.50
Network Game with
Intertemporal Choice
and Knowledge
Externalities.
Vladimir Matveenko
and Alexei Korolev
Detecting Social
Influence in Egonetworks and
Transportation Mode
Choice. Susan Pike
Erasmus student
mobility. Kristijan
Breznik
10.50 - 11.10
Relational bundles in
the analysis of
multiple networks.
Antonio Rivero
Ostoic
Relational chains in
student world. MariePierre Bès
Support structures for
undergraduate medical
students – an approach
using social network
analysis. Joseph Heath,
Rachel Isba and Rachel
Markham
11.10 - 11.30
Centrality and Social
Capital dependence
on network
functionality: a game
theoretical
approach. Ramón
Flores, Elisenda
Molina and Juan
Tejada
If you tell me about
your friends can I
predict your food
purchasing behaviour?
Iljana Schubert, Judith
de Groot and Adrian
Newton
Cooperative learning
focused to the
cooperative network: A
study with nursing
students. Pilar
Marques-Sanchez, Elena
Fernandez-Martinez,
Cristina Liebana-Presa,
Natalia Arias-Ramos,
Enedina QuirogaSanchez and Arrate
Pinto-Carral
11.30 - 11.50
COFFEE/TEA
19
Thursday July 3
Paper sessions - 3
Longitudinal Network
Modelling II
(Chair: Tom Snijders)
Political Networks III:
Environmental Policy
and Governance (Chair:
Communication
Networks
(Chair: Thomas Friemel)
Manuel Fischer)
Room
11.50 - 12.10
211
Political skill,
friendship and
leadership network
position and
performance - a
longitudinal analysis.
Yuval Kalish
212
Using social network
analysis to unravel
complexity in
agricultural
biodiversity
governance. Jennifer
Hauck and Jenny
Schmidt
Sala de Graus
Risk communication,
power relations, and
politics of expertise in
South Korea. Yunjae
Kang, Dong-Kwang Kim
and Jinseo Park
12.10 - 12.30
The Evolution of
Knowledge Creation in
Organized Business
Groups. Ingmar
Hammer
Blueprints: InterInstitutional Policy
Influence in the
Global Fisheries
Governance Complex.
James Hollway
Do International News
Reflect World
Hierarchy? A Network
Approach. Laurent
Beauguitte, Marta
Severo and Hugues
Pécout
12.30 - 12.50
Keeping Up with the
Family? A Longitudinal
Analysis of Kinship
Networks and
Performance of
Intercorporate
Alliances. Zong-Rong
Lee and Ming-Yi Chang
Financial Networks
and Real Economy: A
Multi-agent Simulation
Framework. Bulent
Ozel, Andrea Teglio and
Mattea Montagna
Issue framing, policy
types and network
dynamics in climate
change policymaking.
Christian Hirschi
Dynamic ego behavior.
A typology how
participants at events
interact over time. Filip
Agneessens and Lukas
Zenk
The politics of
market-based
instruments: A case
study of Swiss climate
change policy.
Marlene Kammerer
and Christian Hirschi
Homophily in TV
related conversation
networks. Thomas
Friemel
12.50 - 13.10
13.10 - 14.40
LUNCH BREAK
20
Thursday July 3
Paper sessions - 3
Business, Market,
Customers I
(Chair: Gabriel Pérez)
Social Networks, Social
Support and Health Care
I (Chairs: Maksim Tsvetovat,
Adolescent Networks I
(Last presenter is chair)
Cristina Metgher & Tatyana
Kanzaveli)
Room
11.50 - 12.10
201
Peer effects and
performance
similarity in interorganizational
networks. Francesca
Pallotti, Paola Tubaro
and Alessandro Lomi
12.10 - 12.30
Relying on networks
to improve
innovative
outcomes: A
longitudinal analysis
applied to UK. Luisa
Delgado-Márquez,
Maksim Belitski and
Blanca L. DelgadoMárquez
Role of Social
Network in Market
Mechanism under
Asymmetric
Information. Károly
Miklós Kiss, Blanka
Bajnai and Zsolt
Stenger
Ownership-effect on
the dynamics of
industry space over
the financial crisis in
Hungary. Balazs
Lengyel, Laszlo
Lorincz, Karoly Miklos
Kiss and Blanka
Bajnai
LUNCH BREAK
12.30 - 12.50
12.50 - 13.10
13.10 - 14.40
202
"You have to be dying
before you actually see
a doctor..." Patients'
medicines safety
networks at transfer of
care. Beth Fylan Gwynn,
Alison Blenkinsopp,
Gerry Armitage and
Deirdre Naylor
Characteristics in the
personal network and
mortality risk in older
adults. Lea Ellwardt,
Theo van Tilburg, Marja
Aartsen, Rafael Wittek
and Nardi Steverink
203
Ego network or
connectivity set?
Structural cohesion and
postsecondary
educational
expectations. Martín
Santos.
Social Space of Online
Networked
Communities: Mapping
AIDS-relevant Groups in
«VK» SNS. Yuri Rykov
and Peter Meylakhs
The focused
organization of school
ties: A case study of
similarity and proximity
as determinants of
friend choices
Sara Roman
Not all those who
wander are lost.
Modeling support and
conflict over medical
mediation in eating
disorder online forums.
Paola Tubaro, Antonio A.
Casilli and Juliette
Rouchier
Social networks and
language choice: A
blockmodeling analysis
Natxo Sorolla
21
Academic self-concept
in school peer
networks. Ksenia
Tenisheva and Daniel
Alexandrov
Thursday afternoon program - July 3
Thursday July 3
Program
14.40 - 15.20
14.40 - 16.10
Open discussion "Ethics in Social
Network Analysis"
Prof. Dr. Michael Schönhuth
(location: Sala de Juntas - 7 on Map 7)
15.20 - 16.50
Poster session
(location: Hall; 6 on Map 7)
17.00 - 18.45
17.00 Welcome
17.15 Award Announcements
17.30 Keynote
Address
"The Positional Turn in Social Network Analysis"
Prof. Dr. Ulrik Brandes
Computer and Information Science
University of Konstanz
19.00 - 22.00
22.00 - 24.00
(location: Auditorium; 5 on Map 7; take the stairs at the end of the
the hall – 6 on Map 7)
Banquet in the Casa Convalescencia (for those who have registered
for the dinner) - with bus transfer between the UAB campus and the
location and with a musical performance. Location bus: 12 on Map 7.
Hospitality Suite
Location: Bar Frankfurt, Vila Universitaria (3 on Map 3)
22
Special session - Thursday, July 3
Open discussion "Ethics in Social Network Analysis"
Prof. Dr. Michael Schönhuth
Location: Sala de Juntas (Indicated as 7 on Map 7)
Time: Thursday afternoon July 3rd, 14.40 - 16.10
14.40
Introduction - Michael Schönhuth
15.00
Presentation by Mandy Lee & Filipa Ribeiro "Ethical issues in conducting social
network analysis research in health and educational settings – a survey of
international researchers and REC/IRB members’ views and experiences"
15.20
Open discussion with the audience
23
Poster session - July 3
Location: Hall, see 6 on Map 7
Thursday
July 3
15.2016.50
POSTERS
1. Link prediction methods
and ERGMs: a comparison.
Bartek Chrol and Michal
Bojanowski
2. Kinsources & Puck – Open
data and open tools for
kinship network analysis.
Pascal Cristofoli and Klaus
Hamberger
3. Avoiding the portfolio
effect on recommender
systems through surprise: A
social network approach.
Carlos Figueiredo and José
Azevedo
4. Personal network
composition of Roma
university students –
‘bonding’ or ‘bridging’? Agnes
Lukacs, Beata David and Eva
Huszti
5. Networks and
Identification in Trismegistos.
Yanne Broux and Silke
Vanbeselaere
6. Soil or land? The
structure of desertification
research network in Spain.
Celia Barbero Sierra, María
José Marqués Pérez and
Manuel Ruiz Pérez
7. How can we detect changes
in social issues of science and
technology? Co-word
mapping of radioactivity and
green algae in Korean
newspaper. Jinseo Park, DongKwang Kim and Minsu Ko
8. Personal networks: a tool
for gaining insight into the
transmission of knowledge
about food and medicinal
plants among Tyrolean
(Austrian) migrants in
Australia, Brazil and Peru.
Heidemarie Pirker, Ruth
Haselmair, Elisabeth Kuhn and
Christian R. Vogl
11. The Team’s Influence on
Sharing Data: A Study on
Willingness to (Not) Comply
With Norms Regarding Data
Sharing. Linda Dominguez
Alvarez
9. Compleo Talent: linking
social network profiles for
job recruiting in information
technology field in Brazil.
Anderson Hummel, Roberto
Baptista, Rodrigo Costa,
Luciano Rodrigues and
Wagner Santos
14. Satisfaction with social
support perceived in chronic
illness. Rosario Fernández,
Loureiro Eva and Marques
Pilar
15. A first approach to the
analysis of social networks
of intentional communities
in Catalonia. Paula Escribano
10. Application of Multilevel
Network Analysis to
International Trade and
Ownership. Matthew Smith
13. The role of relational
environment in the
intentional process of
Ukranian immigrants. Renata
Hosnedlova
24
12. Cohesion under
covertness: a preliminary
description. Chiara
Broccatelli
16. The Effects of Vulnerable
and Grandiose Narcissism on
Liking-based and Dislikingbased Centrality in Social
Networks. Anna Z. Czarna,
Michael Dufner and Allan D.
Clifton
19. Analyzing structural
changes through hashtags:
Twitter reactions to a
mockumentary.
Liliana Arroyo Moliner and
Renato Marín López
22. Network Analysis of
Comorbid Symptoms in
Individuals with
posttraumatic stress disorder.
Mohammad Hassan Afzali, Eric
Bui and Philippe Birmes
25. Technology Transfer and
Innovation Networks in
Ireland. Bandeh Ali Talpur and
Diane Payne
17. Network Analysis of
Private Water Companies:
Collaboration and
Competition. Yasaman Sarabi
18. Customer Relationship
Management under using
Social Software. Waad
Assaad
20. Multimodal connections.
Recommendations for
participants, talks and rooms
at conferences. Lukas Zenk,
Florian Windhager and
Michael Smuc
23. Exploring a Regional Scale
Network of interactions
during the Bronze Age.
Florencia Del Castillo, Joan
Anton Barceló and Giacomo
Capuzzo
21. Rural development and
social networks in the
autonomous community of
Valencia. Isabel Beltran Gil
and Javier Esparcia
25
24. Network Lobbying: Its
Effect on EU Data Protection
Policy. Colman McMahon
and Diane Payne
Continuation paper sessions - Friday July 4
Friday July 4
Paper sessions - 1
Network Perspectives
in Measurement and
Analysis of Social
Support (Chairs: Giulia
Rivellini and Susanna Zaccarin)
Mixed Methods for
studying Network
Dynamics I
Intra-organisational
Networks I
(Chair: Gabriela Dodoiu)
(Chairs: Claire Bidart &
Michel Grossetti)
Room
8.30 - 8.50
211
-
212
-
Sala de Graus
-
8.50 - 9.10
Social Support
Networks: an
International
Comparison. Livia
García-Faroldi
How can we explore the
coming into being of
intra-organizational
networks? A proposal
based on practice theory.
