Generated by GPT-5-mini| ACM Transactions | |
|---|---|
| Title | ACM Transactions |
| Discipline | Computer science |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | Association for Computing Machinery |
| Country | United States |
| History | 1950s–present |
| Frequency | Monthly/Quarterly (varies by series) |
| Issn | Multiple |
ACM Transactions is a collection of peer-reviewed scholarly journals and series published by the Association for Computing Machinery covering diverse topics in computing. The collection has shaped research dissemination across areas associated with the ACM Special Interest Groups, influential conferences such as SIGGRAPH, SIGCOMM, and SOSP, and major research labs including Bell Labs, PARC, and Microsoft Research. Leading authors and winners of awards such as the Turing Award, ACM Prize in Computing, and Gödel Prize have contributed to these Transactions.
The Transactions series evolved from early ACM periodicals and conference proceedings linked to milestones like the founding of the Association for Computing Machinery and the launch of SIGs including SIGACT and SIGPLAN. Editorial patterns were influenced by paradigm shifts exemplified by work at institutions such as MIT, Stanford University, Carnegie Mellon University, and University of California, Berkeley. Historical diffusion of research via Transactions paralleled developments recorded at events like the Symposium on Operating Systems Principles and publications associated with the International Conference on Machine Learning. Key editorial figures and contributors include faculty and researchers affiliated with Harvard University, Princeton University, Cornell University, and ETH Zurich.
Transactions cover subfields aligned with SIGs and landmark venues: topics range from theoretical foundations tied to results appearing at FOCS and STOC to applied systems research connected with SIGMETRICS and MobiCom. Subject areas span algorithms and complexity theory represented by work from groups at Institute for Advanced Study, distributed systems connected to research at IBM Research, programming languages influenced by advances at INRIA, human-computer interaction linked to projects at Carnegie Mellon University Human-Computer Interaction Institute, and graphics research reflecting contributions to SIGGRAPH. The series publishes articles by researchers associated with award-winning programs like the NSF CAREER recipients and laboratories such as Google Research, Facebook AI Research, and Apple Inc. R&D teams.
Each Transaction title operates with a dedicated editorial board often populated by editors-in-chief and associate editors drawn from universities and corporations including University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, University of Washington, Columbia University, Johns Hopkins University, Bell Labs Research, and Toyota Research Institute. Peer review processes mirror standards seen at journals affiliated with professional bodies like IEEE Computer Society and are informed by best practices discussed at workshops hosted by Committee on Publication Ethics-related forums and policy debates involving stakeholders such as National Science Foundation program officers. Publication schedules vary between monthly, quarterly, and irregular thematic issues coordinated with conferences such as PLDI and ICML. Digital distribution is integrated with platforms and indexes maintained by organizations like CrossRef and citation databases including Scopus and Web of Science.
Prominent titles in the collection correspond to SIGs and established domains: transactions focused on programming languages and systems resonate with audiences of SIGPLAN and contributors from Princeton University and UC San Diego; graphics-oriented Transactions relate to SIGGRAPH contributors at studios and labs like Industrial Light & Magic and Weta Digital; networking and mobile computing Transactions intersect with communities around SIGCOMM and MobiSys. Special issues have spotlighted breakthroughs tied to recognitions such as the Turing Award lectures and retrospectives on seminal works published by researchers from Bell Labs, PARC, and universities such as MIT and Stanford University. Editorial collections and survey series often synthesize developments linked to conferences like NeurIPS and ICML and to initiatives funded by entities such as the European Research Council.
The Transactions collection is cited frequently across literature produced by groups at Oxford University, Cambridge University, National Institute of Standards and Technology, and national laboratories including Los Alamos National Laboratory and Argonne National Laboratory. Its influence is evident in curricula at institutions such as Carnegie Mellon University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in standards discussions involving bodies like the Internet Engineering Task Force, and in technology transfers tied to companies such as Google, Microsoft, and IBM. Reviews and meta-analyses published in venues associated with ACM SIGSOFT, IEEE Transactions titles, and independent surveys acknowledge the Transactions series for shaping citation networks, informing tenure evaluations at research universities, and chronicling methodological shifts documented at conferences including STOC and FOCS.
Category:Academic journals in computer science