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IEEE Computer Society Press

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IEEE Computer Society Press
NameIEEE Computer Society Press
TypeSubsidiary publisher
Founded1970s
LocationLos Alamitos, California
IndustryPublishing
ProductsBooks, proceedings, standards
ParentIEEE Computer Society

IEEE Computer Society Press is the publishing arm historically associated with the IEEE Computer Society that produced technical books, conference proceedings, standards-related monographs, and educational materials. It served as a vehicle for disseminating research from venues such as International Conference on Computer Vision, ACM SIGGRAPH, IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy, and International Symposium on Computer Architecture, while interacting with organizations including Association for Computing Machinery, Springer Science+Business Media, and John Wiley & Sons. The imprint became notable for ties to events like Supercomputing Conference and collaborations with institutions such as Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, and University of California, Berkeley.

History

The press emerged amid the growth of the IEEE Computer Society during the late 20th century, paralleling developments at Bell Labs, Xerox PARC, and IBM Research. Early titles reflected research from gatherings such as the International Conference on Software Engineering, IEEE Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science, and Design Automation Conference. During the 1980s and 1990s the imprint expanded alongside the rise of companies and labs including Intel Corporation, Microsoft Research, Apple Computer, Hewlett-Packard, and Sun Microsystems. Strategic partnerships were formed with commercial publishers like Elsevier and scholarly communities at Carnegie Mellon University and University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. The press navigated shifts from print to digital distribution in the era of arXiv, Google Books, and institutional repositories at places such as Harvard University and University of Oxford.

Publications and Imprints

Catalogs encompassed monographs, edited volumes, tutorial texts, and proceedings from conferences including NeurIPS, ICML, COLT, and CHI. Notable series paralleled programs at IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation and IEEE International Conference on Communications, with editorial contributions by scholars affiliated with Princeton University, California Institute of Technology, University of Toronto, ETH Zurich, University of Cambridge, and University of Michigan. The press issued handbooks and compendia used alongside works published by MIT Press, Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press, and CRC Press. Standards-oriented titles complemented documents produced by bodies such as Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, International Organization for Standardization, and Internet Engineering Task Force contributors from National Institute of Standards and Technology and European Telecommunications Standards Institute.

Organizational Structure and Editorial Policies

Governance reflected the organizational frameworks of the IEEE Computer Society board and editorial boards drawn from program committees of conferences like SIGMOD, PODS, ICSE, and SOSP. Editorial policy emphasized peer review practices comparable to those at Journal of the ACM, Communications of the ACM, and IEEE Transactions on Computers, with conflicts-of-interest and authorship protocols influenced by guidelines from Committee on Publication Ethics signatories at institutions such as Columbia University and Yale University. Acquisition decisions involved liaisons with symposium organizers from IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference, USENIX Association, and regional chapters tied to IEEE Region 1 through IEEE Region 10. Editorial leadership often included faculty from Georgia Institute of Technology, Purdue University, University of Washington, and Duke University.

Distribution and Access

Distribution channels combined traditional bookselling networks—retailers tied to Barnes & Noble and university presses—and electronic delivery platforms analogous to IEEE Xplore and commercial aggregators used by ProQuest and EBSCOhost. Licensing arrangements paralleled those negotiated by Springer Nature and consortium agreements at libraries such as Library of Congress, British Library, National Library of Medicine, and university systems like California State University and University of California. Open access trends, propelled by mandates from funders based at Wellcome Trust, European Research Council, and National Science Foundation, influenced embargo policies and hybrid publishing models. Distribution logistics interfaced with standards bodies and conference organizers at venues including Moscone Center, ExCeL London, and Jacob K. Javits Convention Center.

Impact and Reception

Titles published under the imprint were cited across scholarship in areas tied to research groups at Google Research, Facebook AI Research, DeepMind, and OpenAI, and were used in curricula at Imperial College London and ETH Zurich. Reviews in outlets such as IEEE Spectrum, Communications of the ACM, and professional newsletters reflected reception among practitioners at AT&T Labs, Cisco Systems, Nokia Bell Labs, and Oracle Corporation. Citations and adoption varied between foundational textbooks adopted at Cornell University and niche conference proceedings referenced in specialized communities like those convened at IETF working groups and IEEE Standards Association panels. The legacy of the press is visible in archival collections at Smithsonian Institution and university libraries holding proceedings from flagship conferences including International Conference on Very Large Data Bases and ACM SIGMOD Conference.

Category:Publishing companies Category:IEEE Computer Society