Yvonne Tobias
9.10 - 9.30
The embeddedness
and support of
homophilous ties: a
review. Irene Cruz
How do employers
recruit? A study on
innovative
entrepreneurship
with a mixed
method. Nathalie
Chauvac and Michel
Grossetti
How trust networks
foster group
cooperation. Cristina
Acedo Carmona and
Antoni Gomila
Benejam
9.30 - 9.50
Exploring structures in
Social Support
Networks of lone
mothers. Rosaria
Lumino, Giancarlo
Ragozini, Marijtje van
Duijn and Maria
Prosperina Vitale
The use of
qualitative tools
nested in a personal
network survey:
advantages and
disadvantages. Joan
Miquel Verd, Oriol
Barranco, Mireia
Bolibar and Joel
Martí
A study on advice
network activity at the
work place. Gabriela
Dodoiu
9.50 - 10.10
COFFEE/TEA
26
Knowledge management
and creativity ideal types
in a multinational virtual
network. Gloria ÁlvarezHernández and Óscar
Pérez-Zapata
Friday July 4
Paper sessions - 1
Business, Market,
Customers II
(Chair: Gabriel Pérez)
Room
8.30 - 8.50
201
-
8.50 - 9.10
-
-
A method based on social
network analysis for DEA
Benchmarking. Clara Simon
de Blas and Jose Simon
Martin
-
-
9.10 - 9.30
An analysis of high-tech
and low-tech global
production networks: What
role for China and the UK?
Sara Gorgoni and Alessia
Amighini
-
-
9.30 - 9.50
Collaboration Networks
and Innovation Results in
Spain. Pablo Galaso and
Jaromir Kovarik
-
-
9.50 - 10.10
COFFEE/TEA
27
Friday July 4
Paper sessions - 2
Methods
(Last presenter is chair)
Mixed Methods for
studying Network
Dynamics II
Intra-organisational
Networks II
(Chair: Sasa Batistic)
(Chairs: Claire Bidart & Michel
Grossetti)
Room
10.10 - 10.30
211
Finding roles in
sparse economic
hierarchies: going
beyond regular
equivalence. Laura
Prota and Patrick
Doreian
212
Relational chains and
musical advices. A study
in the region of
Toulouse. Michel
Grossetti, Laurent
Laffont and Martine
Azam
Sala de Graus
Understanding the
Network Structure of
Irish Primary Care Teams.
Diane Payne and Pablo
Lucas
10.30 - 10.50
Actor non-response
treatments in case of
valued networks.
Anja Žnidaršič,
Patrick Doreian and
Anuška Ferligoj
What makes ties persist
over time and distance?
A longitudinal study of
personal networks.
Claire Bidart
Team Cohesion and
Embedding – A
Comparative Analysis of
Spatial and
Organisational
Parameters.
Kerstin Sailer
10.50 - 11.10
Correspondence
Analysis with
Doubling for TwoMode Valued
Networks. Daniela
D'Ambrosio,
Domenico De Stefano
and Giancarlo
Ragozini
Homophily and the
heterophilic variety
following the criteria of
identification and
classification of
different collectives.
Carlos Lozares, Dafne
Muntanyola and Oriol
Barranco
Discovery and analysis of
intra-organizational
networks from social
media data. Pablo
Alfonso Haya, Ana
Jusdado, Esteban Moro,
Kate Ehrlich and
Mercedes Vidal
11.10 - 11.30
Measurement
Accuracy in Samples
of Online
Communication
Networks. Ju-Sung
Lee and Juergen
Pfeffer
Using narratives to
study the impact of
social networks on the
educational paths of
immigrant students.
Ana Belén Cano Hila,
Angelina Sánchez Martí
and María Paz Sandín
Esteban
Solving the problem of
ineffective subsidiary:
the impact of
intraorganizational
networks. Valentina
Kuskova, Stanley
Wasserman and Irina
Volkova
Rescheduled to Thursday
morning 9.30-9.50
11.30 - 11.50
COFFEE/TEA
28
Friday July 4
Paper sessions - 2
Business, Market,
Customers III
Social Networks and
Local Development I
Networking the
Environment II (Chairs: Isabel
(Chair: Gabriel Pérez)
(Chairs: Javier Esparcia &
Xavier Molina)
Díaz Reviriego, Laura Calvet Mir,
Matthieu Salpeteur & Victoria
Reyes García)
Room
10.10 - 10.30
201
Network dynamics in
the ethical banking
sector: Understanding
network change and
continuity in a
developing industry
sector. Daniel Tischer
10.30 - 10.50
Patterns of
embeddedness of PPPs
in France. Elise Penalva
and Emmanuel Lazega
10.50 - 11.10
The study of a
business-to-business
knowledge portal for
sustainability best
practices
development: a social
network analysis
approach. Leonardo
Marques
11.10 - 11.30
Social Network
Analysis of European
Financial Crisis
Interconnectedness.
Amir Armanious
11.30 - 11-50
COFFEE/TEA
202
Leadership and
power: an approach
from social networks
in rural areas in Spain.
Javier Esparcia
203
Social network analysis
to select stakeholders: A
study of the natural park
Sant Llorenç del Munt
(Catalonia, Spain). Laura
Calvet-Mir, Sara MaestreAndrés and Jeroen van
den Bergh
Social capital, social
Collective learning from
networks and rural
a multi-level perspective:
development: Rincón the case of the
de Ademuz (1994conversion of wine
2013). Jose Javier
producers to organic
Serrano Lara
farming. Jaime Montes
Lihn and Emmanuel
Lazega
Local development
From personal networks
processes in rural
of fishermen and
development and the skippers in Andalusian
role of relational
fishing ports to the cosocial capital. A
management of natural
comparative analysis
resources. Isidro Mayafrom Teruel (Spain).
Jariego, Daniel Holgado
Escribano Jaime, Rubio and David Florido
Pascual and Esparcia
Javier
From social networks Common life, common
to discourse analysis
knowledge? Assessing
in rural local
the role of multiple
development
collectives in shaping
processes. A case
variations in traditional
study from NO of
ecological knowledge
Murcia (Spain).
among a community of
Francisca Camacho
semi-nomadic
and Javier Esparcia
pastoralists of Gujarat
(India). Matthieu
Salpeteur, Victoria ReyesGarcia and José Luis
Molina
29
Friday July 4
Paper sessions - 3
Centrality
Power and Networks I
(Last presenter is chair)
(Chairs: Ainhoa de Federico de
la Rúa, Narciso Pizarro & Reyes
Herrero)
212
The mobilisation of
business leaders in
the policy-planning
network in France.
Catherine Comet
Online Social Networks III
Room
11.50 - 12.10
211
Measuring network
position through node
and structural
characteristics - Ego
network Quality.
Tamás Sebestyén and
Attila Varga
12.10 - 12.30
Axioms for Centrality
Coalition formation
Scoring with Principal
along network ties –
Eigenvectors. Mitri Kitti why and how
centrality matters.
Franziska Barbara
Keller
The structure of online
social networks and
media consumption.
Dominik Batorski and
Lukasz Bolikowski
12.30 - 12.50
Centrality Indices and
a Class of Uniquely
Ranked Graphs. David
Schoch and Ulrik
Brandes
The moderating role
of intrinsic motivation
in senior managers’
use of external
networks. Olga
Zarzecka
Spatial diffusion of an
online social network.
Balazs Lengyel
12.50 - 13.10
Centrality for different
types of valued
networks. Filip
Agneessens, Steve
Borgatti and Daniel
Halgin
The Prediction Value.
Maurice Koster,
Sascha Kurz, Ines
Lindner and Stefan
Napel
Beyond Reply and Quote
Networks: Exploring the
Evolution of Online
Communities Through a
Longitudinal Two-Mode
Network Approach.
Spyros Angelopoulos and
Yasmin Merali
13.10 - 14.40
LUNCH BREAK
30
Sala de Graus
Geometric Positions in
Tweeterdom and
Political Party
Affiliations. Han Woo
Park and Bulent Ozel
Friday July 4
Paper sessions - 3
Kinship Networks
(Chairs: Verónica de MiguelLuken, Luis Ayuso-Sánchez &
Livia García-Faroldi)
Room
11.50 - 12.10
201
Romantic relationships
and changes in
personal networks.
Jesper Rözer, Gerald
Mollenhorst and Beate
Völker
12.10 - 12.30
How can we explain
tensions with the ones
we rely on?
Constituents of
conflicts in personal
networks. Andreas
Herz
12.30 - 12.50
Support Network
Typologies of Italian
Couples: Common
Findings from
Alternative Clustering
Techniques. Viviana
Amati, Silvia
Meggiolaro, Giulia
Rivellini and Susanna
Zaccarin
12.50 - 13.10
Virtual and Social
Support Networks in
Building the Spanish
Adoptive Families.
María José Rodríguez
Jaume, Josep Antoni
Rodríguez Díaz and
Diana Jareño Ruiz
13.10 - 14.40
LUNCH BREAK
Social Networks and
Local Development II
University Networks II macro-level
(Chairs: Javier Esparcia &
Xavier Molina)
(Chair: Daniel Houben)
202
Local Development
and the networks of
tourism agents:
evidences from
middle towns in the
Andalusian
community (Spain).
Rafael Merinero,
Javier Esparcia and
José Luis Molina
Social networks and
local development in
rural areas: a
comparative analysis
from two study areas
(Serranía-Cuenca and
Ports-Castellón,
Spain). Cristina Herraiz
and Javier Esparcia
Are social networks
linked to local
development in high
rural developed
areas? An analysis
from the LEADER area
of Central Catalonia
Central (Spain). Jaime
Escribano, Dolores
Sánchez Aguilera and
Javier Esparcia
Firm’s performance in
the cluster: a question
of balancing its role
and intermediation in
the knowledge
system. Luis MartínezCháfer, Bárbara
Larrañeta GómezCaminero and
Francesc Xavier
Molina-Morales
203
From Communication to
International
Cooperation: The Case of
Inter-university
Networks in Egypt.
Hanan Rezk
31
The influence of
governance on research
network performance: a
combined analysis. Pablo
Cabanelas, José
Cabanelas Omil and
Patricia Somorrostro
López
School quasi-markets as
social networks.
Nathanael Friant and
Matteo Gagliolo
University boards and
strategic networks in
higher education. Daniel
Houben
Friday July 4
Paper sessions - 4
Room
14.40 - 15.00
Longitudinal Modelling of
Adolescent Networks
Power and Networks
II
(Chair: Tom Snijders)
(Chairs: Ainhoa de Federico
de la Rúa, Narciso Pizarro &
Reyes Herrero)
Qualitative and Mixed
Methods Network
Research II
(Chairs: Mireia Bolibar &
Dafne Muntanyola)
211
Cohesion in Perceived
Friend Groups and
Adolescents’ Involvement
in Risk Behaviors
Kim Pattiselanno, Jan
Kornelis Dijkstra, Christian
Steglich, Aart Franken,
Wilma Vollebergh and
René Veenstra
Coevolution of smoking
and friendship in
vocational schools
Vera Titkova, Valeria
Ivaniushina and Daniel
Alexandrov
212
Theoretical and
methodological
foundations of
research on power
networks. Narciso
Pizarro
Sala de Graus
Data Collection and
Analysis with
“VennMaker” - Povertypolitical Networks of Local
Politicians in Two German
Cities. Isabelle Borucki
Polarization,
discourse and
cleavages in the
political space.
