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Publications

Publications by Carlos Baquero

2021

Seeking Out Camille, and Being Open to Others

Authors
Hill, RK; Baquero, C;

Publication
COMMUNICATIONS OF THE ACM

Abstract
Robin K. Hill on overcoming biases against alternative views, and Carlos Baquero on his search for the elusive Camille Nous.

2022

Picking Publication Targets

Authors
Baquero, C;

Publication
COMMUNICATIONS OF THE ACM

Abstract
The Communications website, http://cacm.acm.org, features more than a dozen bloggers in the BLOG@CACM community. In each issue of Communications , we'll publish selected posts or excerpts. twitter Follow us on Twitter at http://twitter.com/blogCACM http://cacm.acm.org/blogs/blog-cacm Carlos Baquero offers guidance on how to decide where to publish one's paper.

2022

Is Having AI Generate Text Cheating?

Authors
Baquero, C;

Publication
COMMUNICATIONS OF THE ACM

Abstract
Carlos Baquero on whether using artificial intelligence provides an unfair advantage to writers.

2020

State-machine replication for planet-scale systems

Authors
Enes, V; Baquero, C; Rezende, TF; Gotsman, A; Perrin, M; Sutra, P;

Publication
Proceedings of the Fifteenth European Conference on Computer Systems

Abstract

2022

The Dynamics of Remembering and Forgetting

Authors
Baquero, C; Cabecinhas, R;

Publication
COMMUNICATIONS OF THE ACM

Abstract
[No abstract available]

2021

Estimating the COVID-19 Prevalence in Spain With Indirect Reporting via Open Surveys

Authors
Garcia Agundez, A; Ojo, O; Hernandez Roig, HA; Baquero, C; Frey, D; Georgiou, C; Goessens, M; Lillo, RE; Menezes, R; Nicolaou, N; Ortega, A; Stavrakis, E; Anta, AF;

Publication
FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH

Abstract
During the initial phases of the COVID-19 pandemic, accurate tracking has proven unfeasible. Initial estimation methods pointed toward case numbers that were much higher than officially reported. In the CoronaSurveys project, we have been addressing this issue using open online surveys with indirect reporting. We compare our estimates with the results of a serology study for Spain, obtaining high correlations (R squared 0.89). In our view, these results strongly support the idea of using open surveys with indirect reporting as a method to broadly sense the progress of a pandemic.

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