Avoiding “conflicts of interest”: a computational approach to scheduling parallel conference tracks and its human evaluation

Author:

Manda Prashanti1,Hahn Alexander2,Beekman Katherine3,Vision Todd J.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Computer Science, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Greensboro, NC, United States of America

2. Department of Computer Science, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, United States of America

3. ROI Revolution Inc., Raleigh, NC, United States of America

4. Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, United States of America

Abstract

Conferences with contributed talks grouped into multiple concurrent sessions pose an interesting scheduling problem. From an attendee’s perspective, choosing which talks to visit when there are many concurrent sessions is challenging since an individual may be interested in topics that are discussed in different sessions simultaneously. The frequency of topically similar talks in different concurrent sessions is, in fact, a common cause for complaint in post-conference surveys. Here, we introduce a practical solution to the conference scheduling problem by heuristic optimization of an objective function that weighs the occurrence of both topically similar talks in one session and topically different talks in concurrent sessions. Rather than clustering talks based on a limited number of preconceived topics, we employ a topic model to allow the topics to naturally emerge from the corpus of contributed talk titles and abstracts. We then measure the topical distance between all pairs of talks. Heuristic optimization of preliminary schedules seeks to balance the topical similarity of talks within a session and the dissimilarity between concurrent sessions. Using an ecology conference as a test case, we find that stochastic optimization dramatically improves the objective function relative to the schedule manually produced by the program committee. Approximate Integer Linear Programming can be used to provide a partially-optimized starting schedule, but the final value of the discrimination ratio (an objective function used to estimate coherence within a session and disparity between concurrent sessions) is surprisingly insensitive to the starting schedule. Furthermore, we show that, in contrast to the manual process, arbitrary scheduling constraints are straightforward to include. We applied our method to a second biology conference with over 1,000 contributed talks plus scheduling constraints. In a randomized experiment, biologists responded similarly to a machine-optimized schedule and a highly modified schedule produced by domain experts on the conference program committee.

Funder

National Evolutionary Synthesis Center and the National Science Foundation

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Computer Science

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