Zoltán Kmetty
The Inequality of Looking
for (and Finding) a Job:
Mixed methods in social
networks of Spanish young
adults. Dafne MuntanyolaSaura and Mattia
Vacchiano
15.20 - 15.40
Size, Structure and
Stability of Cliques in Early
Adolescence
Christian Steglich and
Andrea Knecht
Challenges for Collecting
Ego Network Data – A
Comparison of Visual
Tools. Tom Toepfer and
Betina Hollstein
15.40 - 16.00
Social influence on ethnic
perception - The coevolution of perceived
Roma ethnicity and
friendship in Hungarian
secondary school classes
Zsófia Boda
16.00 - 16.20
The relationship between
popularity and health
behaviours in French
adolescents
Laura Rennie and Cécile
Bazillier-Bruneau
Two faces of power.
Cohesion and
influential groups in
government elites. A
study of two
democratic
executives in Spain
(2004 and 2012).
Andrés Villena-Oliver
Researching the
“labyrinth of
solitude”: networks
in political
intermediation in
Mexico. Gisela
Zaremberg and
Ainhoa de Federico
The structure of
political funding in
Brazil: results from
elections. Reyes
Herrero López
16.20 - 16.40
COFFEE/TEA
15.00 - 15.20
32
How to do Qualitative
Structural Analysis: lessons
learned from exploring the
embeddedness of
organizations.
Andreas Herz, Inga
Truschkat and Luisa Peters
Ties That Matter:
Exploring of Social Ties in
Managerial Social
Networks the
Characteristics and
Meaning. Tanja Sliskovic
Friday July 4
Paper sessions - 4
Historical Network
Research II (Chairs:
Social Networks, Social
Support and Health Care II
Social Networks and
Collective Action I (Chairs:
Matthias Bixler, Florian
Kerschbaumer & Martin Stark)
(Chairs: Maksim Tsvetovat, Cristina
Metgher & Tatyana Kanzaveli)
Mario Diani & Nina Eggert)
Room
14.40 - 15.00
201
Ego centered networks
and community
dynamics in Buenos
Aires, 1620-1840:
Building a large
database. Pascal
Cristofoli, Zacarias
Moutoukias and
Christophe Prieur
202
Health, quality of life, and
sociability: an analysis of
users of mental health
services in four Brazilian
cities. Breno Fontes and
José Alberto Lins
203
Hearts and Minds:
Indentifying actors as
facilitators of cultural
expression and civic
engagement in DIY
music networks. Joseph
Watson
15.00 - 15.20
The Congress of Vienna
1814/15 and the
Historical Network
Research: Connecting
empirical and
theoretical
Perspectives. Florian
Kerschbaumer
The influence of social
relations on parental,
subjective well-being. A
Comparison of Japanese
and German Ego-centric
Networks. Marina Hennig
15.20 - 15.40
Marriage Networks
and the Development
of Social Stratification
in the 19th Century.
Martin Stark and
Matthias Bixler
What influences seasonal
influenza vaccination
uptake in medical
students?: a pilot using
social network analysis.
Rhiannon Edge
Really do university
students believe that
Facebook is a useful
tool to mobilizing
people both online and
offline around social
causes? Shumaila Y.
Yousafzai and Juan D.
Borrero
Protest friends: shared
cognition, networks
and affordances of
Facebook political
groups. Giuseppe A.
Veltri and Matteo
Gagliolo
15.40 - 16.00
AIDS as a Global Media
Event. An intercultural
comparison of posters
and their imagery.
Vladimir Cajkovac
Modeling peer group
support and criticism,
self-esteem and
subjective well-being, on
Body Image Disturbances.
Carlos C. Contreras-Ibáñez
and Ignacio Ramos-Vidal
16.00 - 16.20
-
A Mixed Method Study
on Treatment Needs and
Social Support Networks
of Women with
Substance Misuse
Problems. Peace Ezumezu
and Mandy Lee
16.20 - 16.40
COFFEE/TEA
33
The Spanish Revolution
in Twitter (): Networks
of hashtags and
individual/ collective
actors in the anti –
Evictions social
movement in Spain.
Estrella Gualda, Juan D.
Borrero and Jose Carpio
The impact of the
structural properties
and the cognitive
content of personal
networks on migrants’
social and political
participation. Mireia
Bolibar
Friday July 4
Paper sessions - 5
Room
16.40 - 17.00
Algorithms II
(Last presenter is chair)
Social Networks and
Collective Action II
Migration, Mobility and
Transnational Networks II
(Chairs: Mario Diani & Nina Eggert)
(Chairs: Basak Bilecen & Markus
Gamper)
211
An Algorithm for
automatically coding Big
Data extracted from
Twitter: getting ready for
the analysis of more than
one million tweets
concerning a competition
on TV
Jose Carpio, Estrella Gualda
and Juan D. Borrero
Propagation dynamics in
networks through rulebased modeling
Jason Vallet, Bruno Pinaud,
Guy Melançon and Helene
Kirchner
212
Social movements and
the diffusion of tactics
and repertoires: From
the viewpoint of intra
organizational and
individual networks in
the protest event.
Tominaga Kyoko
Sala de Graus
The network origin of
plural identities: structural
brokerage, diversity and
cultural holes in
international immigrants’
networks. Raffaele Vacca
and Tommaso Vitale
The Anonymous brand
and the “Million Mask
March” network. Davide
Beraldo
Transnational networks
and transnational
practices: Bulgarian
migrants in Catalonia.
Sílvia Gómez-Mestres
17.20 - 17.40
Operations in temporal
networks with zero
latency
Selena Praprotnik and
Vladimir Batagelj
Collective action in the
field of immigration.
Nina Eggert and Katia
Pilati
The Company You Keep:
Content and Structure of
Immigrants’ Social
Networks and PsychoSocial Adjustment. Lydia
Repke, Veronica BenetMartinez and Eva Maciocco
17.40 - 18.00
Closures in temporal
networks with zero
latency
Vladimir Batagelj and
Selena Praprotnik
Revolution S.A: Telling
stories from the Arab
Street. Hugo Leal
Transnational Mobility of
Early-Career Academics:
Transformation or
Reproduction of Gender
Regimes? A Network
Perspective. Janine
Dahinden and Martine
Schaer
18.00 - 18.20
-
Civic networks in Cape
Town. Mario Diani,
Henrik Ernstson and
Lorien Jasny
Geographic Distance and
Structural Holes. Zong
Rong Lee and Hsin Fei Tu
17.00 - 17.20
End of conference
34
Friday July 4
Paper sessions - 5
Adolescent Networks II
(Last presenter is chair)
Social Networks and Local
Development III
Networking the Environment
III (Chairs: Isabel Díaz Reviriego, Laura
Calvet Mir, Matthieu Salpeteur & Victoria
Reyes García)
Room
16.40 - 17.00
201
Inter-Ethnic Friendship
and Negative Ties in
Secondary School
Balint Neray and Zsófia
Boda
202
Evaluating the
Effectiveness of Interorganizational
Collaboration Networks:
A Comparative Study of
Nonprofit Business
Federations in Turkey.
Nazli Aytug and Mustafa
Yasar Tinar
203
Institutional Fit and
Centralized Networks for
Invasive Species
Management. Mark Lubell
17.00 - 17.20
Bullying and School
Attitudes in NonAcademic
Environment. Daniel
Alexandrov, Valeria
Ivaniushina and Vera
Titkova
Agent Based Mapping for
assessing socio-economic
networks of mountain
tourism as a coupled HES.
Tobias Luthe and Tobias
Wyss
17.20 - 17.40
Perception of Your
Ethnicity Makes You Be
More Bullied? Peer
Perception and SelfDeclaration of Ethnicity
in Bullying and
Victimization Processes
Dorottya Kisfalusi and
Judit Pál
Friendship and advice
networks of minority
students
Valeria Ivaniushina,
Vera Titkova and Daniel
Alexandrov
Entrepreneurship in
processes of civic
engagement – the role of
individual and collective
resources for local
communities. Stefan
Kundolf
The relevance of social
networks for multi-level
water governance: a case
study from two
Mediterranean watersheds.
Irene Iniesta-Arandia, Marta
Varanda, Carlos Montes and
Berta Martín-López
Using two-mode social
networks to identify socialecological interaction
hotspots. Romano Wyss and
Tobias Luthe
'Paying-it-Forward’:
Mechanisms of Social
Capital Development
among Resource-Poor
Women in Rural
Bangladesh. Anastasia
Seferiadis and Marjolein
Zweekhorst
Science policy interface and
the biodiversity regime
complex: what level of
representativeness for IPBES?
Mohamed Oubenal, Sélim
Louafi, Amandine Orsini and
Jean-Frédéric Morin
Social Status in Class
and Delinquency: The
Impact of Sociometric
Position on Truancy
and Violence. Dr. Imke
Dunkake
An efficient organization
for the help of children?
The case of the “Give Kids
a Chance” program in
Hungary. Hanna Kónya
and Éva Szontágh
“Big fish in a small pond?”
Fishing networks in an
indigenous society. Isabel Díaz
Reviriego, Álvaro FernándezLlamazares Onrubia, José Luis
Molina and Victoria Reyes
García
17.40 - 18.00
18.00 - 18.20
End of conference
35
Author Index
Aartsen, Marja
Acedo Carmona, Cristina
Agneessens, Filip
Agneessens, Filip
Albani, Eugenia
Albert, Fruzsina
Alexandrov, Daniel
Alexandrov, Daniel
Alexandrov, Daniel
Ali Talpur, Bandeh
Alonso Alsina, Oriol
Alvarez-Galvez, Javier
Álvarez-Hernández,
Gloria
Amati, Viviana
Amighini, Alessia
Angelopoulos, Spyros
Anton Barceló, Joan
Arias-Ramos, Natalia
Armanious, Amir
Armitage, Gerry
Arroyo Moliner, Liliana
Assaad, Waad
Aytug, Nazli
Azam, Martine
Azevedo, José
Bajec, Marko
Bajnai, Blanka
Baptista, Roberto
Baptista, Roberto
Barbara Keller, Franziska
Barbero Sierra, Celia
Barbillon, Pierre
Barranco, Oriol
Barranco, Oriol
Basov, Nikita
Batagelj, Vladimir
Batagelj, Vladimir
Batorski, Dominik
Bazillier-Bruneau, Cécile
Belitski, Maksim
Bellon, Mauricio
THU 11.50-13.10
FRI 8.50-9.50
THU 11.50-13.10
FRI 11.50-13.10
WED 11.40-13.20
THU 8.30-9.50
THU 11.50-13.10
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
THU 15.20-16.50
WED 16.50-18.30
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 8.50-9.50
Bellotti, Elisa
Bellotti, Elisa
Beltran Gil , Isabel
Benet-Martinez, Verónica
Beraldo, Davide
Bès, Marie-Pierre
Bidart, Claire
Birmes, Philippe
Bixler, Matthias
Blenkinsopp, Alison
Boda, Zsófia
Boda, Zsófia
Bodlaj, Jernej
Boguchwal, Louis
Bojanowski, Michal
Bojanowski, Michal
Bolibar, Mireia
Bolibar, Mireia
Bolikowski, Lukasz
Borgatti, Steve
Borrero, Juan D.
