Welcome to the Lab for Social Computing

Sam the Socialite

Hey! My name is Sam the socialite, if you have any questions about the LSC, I can help you out!

I am a big fan of social computing and can help you out whenever you need me. Common questions that people ask when they come to the Lab for Social computing website are about the following topics:

What is Social Computing?
What exactly is the Lab for Social Computing?
What kind of projects is the Lab working on?
How do I contact lab members?
How can I get involved with the Social Computing Club?
Where can I find a ton of information fast?

If you have a question and can't seem to find an answer by looking through the page, try a quick search. If you still can't find an answer, why don't you just 'Ask Sam' and I will get back to you as soon as possible!

Enjoy your stay!

RIT's Reporter magazine writes about social computing and the LSC

In an article published in their most recent magazine, the RIT Reporter magazine wrote about social software as well as the Lab for Social Computing here at RIT. Here’s an excerpt from the article The Facebook and the Newest Wave of Social Computing for Us to Surf:


Liz Lawley, an associate professor of IT, is very involved in blogging and social computing. She keeps her own blog at mamamusings.net. She was recently selected by Marqui as one of the twenty-one bloggers they chose nation-wide, to begin their Blogosphere program.

She teaches blogging in her classes and has also recently become the director of the Lab for Social Computing that has been created at RIT. She has many great insights on Social Computing, Blogging, and where RIT fits into both.

“In the classes where I’ve introduced students to blogging, a number have gone on to start and maintain their own blogs. Those students have been able to use their blogs as a way to improve their writing skills as well as their visibility in the technical community. [Also,] Students who read the blogs of their professors are able to develop a better sense of us as people, and often find us more approachable as a result.”

RNews reports on the new Lab for Social Computing

RNews, a local Rochester news station, reported on the creation of the new Lab for Social Computing here at RIT. Here’s an excerpt from the article entitled R.I.T. Studies “Blogging”:


“It’s not so much revolutionary as it is evolutionary,” Liz Lawley, associate professor of information technology at R.I.T., said.

“If my ten-year-old is using instant messenger every day, is that good or bad? Is it hurting or helping his ability to communicate with other people? We don’t know that unless we study these tools,” Lawley said.

Democrat & Chronicle writes on the blogging seminar and the LSC

The Democrat & Chronicle newspaper of Rochester, New York, covered the weblogging conference put on by Elizabeth Lawley, Director of the Lab for Social Computing. Here is an excerpt from the article RIT explores evolution of social computing:


“Instead of talking about people interacting with computers, we’re talking about people interacting with people,” said Elizabeth Lawley, director of a new laboratory at RIT dedicated to exploring this world of “social computing.”

The lab is not a physical location, an actual laboratory, but an umbrella under which faculty members and students will do research and development. And the lab plans to offer seminars, open to the public, on different aspects of social computing.

The lab will involve not just faculty and students in the Golisano College of Computing and Information Science but also people from other disciplines, including liberal arts, said Lawley, an associate professor of information technology.

LSC featured in RIT News and Events publication

In the latest RIT News and Events publication, the Lab for Social Computing was featured as a cover story. Here is an excerpt from the article entitled RIT opens first 'social computing' lab:

RIT, internationally recognized as a leader in computing education, recognizes the need for more research into cyber interaction and has established a groundbreaking lab for "social computing." RIT is the first academic institution to offer research of this kind at the graduate and undergraduate levels.

The social computing lab is part of the B. Thomas Golisano College of Computing and Information Sciences' new research initiative-Center for Advancing the Study of Cyberinfrastructure. Elizabeth Lane Lawley, associate professor of information technology, is the lab's director.

"Considering the importance of the forms of social software that are altering the way people organize political campaigns, report the news and form social networks, it is particularly important to put together a research group of experienced scholars who are versed in both the academic disciplines and personally immersed in social software practices," explains board member Rheingold.