Generated by GPT-5-mini| DBLP | |
|---|---|
![]() dblp.org · Public domain · source | |
| Name | DBLP |
| Established | 1993 |
| Focus | Bibliographic database for computer science |
| Location | Schloss Dagstuhl / University of Trier |
| Language | English |
DBLP DBLP is an online bibliography for research publications in computer science that indexes journals, conference proceedings, and books. It serves researchers, librarians, and students by aggregating bibliographic records and author profiles linked to publication venues and organizations. The platform is widely cited in literature on digital libraries, information retrieval, and scientometrics.
DBLP began as a personal project at the University of Trier under the direction of Michael Ley in the early 1990s, emerging contemporaneously with efforts like ACM Digital Library, IEEE Xplore, and CiteSeerX. During its formative period DBLP intersected with initiatives at Leibniz Center for Informatics and collaborations involving Schloss Dagstuhl, expanding coverage through integration with proceedings from conferences such as International Conference on Software Engineering, SIGMOD Conference, and NeurIPS. Over time DBLP adapted metadata practices influenced by standards promoted by Library of Congress, Dublin Core Metadata Initiative, and projects like Open Archives Initiative, while responding to the growth of venues like AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence and International Conference on Machine Learning. Major platform milestones include migrations of backend infrastructure paralleling trends in scholarly communication visible in projects like arXiv and Google Scholar.
DBLP focuses on computer science publications from established venues including journals such as Communications of the ACM, Journal of the ACM, and IEEE Transactions on Computers, and conferences like International Conference on Computer Vision, ACM SIGCOMM Conference, and International Conference on Data Engineering. Coverage spans subfields represented by authors affiliated with institutions such as Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, University of California, Berkeley, Max Planck Society, and ETH Zurich. DBLP indexes proceedings from publishers including ACM, IEEE, Springer, Elsevier, and Association for Computational Linguistics, and catalogs influential works by researchers like Donald Knuth, Edsger W. Dijkstra, Ada Lovelace, Alan Turing, Tim Berners-Lee, John McCarthy, Geoffrey Hinton, Yoshua Bengio, and Andrew Ng.
DBLP represents bibliographic entries with structured fields for title, authors, venue, year, and pages, drawing on conventions similar to those used in BibTeX and metadata schemas from Dublin Core Metadata Initiative and CrossRef. Author name disambiguation practices address homonyms and variants through heuristics used in projects like ORCID and ResearcherID, and linkages to organizations such as Carnegie Mellon University and University of Cambridge inform affiliation metadata. The dataset accommodates proceedings from events like International Conference on Software Engineering and ACM SIGGRAPH and annotates influential works such as The Art of Computer Programming and Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs while aligning citation patterns studied in analyses by scholars at Google Research, Microsoft Research, and IBM Research.
DBLP provides a web interface optimized for queries by author, title, and venue, analogous to search services at Google Scholar, Microsoft Academic (defunct), and Semantic Scholar. It offers machine-readable exports employing formats familiar to users of BibTeX, RIS, and data consumers such as dblp XML adopters and integration partners including Zotero, Mendeley, and EndNote. Bulk access and interoperability considerations echo practices promoted by OpenCitations, CrossRef, and APIs used by projects at Wikidata and Europeana.
DBLP is widely used in bibliometric studies and digital library research alongside resources like Scopus, Web of Science, and Google Scholar. Its curated coverage informs evaluations at conferences such as International Conference on Digital Libraries and contributes data to analyses produced by research groups at ETH Zurich, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and University College London. The service has been cited in discussions of open science involving stakeholders such as SPARC, Creative Commons, and funding agencies like European Research Council, reflecting its role in shaping publication discovery for researchers including Judea Pearl, Barbara Liskov, Leslie Lamport, Frances E. Allen, and Vint Cerf.
DBLP development and maintenance have been supported through institutional backing from the University of Trier and the Leibniz Center for Informatics with collaborations linked to Schloss Dagstuhl. Funding and sustainability dialogues have engaged funders and organizations such as the German Research Foundation, European Commission, and partnerships with publishers including ACM and Springer Nature. Community practices around data curation reflect input from editorial boards and stakeholder institutions like National Science Foundation, ETH Zurich, and Max Planck Society.
Category:Bibliographic databases Category:Computer science publications