Borrero, Juan D
Borucki, Isabelle
Boudourides, Moses
Boumans, Dorine
Brahimian, Homayoun E
Brandes, Ulrik
Breznik, Kristijan
Broccatelli, Chiara
Broccatelli, Chiara
Broux, Yanne
Buch-Hansen, Hubert
Bui, Eric
Cabanelas Omil, José
Caillon, Sophie
Caimo, Alberto
Cajkovac, Vladimir
Calvet-Mir, Laura
Calvet-Mir, Laura
Camacho, Francisca
Cano Hila, Ana Belén
Capuzzo, Giacomo
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 8.50-9.50
FRI 11.50-13.10
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 10.10-11.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
THU 11.50-13.10
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 10.10-11.30
THU 15.20-16.50
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 11.50-13.10
THU 15.20-16.50
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 8.50-9.50
FRI 10.10-11.30
WED 11.40-13.20
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 14.40-16.20
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 14.50-16.30
36
WED 11.40-13.20
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
THU 10.10-11.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 14.40-16.20
THU 11.50-13.10
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 8.30-9.50
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 8.50-9.50
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 8.30-9.50
FRI 11.50-13.10
THU 10.10-11.30
WED 11.40-13.20
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 15.20-16.50
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 11.50-13.10
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
THU 15.20-16.50
Cardenas, Julian
Carpio, José
Carpio, José
Carpio, José
Carrel, Noemi
Carvajal, David
Casilli, Antonio A.
Castro, Javier
Celinska-Janowicz,
Dorota
Chang, Ming-Yi
Chauvac, Nathalie
Christopoulos, Dimitris
Christopoulos, Dimitris
Chrol, Bartek
Cid, José
Clifton, Allan D.
Cobo Martín, Manuel
Jesus
Coenen, Frans
Colleoni, Elanor
Comas, Jordi
Comet, Catherine
Conlon, Michael
Contreras-Ibáñez, Carlos
C.
Corten, Rense
Costa, Rodrigo
Cristofoli, Pascal
Cristofoli, Pascal
Crossley, Nick
Cruz, Irene
Czarna, Anna Z.
Czerniawska, Dominika
D. Borrero, Juan
Dahinden, Janine
Daly, Michele
D'Ambrosio, Daniela
Dávid, Beáta
Dávid, Beáta
Dávid, Beáta
De Benedictis, Luca
De Federico, Ainhoa
De Groot, Judith
De Miguel-Luken,
Verónica
De Nooy, Wouter
WED 14.50-16.30
THU 10.10-11.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
WED 11.40-13.20
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 11.50-13.10
THU 10.10-11.30
WED 14.50-16.30
De Stefano, Domenico
De Stefano, Domenico
De Vita, Riccardo
Dehdarirad, Tahereh
Del Castillo, Florencia
Delgado-Márquez, Blanca
L.
Delgado-Márquez, Luisa
D'Esposito, Maria Rosaria
Diani, Mario
Díaz Reviriego, Isabel
Diesner, Jana
Dijkstra, Jan Kornelis
Dodoiu, Gabriela
Domínguez Alvarez, Linda
Doreian, Patrick
Doreian, Patrick
Drucker, Adam
Dufner, Michael
Dunkake, Imke
Edge, Rhiannon
Edling, Christofer
Edwards, Gemma
Edwards, Gemma
Eggert, Nina
Ehrlich, Kate
Ellis, Cali
Ellwardt, Lea
Elouaer-Mrizak, Sana
Elvan Erginli, Burge
Erickson, Bonnie
Ernstson, Henrik
Escobar, Modesto
Escribano, Jaime
Escribano, Jaime
Escribano, Paula
Escribano, Paula
Esparcia, Javier
Esparcia, Javier
Esparcia, Javier
Esparcia, Javier
Estrella, Gualda
Eva, Loureiro
Evans, Daniel
Ezumezu, Peace
Faul, Moira
THU 11.50-13.10
FRI 8.50-9.50
THU 8.30-9.50
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 15.20-16.50
WED 11.40-13.20
THU 15.20-16.50
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 8.30-9.50
THU 10.10-11.30
WED 11.40-13.20
FRI 11.50-13.10
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 8.50-9.50
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 10.10-11.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
WED 11.40-13.20
FRI 10.10-11.30
WED 11.40-13.20
THU 8.30-9.50
THU 15.20-16.50
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
THU 10.10-11.30
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 11.40-13.20
37
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 14.50-16.30
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 11.50-13.10
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
WED 11.40-13.20
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 8.50-9.50
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 10.10-11.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
WED 14.50-16.30
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 11.40-13.20
WED 11.40-13.20
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 10.10-11.30
THU 8.30-9.50
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 8.30-9.50
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 10.10-11.30
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 11.50-13.10
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 8.30-9.50
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 11.40-13.20
Fei Tu, Hsin
Ferligoj, Anuška
Fernández, Rosario
Fernández-Llamazares
Onrubia, Álvaro
Fernandez-Martinez,
Elena
Figueiredo, Carlos
Fischer, Eva
Fischer, Manuel
Flores, Ramón
Florido, David
Fontes, Breno
Franken, Aart
Friant, Nathanael
Friemel, Thomas
Fuccella, Vittorio
Fuhse, Jan
Fylan Gwynn, Beth
Gagliolo, Matteo
Gagliolo, Matteo
Galaso, Pablo
Gamper, Markus
Gao, Ning
Gagliolo, Matteo
García-Faroldi, Livia
García-Macías, Alejandro
Garine, Eric
Gauci, Jean-Pierre
Giordano, Giuseppe
Gollini, Isabella
Gomez, Daniel
Gómez-Mestres, Sílvia
Gomila Benejam, Antoni
Gorgoni, Sara
Granger, Douglas
Green, Brandn
Groenewegen, Peter
Grønmo, Sigmund
Grossetti, Michel
Grossetti, Michel
Grossi, Davide
Guadalupi, Luigi
Gualda, Estrella
Gualda, Estrella
Gutiérrez Salcedo, María
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 10.10-11.30
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 16.40-18.20
Halgin, Daniel
Hamberger, Klaus
Hamberger, Klaus
Hammer, Ingmar
Haselmair, Ruth
Hassan Afzali,
Mohammad
Hauck, Jennifer
Haunss, Sebastian
Haya, Pablo Alfonso
Heath, Joseph
Held, Fabian
Hellsten, Iina
Hennig, Marina
Henriksen, Lasse
Herraiz, Cristina
Herrera-Viedma, Enrique
Herrero López, Reyes
Herz, Andreas
Herz, Andreas
Higgins, Andrew
Hill, Gary
Hirschi, Christian
Hmimida, Manel
Hofstra, Bas
Holgado, Daniel
Hollstein, Betina
Hollway, James
Hosnedlova, Renata
Houben, Daniel
Huan, Jia-Ping
Hummel, Anderson
Hummel, Anderson
Huszti, Éva
Huszti, Éva
Illia, Laura
Ingold, Karin
Iniesta-Arandia, Irene
Iniesta-Arandia, Irene
Ireri Kamau, Joseph
Isba, Rachel
Ivaniushina, Valeria
Ivaniushina, Valeria
Jackson, Cornell
Jareño Ruiz, Diana
Jasny, Lorien
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 8.30-9.50
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 10.10-11.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 11.50-13.10
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 11.40-13.20
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 8.50-9.50
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 8.50-9.50
WED 16.50-18.30
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 16.50-18.30
WED 14.50-16.30
THU 10.10-11.30
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 8.50-9.50
FRI 8.50-9.50
THU 10.10-11.30
WED 11.40-13.20
WED 11.40-13.20
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 8.50-9.50
FRI 10.10-11.30
THU 8.30-9.50
WED 11.40-13.20
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
WED 16.50-18.30
38
FRI 11.50-13.10
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 16.40-18.20
THU 11.50-13.10
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 11.50-13.10
THU 8.30-9.50
FRI 10.10-11.30
THU 10.10-11.30
WED 11.40-13.20
WED 11.40-13.20
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 11.40-13.20
FRI 11.50-13.10
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 11.40-13.20
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 16.50-18.30
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
THU 11.50-13.10
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 11.50-13.10
THU 8.30-9.50
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 15.20-16.50
WED 11.40-13.20
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 10.10-11.30
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
WED 14.50-16.30
THU 10.10-11.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 11.50-13.10
WED 11.40-13.20
Jasny, Lorien
Joel-Edgar, Sian
Jusdado, Ana
Juste, Rubén
Kalish, Yuval
Kammerer, Marlene
Kanagavel, Rajalakshmi
Kanawati, Rushed
Kang, Yunjae
Kerschbaumer, Florian
Kim, Dong-Kwang
Kim, Dong-Kwang
Kim, Jinseok
Kim, Ji Young
Kirchner, Helene
Kisfalusi, Dorottya
Kitti, Mitri
Kmetty, Zoltán
Knecht, Andrea
Ko, Minsu
Koltai, Julia
Kónya, Hanna
Kornienko, Olga
Korolev, Alexei
Koskinen, Johan
Koskinen, Johan
Koskinen, Johan
Koskinen, Johan
Koskinen, Johan
Koster, Maurice
Koster, Maurice
Kovarik, Jaromir
Kuhn, Elisabeth
Kundolf, Stefan
Kurz, Sascha
Kuskova, Valentina
Kuznetsova, Eugenia
Kyoko, Tominaga
Labeyrie, Vanesse
Laffont, Laurent
Larrañeta GómezCaminero, Bárbara
Lazega, Emmanuel
Leal, Hugo
Leclerc, Christian
Lee , Ju-Sung
FRI 16.40-18.20
WED 11.40-13.20
FRI 10.10-11.30
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 11.50-13.10
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 11.50-13.10
FRI 14.40-16.20
THU 11.50-13.10
THU 15.20-16.50
WED 11.40-13.20
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 14.40-16.20
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 8.30-9.50
FRI 16.40-18.20
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 10.10-11.30
WED 11.40-13.20
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 8.30-9.50
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 8.30-9.50
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 8.50-9.50
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 10.10-11.30
THU 8.30-9.50
FRI 16.40-18.20
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 11.50-13.10
Lee, Mandy
Lee, Mandy
Lee, Zong Rong
Lee, Zong Rong
Lee, Zong Rong
Leifeld, Philip
Lengyel, Balazs
Lengyel, Balazs
Lenis, Sergios
Liebana-Presa, Cristina
Lindner, Ines
Lindner, Ines
Lins, José Alberto
Lobato, Marta María
Lomi, Alessandro
Lomi, Alessandro
Lopaciuk-Gonczaryk,
Beata
López Serrano, Rafael
López-Herrera, Antonio
Lorincz, Laszlo
Louafi, Sélim
Lowry, Ruth
Løyning, Trond
Løyning, Trond
Lozares, Carlos
Lozares, Carlos
Lubbers, Miranda
Lubbers, Miranda
Lubbers, Miranda
Lubbers, Miranda
Lubell, Mark
Lucas, Pablo
Lucena, Delio
Lukacs, Agnes
Lumino, Rosaria
Luthe, Tobias
Maciocco, Eva
Maestre-Andrés, Sara
Malang, Thomas
Marín López, Renato
Markham, Rachel
Marqués Pérez, María
José
Marques, Leonardo
Marques-Sanchez, Pilar
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
39
THU 14.40-16.10
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 11.40-13.20
THU 11.50-13.10
FRI 16.40-18.20
THU 8.30-9.50
THU 11.50-13.10
FRI 11.50-13.10
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 8.30-9.50
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 16.50-18.30
WED 11.40-13.20
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 10.10-11.30
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 11.50-13.10
FRI 16.40-18.20
THU 10.10-11.30
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 16.50-18.30
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 8.30-9.50
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 10.10-11.30
WED 14.50-16.30
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 8.50-9.50
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 10.10-11.30
THU 8.30-9.50
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 10.10-11.30
THU 10.10-11.30
Martí, Joel
Martí, Joel
Martínez, M.A.
