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[RACI-list] [IMC 2022] CfP: ACM Internet Measurement Conference 2022 @Nice, France - paper registration due by May 11th
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Oliver Hohlfeld
oliver at inet.tu-berlin.de
Thu Mar 10 21:56:06 CET 2022
ACM Internet Measurement Conference – IMC 2022
Nice, France on October 25 - 27, 2022
https://conferences.sigcomm.org/imc/2022/
Submission link: https://imc2022.hotcrp.com/
*Important Dates*
Paper registration: May 11, 2022, 23:59 AoE
Paper submission: May 18, 2022, 23:59 AoE
Early reject notification: Approximately July 11, 2022
Notification: Friday August 19, 2022
Camera-ready due: Monday September 19, 2022
Conference: October 25 - 27, 2022
*Call For Papers ACM IMC 2022*
The Internet Measurement Conference (IMC) is a highly selective venue
for the presentation of measurement-based research in data
communications. The focus of IMC 2022 will be on research that improves
the practice of network measurement, illuminates some facet of an
operational network, or both. We encourage authors to discuss the
implications of their results on future research and/or operations. We
encourage authors to discuss representativeness and limitations of their
work due to coverage of their measurements across space and time.
Finally, we encourage authors to validate inferences using ground truth.
IMC takes a broad view of contributions that are considered in scope for
improving the practice of network measurement, including, but not
limited to:
* collection and analysis of data that yield new insights about network
structure and network performance (e.g., traffic, topology, routing,
energy utilization, performance)
* collection and analysis of data that yield new insights about
application and end-user behavior (e.g., economics, privacy, security,
application interaction with protocols)
* measurement-based modeling (e.g., workloads, scaling behavior,
assessment of performance bottlenecks, causality)
* methods and tools to monitor and visualize network-based phenomena
systems and algorithms that build on measurement-based findings
* Novel methods for data collection, analysis, and storage (e.g.,
anonymization, querying, sharing)
* reappraisal of previous empirical network measurements and
measurement-based conclusions
* descriptions of challenges and future directions the measurement
community should pursue
Networks of interest include:
* Internet transit networks
* edge networks, including home networks, broadband access networks
(e.g., cable, fiber), and cellular networks
* data center networks and cloud computing infrastructure
* peer-to-peer, overlay, and content distribution networks
* software-defined networks
* online social networks
* online services, platforms, and content providers
* experimental networks, prototype networks, and future internetworks
Authors unsure about topical fit are welcome to contact the program
committee co-chairs at imc2022pcchairs at acm.org.
*Review process and criteria*
IMC 2022 invites two forms of submissions:
- *Full papers* (up to 13 pages for text and figures + unlimited pages
for references and appendix) that describe original research, with
succinctness appropriate to the topics and themes they discuss.
- *Short papers* (up to 6 pages for text and figures + unlimited pages
for references and appendix) that convey work that is less mature but
shows exciting promise, OR offer results that do not merit a full
submission. Short papers could articulate a high-level vision and
describe challenging future directions that the authors believe the
community should tackle; validate, verify, or update important results;
or present new ideas that challenge existing assumptions.
Any submission exceeding the short paper page-length limit will be
evaluated as a full paper.
Authors should submit only original work that has not been published
before and is not under submission to any other venue. We will consider
full paper submissions that extend previously published short,
preliminary papers (including IMC short papers), in accordance with the
SIGCOMM policy and the ACM Plagiarism Policy. The ACM policy on
simultaneous submissions does not consider technical reports (including
arXiv) to be concurrent publication or submission.
IMC 2022 will bestow two awards on paper submissions, (1) a Best Paper
award; and (2) a Community Contribution award. The best paper award will
recognize the outstanding paper at the conference, and all accepted
papers are eligible for it. The community contribution award will
recognize a paper with an outstanding contribution to the community in
the form of a new dataset, source code distribution, open platform, or
other noteworthy service to the community. To be eligible for the
community award, the authors must make data or source code publicly
available or have a software artifact that is accessible and usable by
the public at the time of the camera-ready deadline. The authors
indicate their eligibility on the submission form and are also
encouraged to include a link to the contribution in the submitted paper.
