Monthly Archives: August 2025

Two new NERDS papers: NFT markets, settlement data

We have two new publications out!

  1. Characterizing NFT Markets through a Multilayer Network Approach, by Alessia Galdeman, Lucio La Cava, Matteo Zignani, Andrea Tagarelli, Sabrina Gaito published in Blockchain: Research and Applications

    In this study, we explore a multilayer network modeling approach to analyze transactions in multiple NFT markets. We reveal previously unnoticed macroscopic and mesoscopic traits by investigating indicators that discern whether markets are independent or linked: users trading NFTs are organized in cross-market communities where multi-market users act as bridges across marketplaces, adapting to the diverse nature of the markets they operate in. We also conduct an in-depth examination of such multi-market users, studying their specific activity patterns that leave a distinctive mark on the system: the majority of multi-market users well differentiate their earnings and expenses among the markets, while a fraction of them is directed toward a more polarized money allocation based on the typology of the markets.
  2. Uncovering large inconsistencies between machine learning derived gridded settlement datasets, by Vedran Sekara, Andrea Martini, Manuel Garcia-Herranz & Do-Hyung Kim, published in EPJ Data Science

    We compare three settlement maps developed by Google (Open Buildings), Meta (High Resolution Population Density Maps) and Microsoft (Global Building Footprints), and uncover which factors drive mismatch. Our study focuses on 44 African countries. We build a global machine learning model to predict where datasets agree, and find that geographic and socio-economic factors considerably impact overlap. However, we also find there is great variability across countries, suggesting complex interactions between country morphology and dataset overlap. It is vital to understand the shortcomings of AI-derived settlement layers as international organizations, governments, and NGOs are already experimenting with incorporating these into programmatic work. We anticipate our work to be a starting point for more critical and detailed analyses of AI derived datasets for humanitarian, policy, and scientific purposes.

Jonas Juul wins the H.C. Ørsted Research Talent Prize

On August 14 2025, our Jonas Juul was awarded the 2025 H.C. Ørsted Research Talent Prize.

Every year, the H.C. Ørsted society celebrates Danish physicist and father of electromagnetism H.C. Ørsted’s birthday with a grand party in Rudkøbing Langeland. At the party, the society hands out two prizes to talented researchers. This year, Jonas received one of these prizes in recognition of his outstanding research, its societal impact, and its potential for addressing security threats such as misinformation and epidemics.

At the party, Jonas was celebrated along with Nobel Prize winner Professor Morten Meldal (University of Copenhagen), who was awarded the main H.C. Ørsted Research Prize, Associate Professor Luisa Sinischalchi (Technical University of Denmark), who won the other H.C. Ørsted Research Talent prize, and several university students and school pupils who won monetary awards in recognition of excellence.

Congratulations, Jonas!

ITU also wrote about Jonas’ award here: https://en.itu.dk/About-ITU/Press/News-from-ITU/2025/Jonas-Juul-receives-the-HC-Orsted-Research-Talent-Award-2025

Jonas receiving the prize

Photo credit: Vedran Sekara

NERDS at IC2S2 in Norrköping

After several NERDS organizing, meeting up, presenting, and keynote-talking at various conferences over the summer (like ICWSM & ICSSI), we reached our grand finale at last week’s IC2S2 in Norrköping where at least 14 of us attended:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Apart from networking and enjoying the talks and discussions, we were also very busy in both the presenting talks and posters departments. Here just a few of the many impressions:


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Congratulations to the organizers of this year’s IC2S2 for another smashing edition! We know how hard it is to organize an IC2S2 and make it so successful, and hope you will see us at many more future IC2S2. Over the years this conference has become the one which us NERDS tend to attend in highest numbers. Apart from the general fit to our research, this is also thanks to the awesomely open computational social science community and the always exciting mix of sub-topics plus fresh new keynotes. What a time to be doing computational social science!

One of the next times you will see again several of us will be at the CCS 2025 in Siena. See you around!