Martínez-Cháfer, Luis
Martín-López, Berta
Matveenko, Vladimir
Maya-Jariego, Isidro
Mazare, Dan
McCarty, Christopher
McMahon, Colman
Meggiolaro, Silvia
Meggiorin, Katia
Merali, Yasmin
Merinero, Rafael
Meylakhs, Peter
Miele, Raffaele
Miklós Kiss, Károly
Milard, Beatrice
Milofsky, Carl
Miquel Verd, Joan
Mólera Peris, Lourdes
Molina, Elisenda
Molina, José Luis
Molina, José Luis
Molina, José Luis
Molina-Morales,
Francesc Xavier
Mollenhorst, Gerald
Mollenhorst, Gerald
Mollenhorst, Gerald
Montagna, Mattea
Montes Lihn, Jaime
Montes, Carlos
Morin, Jean-Frédéric
Moro, Esteban
Moutoukias, Zacarias
Muller, Allan
Muntanyola-Saura, Dafne
Muntanyola-Saura, Dafne
Muscillo, Alessio
Napel, Stefan
Naylor, Deirdre
Nelson, David
Nenci, Silvia
Nenko, Aleksandra
Neray, Balint
WED 11.40-13.20
FRI 8.50-9.50
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 16.40-18.20
THU 10.10-11.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 11.50-13.10
THU 10.10-11.30
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 11.50-13.10
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 11.40-13.20
FRI 8.50-9.50
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 10.10-11.30
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 11.50-13.10
Nerghes, Adina
Newton, Adrian
Niezink, Nynke
Noguera Méndez, Pedro
Nuñez, Juan
Oliver, Kathryn
Oliver, Kathryn
Orsini, Amandine
Oubenal, Mohamed
Oubenal, Mohamed
Ozel, Bulent
Ozel, Bulent
Pablo Cabanelas,
Pahl-Wostl, Claudia
Pál, Judit
Pallotti, Francesca
Pallotti, Francesca
Pampalona-Tarrés, Judith
Park, Han Woo
Park, Han Woo
Park, Jinseo
Park, Jinseo
Park, Ji Young
Pascual, Rubio
Pascual, Unai
Pattiselanno, Kim
Payne, Diane
Payne, Diane
Pécout, Hugues
Penalva, Elise
Pérez-Zapata, Óscar
Peters, Luisa
Pfeffer, Juergen
Pike, Susan
Pilar, Marques
Pilati, Katia
Pinaud, Bruno
Pinto-Carral, Arrate
Pirker, Heidemarie
Pisa, Ivan
Pizarro, Narciso
Ploszaj, Adam
Poghosyan, Tatevik
Popov, V.
Porzio, Giovanni
Praprotnik, Selena
WED 11.40-13.20
THU 8.30-9.50
FRI 11.50-13.10
THU 11.50-13.10
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 11.40-13.20
FRI 10.10-11.50
FRI 14.40-16.20
THU 8.30-9.50
FRI 11.50-13.10
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 16.50-18.30
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 11.40-13.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
40
WED 11.40-13.20
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 8.30-9.50
WED 11.40-13.20
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
WED 11.40-13.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
THU 11.50-13.10
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
WED 11.40-13.20
THU 11.50-13.10
THU 8.30-9.50
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 11.50-13.10
THU 11.50-13.10
THU 15.20-16.50
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 10.10-11.30
THU 11.50-13.10
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 8.50-9.50
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 10.10-11.30
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 15.20-16.50
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 11.40-13.20
WED 11.40-13.20
THU 10.10-11.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
Prieur, Christophe
Prosperina Vitale, Maria
Prosperina Vitale, Maria
Prosperina Vitale, Maria
Prota, Laura
Quiroga-Sanchez ,
Enedina
Ragozini, Giancarlo
Ragozini, Giancarlo
Ragozini, Giancarlo
Ragozini, Giancarlo
Ramos-Vidal, Ignacio
Ravera, Federica
Redondo, Esther
Reixach, Albert
Rennie, Laura
Repke, Lydia
Restrepo Plaza, Lina
Maria
Reyes Acosta, Cornelia
Reyes García, Victoria
Rezk, Hanan
Ribeiro, Filipa
Ribeiro, Filipa
Rivellini, Giulia
Rivero Ostoic, Antonio
Roberts, Chris
Robins, Garry
Rodrigues, Luciano
Rodríguez Díaz, Josep
Antoni
Rodríguez Jaume, María
José
Rodríguez, José A.
Rodríguez-García, Dan
Roman, Sara
Rong Lee, Zong
Ronzhyn, Alexander
Rouchier, Juliette
Rözer, Jesper
Rozza, Alessandro
Ruiz Pérez, Manuel
Rydgren, Jens
Rykov, Yuri
Sailer, Kerstin
Salah, Zaher
Salazar, Boris
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 14.50-16.30
THU 10.10-11.30
FRI 8.50-9.50
FRI 10.10-11.30
THU 10.10-11.30
Salpeteur, Matthieu
Sánchez Aguilera,Dolores
Sánchez Martí, Angelina
Sandín Esteban, María
Paz
Santana, María Eugenia
Santos Castroviejo, Iago
Santos, Martín
Santos, Wagner
Sarabi, Yasaman
Schaefer, David
Schaer, Martine
Schmidt, Jenny
Schoch, David
Schubert, Iljana
Schutjens, Veronique
Sebestyén, Tamás
Seferiadis, Anastasia
Semitiel García, María
Serino, Marco
Serrano Lara, José Javier
Severo, Marta
Sheehan, Kathleen
Simon de Blas, Clara
Simon Martin, Jose
Sitch, Matthew
Sliskovic, Tanja
Smith, Matthew
Smuc, Michael
Smuc, Michael
Snijders, Tom
Sohler, Karin
Sohn, Christophe
Solana-Solana, Miguel
Solano, Giacomo
Solano, Giacomo
Somorrostro López,
Patricia
Sorolla, Natxo
Stark, Martin
Steglich, Christian
Stenger, Zsolt
Stevenson, Rachel
Steverink, Nardi
Stovel, Katherine
Šubelj, Lovro
WED 14.50-16.30
THU 8.30-9.50
FRI 8.50-9.50
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 16.50-18.30
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
WED 11.40-13.20
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 11.50-13.10
WED 14.50-16.30
THU 14.40-16.10
FRI 11.50-13.10
THU 10.10-11.30
WED 11.40-13.20
WED 11.40-13.20
THU 15.20-16.50
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 11.50-13.10
WED 11.40-13.20
WED 14.50-16.30
THU 11.50-13.10
FRI 16.40-18.20
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 11.50-13.10
FRI 11.50-13.10
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 15.20-16.50
WED 11.40-13.20
THU 11.50-13.10
FRI 10.10-11.30
THU 8.30-9.50
WED 11.40-13.20
41
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
WED 16.50-18.30
WED 14.50-16.30
THU 11.50-13.10
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 10.10-11.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
THU 11.50-13.10
FRI 11.50-13.10
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 8.30-9.50
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 16.40-18.20
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 8.30-9.50
FRI 10.10-11.30
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 11.40-13.20
FRI 8.50-9.50
FRI 8.50-9.50
THU 10.10-11.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
THU 15.20-16.50
WED 14.50-16.30
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 10.10-11.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
THU 8.30-9.50
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 14.50-16.30
THU 8.30-9.50
FRI 11.50-13.10
THU 11.50-13.10
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 14.40-16.20
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 11.40-13.20
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 16.50-18.30
WED 16.50-18.30
Sulinska, Iwona
Szejda, Jacek
Szontágh, Éva
Teglio, Andrea
Teixeira, Fabio
Teixeira, José
Tejada, Juan
Tejada, Juan
Tenisheva, Ksenia
Teves, Laura
Thomas, Mathieu
Tischer, Daniel
Titkova, Vera
Titkova, Vera
Tobias, Yvonne
Toepfer, Tom
Tranmer, Mark
Truschkat, Inga
Tsuladze, Lia
Tu, Hsin Fei
Tubaro, Paola
Tubaro, Paola
Vacca, Raffaele
Vacca, Raffaele
Vacca, Raffaele
Vacchiano, Mattia
Valenzuela-García, Hugo
Vallet, Jason
Van den Bergh, Jeroen
Van Duijn, Marijtje
Van Tilburg, Theo
Van Tubergen, Frank
Vanbeselaere, Silke
Vandenbogaerde, Ellen
Varanda, Marta
Varga, Attila
Veenstra, René
Veltri, Giuseppe A.
Videira, Pedro
Villena-Oliver, Andrés
Violon, Chloe
Vitale, Tommaso
Vlaemynck, Marieke
Vogl, Christian R.
Völker, Beate
Völker, Beate
WED 14.50-16.30
THU 10.10-11.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 8.30-9.50
THU 10.10-11.30
THU 11.50-13.10
THU 8.30-9.50
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 8.50-9.50
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 11.40-13.20
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
THU 11.50-13.10
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 16.50-17.00
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 8.50-9.50
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 16.50-18.30
THU 15.20-16.50
WED 11.40-13.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 11.50-13.10
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 11.40-13.20
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
WED 11.40-13.20
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 8.30-9.50
FRI 11.50-13.10
Volkova, Irina
Vollebergh, Wilma
Wasserman, Stanley
Watson, Joseph
Wencelius, Jean
Weren, Serena
Windhager, Florian
Windhager, Florian
Wittek, Rafael
Wurpts, Bernd
Wyss, Romano
Wyss, Tobias
Xing, Xin
Xu, Wayne Weiai
Yasar Tinar, Mustafa
Yee, Claire
Yepes, Lídia
Yousafzai, Shumaila Y.
