The papers receiving these awards were selected from a set of outstanding papers,
based on the quantitative and qualitative classifications as well as comments provided
by the program committee reviewers, their final classification as full paper and
their oral presentation at the conference.
2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 | 2016
COMPLEXIS 2020
Best Paper Award
Area:
Complexity in Social Sciences
Credibility-based Model for News Spreading on Online Social Networks
Vincenza Carchiolo, Alessandro Longheu, Michele Malgeri, Giuseppe Mangioni and Marialaura Previti
Best Student Paper Award
Area:
Complexity in Risk and Predictive Modeling
Return on Cybersecurity Investment in Operational Technology Systems: Quantifying the Value That Cybersecurity Technologies Provide after Integration
Roger A. Hallman, Maxine Major, Jose Romero-Mariona, Richard Phipps, Esperanza Romero and John S. Miguel
Best Poster Award
Area:
Complexity in Biology and Biomedical Engineering
FLOPTICS: A Novel Automated Gating Technique for Flow Cytometry Data
Wiwat Sriphum, Gary Wills and Nicolas G. Green
COMPLEXIS 2019
Best Paper Award
Area:
Complexity in Risk and Predictive Modeling
Minimization of Attack Risk with Bayesian Detection Criteria
Vaughn H. Standley, Frank G. Nuño and Jacob W. Sharpe
COMPLEXIS 2018
Best Paper Award
Area:
Complexity in Social Sciences
Why so Emotional? An Analysis of Emotional Bot-generated Content on Twitter
Ema Kušen and Mark Strembeck
Best Poster Award
Area:
Complexity in Social Sciences
University Student Desertion Analysis using Agent-Based Modeling Approach
M. C. Castellanos Rojas, L. D. Alvarado Nieto and J. E. Villamil Puentes
COMPLEXIS 2017
Best Paper Award
Area:
Complexity in Biology and Biomedical Engineering
A Network of Networks to Reproduce the Electrical Features of an Aptamer-ligand Complex - What an Electrical Network Tells about Affinity
Eleonora Alfinito, Rosella Cataldo and Lino Reggiani
Best Student Paper Award
Area:
Complexity in Informatics, Automation and Networking
Security Against Collective Attacks of a Modified BB84 QKD Protocol with Information only in One Basis
Michel Boyer, Rotem Liss and Tal Mor
COMPLEXIS 2016
Best Paper Award
Area:
Complexity in Informatics, Automation and Networking
Inferring Causality from Noisy Time Series Data - A Test of Convergent Cross-Mapping
Dan Mønster, Riccardo Fusaroli, Kristian Tylén, Andreas Roepstorff and Jacob F. Sherson
Best Student Paper Award
Area:
Complexity in Informatics, Automation and Networking
A Data-Aware MultiWorkflow Cluster Scheduler
César Acevedo, Porfidio Hernandez, Antonio Espinosa and Víctor Méndez