Generated by GPT-5-mini| Proceedings of the ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries | |
|---|---|
| Name | Proceedings of the ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries |
| Status | Active |
| Discipline | Library and information science |
| Publisher | Association for Computing Machinery; IEEE Computer Society |
| Country | United States; international |
| Frequency | Annual |
Proceedings of the ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries The Proceedings of the ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries collect peer-reviewed papers presented at the annual ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries, a major venue intersecting Association for Computing Machinery, IEEE Computer Society, Stanford University, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and international partners. The proceedings function as a record of advances in digital preservation, information retrieval, user studies, metadata, and systems engineering, reflecting contributions from researchers affiliated with Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of California, Berkeley, Cornell University, Carnegie Mellon University, and other institutions.
The proceedings compile full papers, short papers, posters, workshops, and tutorials presented at the Joint Conference, and they are distributed by publishers including the Association for Computing Machinery and the IEEE Computer Society, with conference locations spanning New York City, Berlin, Toronto, Pisa, and Shanghai. Each volume typically includes program committee lists that feature scholars from University of Washington, University of Oxford, University of Cambridge, University of Michigan, and Princeton University, as well as industry researchers from Google, Microsoft Research, IBM Research, Amazon, and Facebook. The proceedings serve librarians, archivists, and technologists from institutions such as the Library of Congress, British Library, National Library of Medicine, and Bibliothèque nationale de France.
The Joint Conference traces roots to separate conferences organized by the Association for Computing Machinery and the IEEE Computer Society during the 1990s, built on earlier initiatives at venues like SIGIR, CHI, ASIS&T and regional meetings at University of California, Los Angeles and University of Illinois Chicago. Over time, the event consolidated expertise from archival projects at Los Alamos National Laboratory, digitization efforts at the Smithsonian Institution, and preservation standards developed at organizations such as OCLC and Internet Archive. Key milestones include program expansions reflecting work from Dublin Core Metadata Initiative, policy discussions influenced by World Wide Web Consortium, and technical advances tied to grants from agencies like the National Science Foundation and the European Research Council.
Proceedings volumes adhere to peer review managed by program committees chaired by researchers from University College London, National Taiwan University, Tsinghua University, Seoul National University, and ETH Zurich, using submission systems comparable to those employed by Springer, IEEE Xplore, and the ACM Digital Library. Editorial practices have evolved to include double-blind review, open data and code requirements promoted by advocates at Harvard University, Yale University, and Columbia University, and indexing arrangements negotiated with bibliographic services like Scopus, Web of Science, and Google Scholar. Copyright and licensing models have shifted under influence from Creative Commons, university presses, and institutional repositories at MIT Libraries and University of California.
Papers span topics including digital preservation workflows developed at National Archives and Records Administration, metadata schemas from the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative, machine learning applications influenced by methods at Stanford University and University of Toronto, and user experience studies reminiscent of work at Interaction Design Foundation and Nielsen Norman Group. Cross-cutting themes often reference standards and systems such as Open Archives Initiative, PREMIS, MODS, Linked Data, and research prototypes originating at Los Alamos National Laboratory, Microsoft Research Cambridge, and IBM Watson Research Center. Workshops and tutorials attract contributors from Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and archival programs at Yale University and University of Chicago.
The proceedings have influenced policy and practice at institutions including the Library of Congress, European Commission, UNESCO, and national libraries of Australia and Canada, shaping digital preservation strategies and metadata interoperability initiatives. Scholarly reception appears in citations tracked by Scopus, Web of Science, and collections curated by JSTOR and Project MUSE, while industry uptake is evident in implementations by organizations such as Oracle, SAP, Adobe Systems, and cloud providers like Amazon Web Services and Google Cloud Platform. Awards for best paper and best poster often recognize contributors from MIT Media Lab, ETH Zurich, Max Planck Society, and Fraunhofer Society.
Notable contributions include early work on metadata standards influenced by the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative and preservation frameworks that informed practices at the Internet Archive and the National Archives, as well as influential papers on search ranking and user modeling drawing on methods from Bayesian inference proponents at Columbia University and machine learning teams at Google Research and DeepMind. Other landmark papers addressed copyright and access policy debated in fora involving United States Copyright Office, European Court of Justice, and advocacy groups such as Electronic Frontier Foundation, and technical innovations later adopted in platforms developed by Elsevier and Wiley.
Proceedings are indexed in bibliographic databases operated by Elsevier (Scopus), Clarivate (Web of Science), and aggregated by Google Scholar and institutional repositories at Harvard University, MIT, and Stanford University. Accessibility initiatives have promoted open access variants and dataset deposits via infrastructures maintained by Zenodo, Figshare, and the Open Science Framework, while software and code releases associated with papers are often hosted on platforms such as GitHub and archived through services provided by the Internet Archive.
Category:Conference proceedings