Yter, Mireia
Zaccarin, Susanna
Zaccarin, Susanna
Zappa, Paola
Zaremberg, Gisela
Zargari Asl, Hamid
Zarzecka, Olga
Zenk, Lukas
Zenk, Lukas
Zenk, Lukas
Zeroual, Abdellatif
Žnidarši, Anja
Zweekhorst, Marjolein
42
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 14.50-16.30
THU 10.10-11.30
WED 14.50-16.30
THU 15.20-16.50
THU 11.50-13.10
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
FRI 16.40-18.20
WED 16.50-18.30
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
THU 10.10-11.30
WED 16.50-18.30
FRI 14.40-16.20
WED 14.50-16.30
WED 14.50-16.30
FRI 11.50-13.10
WED 11.40-13.20
FRI 14.40-16.20
THU 8.30-9.50
FRI 11.50-13.10
WED 14.50-16.30
THU 11.50-13.10
THU 15.20-16.50
WED 11.40-13.20
FRI 10.10-11.30
FRI 16.40-18.20
Practical information
Accommodation
The campus of the Autonomous University of Barcelona is about 45 minutes of traveling away
from the city center (35 min by train and 5-10 min walk). It is strongly recommended to book
an accommodation on the University campus, either in Hotel Campus
(http://www.hotelcampusuab.com) or in the apartments. Both are relatively cheap (about €60
per night for two persons, and €8 for breakfast) and about 15 minutes' walk to the place where
the conference will be held. Breakfast for both places is provided in the same room. In case
you want to share an apartment on the campus with other participants, we suggest using this
Doodle: http://doodle.com/bpvue7hgxzpkfb5d. Please note that the apartments provide linen
and towels but no shampoo or soap. The kitchen has a fridge and a microwave. A small
supermarket is nearby - in case you forgot to bring soap or shampoo.
If you wish to stay in the center of Barcelona, it may be a good idea to choose a hotel close to
the Catalonia Square ("Plaça Catalunya"), to minimize travel time. We propose Hostal Grau,
http://www.hostalgrau.com/en/hotel->overview.html. The hotel can be booked online (from
€110 per night, breakfast excluded).
If you want to find a hotel between the two places, you can check the train travel here:
http://www.fgc.cat/downloads/horaris/Sabadell_1403.pdf and choose one village and try to
find a hotel near the station. One example: San Cugat del Vallés is one of the largest and most
beautiful villages located between Barcelona and the university campus. The S2 line goes to
the UAB (10 min) and to the Plaça Catalunya (25min). Here are two hotels you could check:
http://www.hotel-santcugat.com/en/ and http://www.qgathotel.com/. Hotel AS Hoteles
Bellaterra may be geographically close to the UAB, but there is no connection by public
transport, so please check other options.
43
Transport
The airport is located in El Prat de Llobregat, 18 km outside Barcelona. From the airport you
will have to take the bus, or the train to get into the centre of Barcelona and then change to
get a different train out to the UAB. Alternatively you can take a taxi directly from the airport.
Option A - By taxi from the airport to the UAB
This is the most expensive, quickest and easiest way to get to the UAB. Official black and
yellow taxis wait in the ranks at the exits of both terminals at the airport.
• The journey takes 30-40 minutes but is dependent on the traffic and will cost 50-60€. The
personnel in the hotel lobby and the apartments can arrange a taxi back to the airport for you.
• There are two types of fare: T1 is applied at night and is more expensive; T2 is applied on
weekdays from 07:00 to 21:00.
44
Option B1: By bus
(STEP1 - from the airport to Barcelona city center)
There are several bus lines that run between Barcelona and the airport. However, the easiest
way to get to Barcelona is by taking the Aerobús (A1 to/from Terminal 1, or A2 to/from
Terminal 2). There are stops outside both airport terminals and the final destination is Plaça
Catalunya, located in the centre of Barcelona.
The Aerobuses are light and dark blue and have 'Aerobús' written
down the side. You can buy the ticket from the staff at the bus stops
(payment in cash or by credit card), at the automatic sales machines
(payment by credit card) or by paying the bus driver (cash only).
From Plaça Catalunya you will have to change to the train to get to the
UAB (see section on Trains from Plaça Catalunya to the UAB and map)
Aerobús timetable:
Terminal T1 (Airport) - Pl. Catalunya
(Barcelona)
Terminal T2 (Airport) - Pl. Catalunya
(Barcelona)
From 05.35 h to 07.30 h every 10 min
From 07.30 h to 22.25 h every 5 min
From 22.25 h to 01.05 h every 10 min
From 06.00 h to 07.00 h every 20 min
From 07.00 h to 23.00 h every 10 min
From 23.00 h to 01.00 h every 20 min
Pl. Catalunya (Barcelona) - Terminal T1
(Airport)
Pl. Catalunya (Barcelona) - Terminal T2
(Airport)
From 05.00 h to 06.50 h every 10 min
From 06.50 h to 21.45 h every 5 min
From 21.45 h to 00.30 h every 10 min
From 05.30 h to 06.50 h every 20 min
From 06.50 h to 22.20 h every 10 min
From 22.20 h to 00.30 h every 20 min
The service operates 365 days a year, always with the same schedule and takes approximately
35 minutes. Prices: One way - 5.90€; Return – 10.20€
(For further information: http://www.aerobusbcn.com/index.php/en/discoveraerobus.html)
NOTE: You can find the Aerobús stop directly outside the enormous El Corte Ingles department
store on one side of the Plaça Catalunya.
On your return, please note that there are two separate queues - one for the Aerobús (A1) to
Terminal 1 and another for the Aerobús (A2) to Terminal 2. The Aerobús queue for Terminal 1
is located towards the front of the bus stop if you are facing away from the Ramblas. The
queue for the Aerobús to Terminal 2 is behind this. At busy times there is a member of staff at
the stop who can help you and give you directions.
45
Option B2: By train
(STEP 1 - from the airport to Barcelona City Centre via SANTS station)
The train station is located in Terminal 2 of the airport. If you
arrive in Terminal 1, you will first have to catch the free shuttle
bus to the station in Terminal 2 (located across the road/sky bridge
from Terminal 2B). These buses "Bustransit T1-T2" are green, and run
every 6-7 minutes (at night 20-25 min). The journey between the
terminals takes up to 10 minutes.The RENFE train station is just outside Terminal 2.





Buy a ticket (see below) and remember to keep it.
Take the train to Barcelona (Line R2). These are the only ones that come to and from
the airport. Trains depart every 30 minutes.
Get off at the Barcelona Sants station (10-15 min. - arriving at platform 13 or 14).
Now you need to change to the second train. When you get off the train you need to
go up into the main concourse and find platform 8. You can use the same ticket to exit
the first concourse and enter the second. From here you can catch any train; get off at
the next stop, Plaça Catalunya (approx. 5 minutes) and exit the station to the street
above.
When you arrive in Plaça Catalunya and you wish to continue your trip to the UAB, you
should leave this train station and walk to the Ferrocarrils (FGC) train to the UAB (see
section Trains from Plaça Catalunya to the UAB (Ferrocarrils).
Price: A single train ticket from the airport to Plaça Catalunya should cost around 2.15€.
However, if you are travelling in a group or you wish to go into Barcelona city centre on other
days, a more convenient and possibly cheaper alternative is to buy a T-10 combined ticket (see
section on the T-10 ticket, below).
RENFE timetable:
From Barcelona Airport: The first train leaves the airport at 05:13 in the morning and the last
train leaves the airport at 23:44 at night.
From Estació Sants: The first train leaves Estació Sants at 05:13 in the morning and the last
train leaves “Sants” at 23:14 at night.
46
Options B1 and B2 (STEP 2): Trains from Plaça Catalunya to the UAB
The best way to get to the UAB from the city center of Barcelona is by train with the
"Ferrocarrils de la Generalitat de Catalunya" company (FGC), lines S2
and S55
. The
train departs from the underground station at the Catalonia Square, in Catalan the "Plaça
Catalunya" (at the very center of Barcelona; see Map 1). You can enter the station in front of
the Café Zurich, a large café at the corner of the Plaça Catalunya that is closest to the Rambla
(see Map 1 in the Appendix). Please note that there are two entries to underground stations
next to each other, one of them is for the FGC and the other for the metro. The correct one is
indicated with the logo
and above the stairs, you will see S2 and S55 indicated among
the lines. The trip takes about 34-36 minutes, and a train departs every 10-15 minutes
(depending on the time of the day).
Vila Universitària
• Buy a ticket (see below). Please do NOT throw away your ticket too early, because you will
need it again to leave the train station when you arrive.
 Take Line S2
direction Sabadell or S55
direction Universitat Autònoma. Both go the
UAB. (Make sure you do not take the other trains departing from there.)
• If you are going to the Hotel Campus or the apartments on campus, get off at the Bellaterra
stop. From there it takes just a few minutes to walk to the hotel on a forested road. Just take
the direction "Vila Universitària" and follow the road, you will see the hotel to your left hand.
 If you are going directly to the conference venue, get off at the Universitat Autònoma
station (see UAB map in the appendix). From this station, the walk takes about 5-10 minutes
to the Faculty of Arts, where the conference will be held (see below for a description of the
route).
Frequency
First Train from UAB -> Plaça
Catalunya
Last Train from UAB -> Plaça
Catalunya
First Train from Plaça Catalunya ->
UAB
Last train from Plaça Catalunya ->
UAB
Weekdays
Approx. every 12
minutes
04:50
Weekends
Approx. every 20 minutes
23:17
(Friday: 02:12)
05:17
Saturday: 02:12
Sunday: 00:15
05:37
23:23
(Friday: 01:35)
Saturday: 01:35
Sunday: 23:25
47
05:45
For time tables and further information, please check the pdf file at
http://www.fgc.net/downloads/horaris/pdf/lectiu/24_Bellaterra_LECTIU_BV05_1_tz.pdf
or
the site http://www.fgc.net/eng/index.asp (for the first box, select the lines "BarcelonaVallès", then select the "Plaça Catalunya" as departure stations and either "Universitat
Autònoma" or "Bellaterra" as arrival stations).
Price: A one-way ticket to the UAB costs €3.00 (it´s 2 zones). It is highly recommend to
purchase a T-10 combined ticket for 2 zones (€20,3) so you can make 10 trips. (see section on
the T-10 ticket, below).
For further information on FGC trains: http://www.fgc.es/eng/index.asp
In the appendix, you will find the map of Plaça Catalunya and the location of the entrances to
the FGC and RENFE stations as well as the Aerobús stop (Map 1) and maps of the UAB campus.
Note that there is another train going to the University from the city center, from the national
railway company "Renfe", which brings you to the station called "Cerdanyola-Universitat".
However, we strongly recommend to take the FGC line instead.
T-10 ticket
The UAB Campus is outside the city of Barcelona, so you need a Zone 2 ticket.
If you buy a single ticket, it only can be used for one kind of transport; i.e. only for RENFE or
FGC or the Metro, etc. For example, you have to buy another ticket when transferring from the
airport train to the metro, and another for the FGC train to the UAB.
However, there is an integrated ticket, which allows you to use
all kinds of transport in the city of Barcelona (RENFE, FGC,
metro, bus and tram although NOT the Aerobús). The minimum
is a ten-journey ticket (T-10). To get to the UAB campus you
will have to buy a 2 Zone T-10 ticket (20.30 €). This T-10 ticket
can be used by more than one person, if travelling together.
