We are thrilled to have you attend this eighteenth edition of the WWW Conference series. The series started in 1994, at the CERN in Geneva, Switzerland. At the time, the Web was evolving at such a fast pace, like a newborn, that it held two meetings a year, and this until 1996. By then, in its toddler years, the conference found its rhythm and the Web research community started meeting on a yearly basis, typically around April or May. Today, we can say, continuing with our easy "child metaphor", that the conference is like a bright teenager, capable of wonders but with still a long way to go hopefully.
This year we are happy to host WWW'2009 in Madrid, the charming capital of Spain. The technical program will hopefully meet and maybe even exceed your expectations, exposing the most recent progress in Web research across a variety of technical tracks. Indeed, we have this year a rich program with submissions originating from more than 50 countries, in a true world wide spirit. We reached a total of 105 accepted papers (including 2 alternate track papers) out of a total of 823 submissions, for an acceptance rate of under 13%. We thus maintained our selective standards as compared to previous years (with an acceptance rate of 12% for 103 accepted papers in 2008 and 15% for 111 accepted papers in 2007).
Papers were submitted to 13 different tracks. In an effort to balance track sizes, we merged this year the previous "Browse and User Interfaces" and "Mobility" tracks into a unified "User Interfaces and Mobile Web" track. In addition, following the successful "geo driven" alternate "WWW in China" track of last year, a new "Web in IberoAmerica" track was offered this year. Its papers were subject to the same reviewing process. Overall, each track was coordinated by two to three vice-chairs and numerous Program Committee members, who worked hard on ensuring a fair reviewing process. Each paper was assigned to at least 3 reviewers and overviewed by at least one Vice-Chair. To ensure calibration between tracks, the Chairs and Vice-chairs of the Technical Program, as well as a few additional chairs, one of our general chair and one of next year program chair, attended a 2 day PC meeting on January 13-14, hosted by the Google Paris office. During these 2 days, all papers above a given threshold were discussed and calibrated across tracks in order to maximize quality. At the end of the two days, the team clustered papers into sessions, which crossed tracks when relevant.
Cited By
- Pandey S, Das S, Ganu H and Singh S Rethinking 'Complement' Recommendations at Scale with SIMD Proceedings of the 15th ACM/SPEC International Conference on Performance Engineering, (25-36)
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Nejadshamsi S, Eicker U, Wang C and Bentahar J (2023). Data sources and approaches for building occupancy profiles at the urban scale – A review, Building and Environment, 10.1016/j.buildenv.2023.110375, 238, (110375), Online publication date: 1-Jun-2023.
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Färber M, Coutinho M and Yuan S (2023). Biases in scholarly recommender systems: impact, prevalence, and mitigation, Scientometrics, 10.1007/s11192-023-04636-2, 128:5, (2703-2736), Online publication date: 1-May-2023.
- Zheng K, Zheng W and Ding B (2022). Deep Neural Networks Algorithm for Vietnamese Word Segmentation, Scientific Programming, 2022, Online publication date: 1-Jan-2022.
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Alarte J, Insa D, Silva J and Tamarit S (2018). Main Content Extraction from Heterogeneous Webpages Web Information Systems Engineering – WISE 2018, 10.1007/978-3-030-02922-7_27, (393-407),
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VERBORGH R, ARNDT D, VAN HOECKE S, DE ROO J, MELS G, STEINER T and GABARRO J (2016). The pragmatic proof: Hypermedia API composition and execution, Theory and Practice of Logic Programming, 10.1017/S1471068416000016, 17:01, (1-48), Online publication date: 1-Jan-2017.
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Haddoud M, Mokhtari A, Lecroq T and Abdeddaïm S (2016). Supervised Term Weights for Biomedical Text Classification: Improvements in Nearest Centroid Computation Computational Intelligence Methods for Bioinformatics and Biostatistics, 10.1007/978-3-319-44332-4_8, (98-113),
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Kelmelis E, Iyer V and Shetty S (2015). Virtual sensor tracking using byzantine fault tolerance and predictive outlier model for complex tasks recognition SPIE Defense + Security, 10.1117/12.2179406, , (94780F), Online publication date: 22-May-2015.
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Kadar I, Lin Y and Shen H (2014). TrustQ: a category reputation based question and answer system SPIE Defense + Security, 10.1117/12.2050610, , (90911N), Online publication date: 20-Jun-2014.
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Flieder K (2018). Mit RFID und BPM zum ereignisgesteuerten Unternehmen, Zeitschrift für wirtschaftlichen Fabrikbetrieb, 10.3139/104.110315, 105:5, (494-502), Online publication date: 29-May-2010., Online publication date: 29-May-2010.
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Joy P The Criminal Discovery Problem: Is Legislation a Solution?, SSRN Electronic Journal, 10.2139/ssrn.2224205
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El-Rafie A 'Evaluation of the Legacy of the NPT with Focus on the Middle East', SSRN Electronic Journal, 10.2139/ssrn.1917278
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Wright R Portable Minimalism in Sentencing Politics, SSRN Electronic Journal, 10.2139/ssrn.1853322
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Gampert M and Madlener R Pan-European Management of Electricity Portfolios: Risks and Opportunities of Contract Bundling, SSRN Electronic Journal, 10.2139/ssrn.1685126
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Baird S Contentious Issues: Copyright Reform in the Age of Digital Technologies, SSRN Electronic Journal, 10.2139/ssrn.1520161
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Meulemann H and Hagenah J Mass Media Research, SSRN Electronic Journal, 10.2139/ssrn.1460650
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Oldham P An Access and Benefit-Sharing Commons? The Role of Commons/Open Source Licences in the International Regime on Access to Genetic Resources and Benefit-Sharing, SSRN Electronic Journal, 10.2139/ssrn.1438027
Index Terms
- Proceedings of the 18th international conference on World wide web
Recommendations
Acceptance Rates
Year | Submitted | Accepted | Rate |
---|---|---|---|
WWW '18 | 1,155 | 170 | 15% |
WWW '17 | 966 | 164 | 17% |
WWW '17 Companion | 966 | 164 | 17% |
WWW '16 | 727 | 115 | 16% |
WWW '16 Companion | 727 | 115 | 16% |
WWW '15 | 929 | 131 | 14% |
WWW '14 | 645 | 84 | 13% |
WWW '13 Companion | 1,250 | 831 | 66% |
WWW '13 | 831 | 125 | 15% |
Overall | 8,196 | 1,899 | 23% |