Simply use the same ticket as many times as needed for passing the barrier for entering into
the train station
The T-10 ticket can be used on more than one means of transport and which is counted as a
single journey as long as the final change is within 1 hour and 30 minutes after you first frank
the ticket for that journey (or 1 hour and 15 minutes for 1 Zone). This means for example, you
can make changes at metro stops, then leave the metro and get on a bus to finish your journey
or vice versa BUT you cannot re-enter the metro once you have left it - this would count as
another journey. You should be able to take the RENFE train from the airport, change to the
Metro and then change again to the FGC train to the UAB all within the time limit, for the price
of a single journey.
48
If you plan on going into the centre of Barcelona various days, or you can share your ticket
with another person, this is the most economic way of travelling around.
Where to buy tickets (including the T10)
Train ticket vending machines can be found in both the airport station and the stations in
Barcelona city centre. There are five ticket machines in Barcelona Airport. If you have difficulty
using the machine, ask somebody wearing a high visibility jacket - there is normally somebody
manning the machines who will be able to help you.
You can pay at the machines with both cash (coins and notes
up to 20€) and credit/debit cards.
The languages available at machines are:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
German
Spanish
Catalan
English
French
Note: It is possible to buy multiple tickets with one payment.
49
How to find your way on the campus...
...if you stay on campus
The route from the hotel to the conference will be indicated on site, but here is a description
that follows the blue route on Map 2 and 3 (the latter is more detailed): Leave the hotel, go
around the breakfast hall to the main street (see picture 1). Go to your right, and walk down
the road parallel to the student apartments. Before the roundabout, cross the street and
continue your walk on the smaller road to the left until you are on the (rough) parking lot
(picture 2, dashed line) or follow the sidewalk (keep left (twice) until you are behind a white
building (hidden behind the trees). Either walk down the parking lot and down the hill (around
the white building) or - if it´s later than 9am and especially if your mobility is limited or you
wear high heals - enter the white building (a library, indicated with 45/58 on Map 4 and
"Biblioteca de Comunicació" on Map 6) and take the elevator down to the first floor, then
leave the building on the other side. You are now on a square, the "Plaça Cívica", with a
pharmacy and some shops on the left side and an ATM on the other side (see photo 3 - left).
Cross the square completely to the other end (keep right at the other end), cross the bridge
and continue your walk up hill (now change to the red route on Map 4, starting at the Plaça
Cívica). On your right hand side you will pass the faculties of Sociology and Political Sciences,
Psychology and if you´d continue Arts. Enter the building of the conference venue at the sign
of the "Facultat de Psicologia" (see Map 4, and picture 4 below). If you arrive early, please
know that you can get coffee from 8 am onwards by continuing the road up hill, where you will
find the bar/restaurant with the outside terrace on your right hand (see Map 4/6/7).
50
Right: Plaça Cívica; Left: Side entrance of the Faculty
... if you do not stay on campus
Once you have arrived by train at the Universitat Autònoma station, follow the crowd leaving
the train station (you will need your train ticket for this) until you arrive on a large square with
some shops, the "Plaça Cívica". Cross the square diagonally to your left, cross the bridge and
continue your walk up hill. On your right hand side you will pass the faculties of Sociology and
Political Sciences, Psychology and -if you´d continue- Arts (see the red route on Map 4). Enter
the building at your right when you see the sign of the "Facultat de Psicologia" (see the picture
above). If you arrive early, you can continue the road up hill, where you will find the
bar/restaurant with the outside terrace on your right hand as well, to take a relaxing cup of
coffee (see Map 4/6/7; coffee from 8 am onwards).
Where to eat?
Eating on and around the university campus
On the campus, there are a few places where you can enjoy a meal. Here we give you more
detailed information about the different options so that you can choose whatever you like
most. Most of the catering areas are open from 8am to 7.30pm.


Faculty of Philosophy and Arts and Faculty of Psychology - bar (indicated as 2 on map
7). It is the nearest place from the conference rooms where you can have breakfast
and lunch, coffee and tea and other drinks. They serve daily menus (and sometimes
pizzas) for about 7 euros, including dessert (between 12.45 and 15.00 - beer and wine
too). Sandwiches, pastries, coffee and tea, beer and other drinks can be bought all day
(note that at lunch time there is a separate queue for the menus and for the
sandwiches/coffee/tea). There are outdoor tables where the shadow is guaranteed.
Faculty of Philosophy and Arts and Faculty of Psychology - restaurant (indicated as 3
on map 7). A bit hidden from the eye, you can find the entry to this small restaurant
51





within the bar, close to the exit to the terrace. Locals refer to this restaurant as “la
bonita” (the nice one, in comparison to the bar of course..). Here you can have threecourse lunches with wine and good coffee for about 15-20 euro, but beware: it´s easily
filled. You can make reservations.
Faculty of Science (indicated as 6 on Map 4). It is one of the largest restaurants on the
campus. It has two floors, and a bar (self-catering), a restaurant, and a pizzeria. They
offer a great variety of food (between 1 and 4 pm), sandwiches, pastries, coffee and
tea and other drinks. They also have places to sit outside.
Restaurant "La Plaça" (indicated as 3 on Map 4). It is right at the center of the
campus, on La Plaça Cívica, which you will cross when you get off the train station. It is
cheaper than the others, and the quality of the food is similar. You can also take a beer
or a coffee outside while watching the plaza with the students (Location: Plaça Cívica).
Bar-Frankfurt (indicated as 3 on Map 3). This is a proper bar. As the name suggests,
you can eat sausages, sandwiches and snacks there. It is also open at night and the
Hospitality Suite is here. (Location: Vila Universitaria, very close to the Hotel Campus)
Bar of the Hotel Campus (indicated as 1 on Map 3). The hotel Campus has a small
menu to cater for their guests at night, so in case you stay at the hotel and you want to
dine in, you can…
La Marmita (indicated as 1 on Map 3). This is a more formal restaurant located within
the Hotel Campus, which is open for lunch. You can find it in the same space as the
hotel bar.
Around the campus:



Marcs (Bartomeu 21, Bellaterra - close to the Vila Universitaria;
http://restaurantmarcs.blogspot.com.es/2013/11/ubicacio.html). If you stay in hotel
Campus, you might like to go out for dinner without travelling all the way to Barcelona.
A nice ten-minute walk through the village of Bellaterra (see Map 5) will lead you to
restaurant Marcs, which has an outside terrace that is lovely and relaxing on warm
summer evenings. Just take care when you walk back with a little alcohol clouding your
head, because cars sometimes pass by at great speed and there is no sidewalk for part
of the road…
La Bolera (Baixada de l’ Alba 20, Sant Cugat del Vallés; opens daily except Sunday for
lunch, http://www.restaurantlabolera.com/en). Sant Cugat is just a few train stops
away from the campus (10 min). This restaurant serves great Catalan, home-style food.
It is a bit more expensive but many international social networkers liked it here. Think
meat and vegetables “a la brasa” (off the grill), pan con tomate, and nice wines.
La Margotín (Vinyoles 8, Sant Cugat del Vallés; Tues-Sat lunch 13.30 – 15.30, dinner
21.00 – 23.30, http://www.totsantcugat.cat/margotin). Also located in Sant Cugat.
Swiss cheese fondues and salads are the specialty here.
These are the easiest places to find, but for more information, or a map, you can check the
following web-page:
http://www.uab.es/servlet/Satellite/life/food-1101231886107.html
52
If you want general information about the Campus, please check the following link
http://www.uab.es/servlet/Satellite/Life-1101231879101.html
Eating in Barcelona
As you know Barcelona is a big city, and you can find all kinds of restaurants and bars to eat.
Nonetheless, there are a few places around the city centre that we would like to recommend
you:









Restaurant “La Flauta” (Carrer d’Aribau, 23, near Plaza Universitat): This modern
restaurant is a very traditional place for Spanish food, and recommended by many
colleagues. It is especially recommended for tapas, and the ham (“el jamón”) they
serve is excellent. The staff is very helpful and they have menus in English as well. For
reviews check: http://www.yelp.com/biz/la-flauta-barcelona (note: it is a very busy
place at night, especially on Fridays and Saturdays, so it is recommended to arrive
between 8 pm and 9pm or, if possible, to book a table in advance)
Restaurant “Maitea” (Carrer de Casanova, 157; http://www.maitea.es/). Pinchos, this
is a traditional Basque place. Maitea is located close to Plaza Universitat and a bit
further away from the touristic areas. It serves all kinds of crazy pinchos, the Basque
variation of tapas, and excellent wine and sangría.
Can Solé (C/ San Carles, 4; http://www.restaurantcansole.com/). Traditional Catalan
cuisine, with excellent rice dishes. An institution. It is close to the old port, the Port
Vell, which is a nice area for going for a walk afterwards. A bit more expensive.
El
Suquet
de
l’Almirall.
(Passeig
de
Joan
de
Borbó,
65;
http://www.suquetdelalmirall.com). This place is also close to the Port Vell. It is also
an emblematic place, and very cosy, where you can have all sorts of rice dishes,
especially brothy rice ("arroz caldoso"), which is very typical in Catalonia. It´s a bit
more expensive.
Catamarán
(Avda.
Litoral,
44
(Platja
Bogatell);
http://barcelona.salir.com/restaurante_catamaran). For paellas, but this time at the
Bogatell beach. Start for example with squid and have a seafood paella or a meat grill,
with a white wine of Rueda verdejo, in a relaxing beach atmosphere. But the best is
the view and the walk at the beach afterwards.
Matsuri (Pl. Regomir 1; http://www.matsuri-restaurante.com). One of the best Asian
restaurants (Japanese and Thai) in Barcelona.
El
Café
de
l’Academia
(Carrer
de
Lledó,
1;
http://www.bcnrestaurantes.com/barcelona.asp?restaurante=cafe-de-l-academia).
This is a small and cosy place located in the gothic quarter. Great Catalan food, with a
nice terrace.
Casa Alfonso (Roger de Llúria 6; http://casaalfonso.com/ca/) Delicious tapas and ham.
“La Boquería” market: The bars located around the Boquería market (right at the
centre, just off the Rambla street) serve fresh fish and seafood. El Quim de la Boquería
53




and Pinotxo are examples of such bars. The market is definitely a must-see.
http://www.boqueria.info/
Qué bueno que viniste (C/ Ciutat, 10; http://quebuenoqueviniste.net/). Combines
Argentinean cuisine with tapas.
Little Italy (C/ Rec, 30; http://www.littleitaly.es/). Italian restaurant with live jazz
music.
Meson David (C/ Carretes 63; http://www.mesondavid.com/). Restaurant with typical
Galician food in the Raval.
Tickets (Avinguda Paral·lel, 164; http://www.ticketsbar.es/web/). El Bulli Chef Ferran
Adria is one of the owners of this tapas bar which serves of course avantgarde tapas.
It´s pricey. And you must reserve online.
Vegetarians and vegans can have a bit of a rough time in Spain. Tapas are a good option; so
are Italian restaurants. In mainstream restaurants, you can best ask for two entrees instead of
one entree and a main course. Even so, do not be surprised if there is some ham or an anchovy
in your "vegetarian" dish... Some completely vegetarian/vegan restaurants:




Juicy Jones (C/Hospital 74). Vegan food, menu of 10 euros both at lunch and dinner
time. Of course there are also lots of fruit and vegetable juices to try. Very original,
colourful and cheap.
Teresa Carles (Jovellanos, 2; http://www.teresacarles.com/cat) Known as the best
vegetarian restaurant in town. Prices range from 12-25 euros. Vegetarian food with
hints of the Catalan cuisine.
La Báscula (C/ Flassaders, 30). Very cosy ambience, and the daily changing menu
includes standards such as quiches, crêpes, smoothies and delicious cakes. Make sure
you try their homemade ginger and lemon juice.
Biocenter (C/Pintor Fortuny, 25; http://restaurantebiocenter.es/ ) Price between 10
and 25 euros. Vegetarian and vegan food, organic production.
For more information, please check these tourist pages:
http://www.barcelona.com/barcelona_city_guide/where_to_eat_barcelona
What to do during leisure time in Barcelona?
It´s July! And Barcelona is full of activities during these days. We let you know some places to
visit, and, if you wish, we can help you to manage the reservation tickets for dinners,
museums, concerts…
If you only have time in the evenings, here are some sites to visit and things to do:

La Pedrera (http://www.lapedrera.com/en/home) A visit to Casa Milà, popularly
known as ‘La Pedrera’ (the stone quarry), gives us a better understanding and
appreciation of architecture and take us to the period when Antoni Gaudí lived. The
54





programme 'La Pedrera by day’ includes a visit to the most important parts of the
building: the Roof-Terrace, the Espai Gaudí (the attic), an apartment that recreates
bourgeois life in the early 20th century, The Courtyards, and the Exhibition Hall, which
has a separate direct entrance from the street and is open whenever there is an
exhibition. But for those of you who don´t stay an extra day, the programme `The
Secret Pedrera´ (from 8.15 pm; last entry at 10.45 pm) shows you La Pedrera by night.
You can combine the tour with a dinner if you like. Should you like to enjoy a small jazz
concert in the atmosphere of La Pedrera, you can visit it on the 3rd, 4th or 5th of July
at 9.45 pm for a concert of the Horacio & Lucía Fumero Trío, plus drinks, check
http://www.lapedrera.com/en/activities/music/summer-nights-la-pedrera-2014
Gran Teatre del Liceu (http://www.liceubarcelona.cat/en/calendar.html?L=2&page=72014) Barcelona's opera house, the Gran Teatre del Liceu, was founded on the Rambla
in 1847 and has continued over the years to fulfill its role as a culture and arts centre.
It is one of the symbols of the city. Check out the program at their website.
Palau de la Musica (http://www.palaumusica.cat/en): The Palau de la Música Catalana
is an architectural jewel of Catalan Art Nouveau, the only concert venue in this style to
be listed as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO. The concert auditorium is one of the
most distinguished in the world. You can do a guided tour at the Palau (expensive
though). If you would like to enjoy the Palau properly, consider booking a ticket for a
choir singing "the Four Seasons" on the 1st of July, or a flamenco performance on the
4th.
Sala Apolo (https://www.sala-apolo.com/en/; C/ Nou de la Rambla 113) and
Razzmatazz (http://www.salarazzmatazz.com/; Pamplona 88) are two night clubs that
are quite popular. Jamboree (Plaça Reial 17 ) and the Harlem Jazz Club (C/Comtessa
de Sobradiel, 8) are... jazz clubs you can check out.
On the 1st and 4th of July, there are matches of the World Cup in Brazil. Want to know
the best bars for watching football in Barcelona, right? Check out http://www.ohbarcelona.com/en/blog/2013/things-to-do/sports/live-football-barcelona-7658.
Of course you cannot leave Barcelona without taking a dip in the Mediterranean sea,
even if it´s at night. The Barceloneta beach is probably the most crowded one (but not
at night), but the most central too. At some beach bars you can dine too, a relaxed way
to end the day (and start the night) http://www.timeout.com/barcelona/food-anddrink/the-best-chiringuitos-in-barcelona.
Did you plan an extra day in Barcelona? Good! Of course one great activity is to stroll through
the Gothic Quarter with its labyrinth of narrow streets and beautiful squares and churches, to
admire some of the highlights of the Modernist architecture, or to relax in one of the parks of
the city (Parc Guell! Parc de la Ciutadella! .. and take a tea in the Hivernacle if you´re there)
 Exhibition at the Centre de Cultura Contemporanea de Barcelona (CCCB): "Big Bang
Data" (http://www.cccb.org/en/exposicio-big_bang_data-45167). An exhibition of the
explosion of data in our lives, with beautiful data visualizations. Montalegre 5, 08001
Barcelona. Open Tuesday to Sunday 11 am - 8 pm.
55



Museu Nacional d´ Art de Catalunya (MNAC). (http://www.museunacional.cat/en)
This museum at the Montjuic hill provides an overview of Catalan art from the 12th to
the 20th centuries. The best part of the museum is probably the Romanesque
collection. When art historians realised that scores of the tenth-century churches in
the Pyrenees were falling into ruin, the beautiful Romanesque murals were removed
from church apses and they are displayed in the MNAC. Tuesday to Saturday, 10am to
8pm; Sundays and public holidays, 10am to 3pm.
MACBA (http://www.macba.cat/en/about-macba) As a public entity, the Museu d’Art
Contemporani de Barcelona (MACBA) disseminates contemporary art, offering a
diverse range of visions, and generates critical debates on art and culture, while
aspiring to reach increasingly diverse audiences. Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and
Friday, from 11 am to 7.30 pm. Saturday, from 10 am to 9 pm
Sunday and public holidays, from 10 am to 3 pm.
If you are more a swimming pool type of person than a beach person, don´t miss out
on the public swimming pool on the Montjuic hill (Avinguda de Miramar, 31), with
spectacular views on the urban landscape. No time, but you want to see the view
anyway?
Here´s
a
video
that
explains
it
all.....
http://www.theguardian.com/travel/2011/nov/01/barcelona-swimming-poolmontjuic-piscina
56
Further practical information
Wifi - campus
The UAB campus (including hotels and apartments) has wifi coverage, but the quality of the
signal varies. You should be able to connect to the internet without problems in the meeting
rooms. To connect, write the direction of the UAB homepage in your browser (www.uab.cat).
You will then receive an access page on which you will have to choose the type of access (guest
or personalized). Identify as a guest and click on OK.
You can find coverage maps on the site http://www.uab.es/servlet/Satellite/des-delcampus/connexio-sense-fils/planols-de-cobertura-1096479276054.html (it is in Catalan, but
you only need to choose the faculty where you are, "Facultat de Lletres i Psicologia", and then
"Espais Comuns", that is, "public spaces").
Lockers - conference venue
At the conference venue, there will be lockers where you can store your coat and belongings.
They can be found in the main hall, near the entry to the bar. The lockers are coin operated
and need to be left empty at night.
Pharmacy
On the campus, there is a pharmacy at the Plaça Cívica, which is open from 9.30am -8pm. The
pharmacy is indicated with 4 on Map 4. In the city, you can find easily find a pharmacy
("farmacia" in Spanish and Catalan).
Security
Unfortunately it is necessary for anyone travelling in or through Barcelona to be vigilant and
take care of their belongings as tourists are targeted by pickpockets - especially in the city
center (Ramblas, metro stations) and near touristic sites. Should it be necessary, contact
details
of
the
Foreign
Embassies
in
Spain
can
be
found
here:
http://embassy.goabroad.com/embassies-in/spain
Money
There are ATMs/cash machines in the airport, the centre of Barcelona (e.g., in Plaça
Catalunya) as well as on the UAB campus (e.g., Plaça Cívica, indicated as 5 on Map 4). If you
need to change money, it is best to do so in the airport when you arrive. The La Caixa Bureau
de change is located in “La Plaza” on level 1 of Terminal 1. It opens from 07:30 to 22:00 every
day. La Caixa banks do not charge commission to change foreign currency. There is no Bureau
de change at the UAB.
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Air travel
Arrival and departure times at Barcelona Airport can be checked on the following pages:
http://www.spanish-airports.com/barcelona/arrivals.php
and
http://www.spanishairports.com/barcelona/departures.php
Weather
Unsubstantiated claims of arrangements with weather deities and up-to-date scientific
predictions may be checked on the following website (just in case):
http://espanol.weather.com/weather/10day-Barcelona-SPXX0015
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Appendix - Maps
Map 1. City center: Train station to UAB campus (
), Plaça Catalunya, La Rambla
El Corte Inglés
Department Store
Airbus Stop
Bar Zurich
& Train
station to
UAB
To the sea
(via the
Ramblas)
Key: Entrances to underground train and metro station
FGC (Ferrocarils trains)
RENFE trains
Walk between FGC and RENFE stations
59
Metro
Map 2. Overview of the Bellaterra Campus of the Autonomous University of Barcelona
←Bar/restaurant, outside terrace, Faculty of Arts
↙Faculty Psychology
Train station↘
Universitat
Autonoma
←Plaça Cívica
Student facilities ("la Vila")
Hotel Campus↘
↑Torre Vila-Puig
↖Train station Bellaterra
The red route takes you from the train station Universitat Autònoma to the Faculty of Psychology.
The pink route takes you from the train station Bellaterra to the Hotel Campus and apartments.
The blue route takes you from the Campus hotel to the Faculty of Psychology.
You can find an interactive map of the campus at http://www.uab.es/mapes/
60
1
2
3
Map 3. Detailed map of the walk from the train station Bellaterra to the hotel (dotted pink route) and from the hotel Campus to the Plaça Cívica (dark
blue route), and vice versa.
1 Reception hotel Campus
2 Reception apartments
3 Supermarket and bar "Frankfurt"
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2
1
4
To the
hotel and
bar
Frankfurt...
←
5
3
6
Map 4. Detailed map of the route from the train station Universitat Autónoma (1) and the Plaça Cívica to the conference venue (2) (red route from train
station to side entrance Faculty, dashed red route to the bar of the Faculty).623: Restaurant La Plaça; 4: Pharmacy, 5: ATM; 6: Restaurant Faculty Science.
Thick blue route to the hotel.
Marcs
Map 5. Route from the hotel Campus to restaurant Marcs in Bellaterra (green route)
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Map 6. Detailed map of the Faculties of Arts (upper part) and Psychology (lower part)
computer room 503
2nd floor:
Department of
Anthropology
Poster
session
conference romos 201 - 215
x
P24
To the
train, to the
hotel...
↓
The grey arrows show the different entrances to the building. You can find the main
entrance ("Accès Principal") right above the information point indicated with SLIPI.
However, if you come from the train station or from the Hotel Campus, you will most likely
enter the building using a side door indicated as "Accés des de Plaça Cívica" (Access from
the Plaça Cívica) or enter via the bar-restaurant. Restrooms are indicated in yellow.
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Map 7. Detailed map of the Faculty
5
12
4
3
6
2
11
7
To the
train, to
the
hotel...
↓
1
0
8
9
0 Registration
7 Conference room "Sala de Juntas"
1 Main hall
8 Conference room "Sala de Graus"
2 Bar
9 Conference room P24
3 Restaurant
10 Conference rooms 201-215
4 Outside terrace
11 Computer rooms
5 Auditorium
12 Bus transfer to the banquet
6 Poster session
65
10