There will be an opt-in shadow TPC for IMC 2022, to provide additional
researchers (primarily junior ones) an opportunity to gain experience
with reviewing and discussing paper submissions. The shadow TPC members
will be bound to the same strict confidentiality rules that apply to the
IMC 2022 TPC. Authors may opt into this shadow PC by unchecking a box on
the submission form. Doing so will not adversely affect your submission
in any way. Reviews from the shadow PC will be returned to authors,
providing the incentive of additional feedback from the community.
As an experiment this year, the shadow PC will rank the top three papers
in their set of submissions. A (non-shadow) TPC member will convey
shadow TPC feedback about those top three papers at the IMC TPC meeting.
The shadow PC will also select a best paper from the set of papers
accepted by the (non-shadow) IMC TPC.
A few accepted papers may be forwarded for fast-track submission to
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking.
*Early Rejection*
The review process will have several reviewing rounds. To allow authors
time to improve their work and submit to other venues, authors of
submissions for which there is a consensus on rejection will be notified
early.
*Anonymity Guidelines*
Authors are expected to make a good-faith effort to anonymize papers. As
an author, you should not identify yourself in the paper either
explicitly or by implication (e.g., through the references).
Anonymization of important details are not required, if they are
critical for the evaluation of the paper. For example, system names may
be left de-anonymized, if the system name is important for a reviewer to
be able to evaluate the work, and the paper may point to existing public
datasets and artifacts that highlight or underscore the contributions
outlined in the paper.
Please follow the following guidelines:
- Author names and affiliations must not appear on any submission.
- Identifying information such as grant numbers must not be included on
submissions.
- The text of the submission must refer to the authors’ own previous
work in the third person, unless the previous work provides important
context for evaluation of the existing contribution (e.g., the paper
describes an implementation or deployment of a method previously
developed by the same authors).
Authors are explicitly allowed to post their submissions on Arxiv or
other public websites, and reviewers will be discouraged from searching
for such listings while a submission is under review. However, authors
are strongly discouraged from engaging in publicity for their papers
while they are under review, unless doing so is in the public interest
(e.g., responsible disclosure). Authors who are unsure of whether they
are allowed to publicize their double-blind submissions should contact
the program committee co-chairs at imc2022pcchairs at acm.org.
Additional details on paper anonymity are available here
<https://conferences.sigcomm.org/imc/2022/anon/> and in the statement
released by the IMC Steering Committee here
<https://www.sigcomm.org/content/imc-statement-double-blind-reviewing>.
*Ethics*
The program committee may raise concerns around the ethics of the work,
even if it does not involve human subjects. *All papers must include, in
a clearly marked appendix section with the heading “Ethics”, a statement
about ethical issues; papers that do not include such a statement may be
rejected.* This could be, if appropriate for the paper, simply the
sentence “This work does not raise any ethical issues.”. If the work
involves human subjects or potentially sensitive data (e.g., user
traffic or social network information, evaluation of censorship, etc.),
the paper should clearly discuss these issues, perhaps in a separate
subsection.
Research that entails experiments involving human subjects or user data
(e.g., network traffic, passwords, social network information) should
adhere to community norms. Any work that raises potential ethics
considerations should indicate this on the submission form. The basic
principles of ethical research are outlined in the Belmont Report
<https://www.hhs.gov/ohrp/regulations-and-policy/belmont-report/read-the-belmont-report/index.html>:
(1) respect for persons (which may involve obtaining consent); (2)
beneficence (a careful consideration of risks and benefits); and (3)
justice (ensuring that parts of the population that bear the risks of
the research also are poised to obtain some benefit from it). Authors
should further consult the ACM policy on research involving human
subjects
<https://www.acm.org/publications/policies/research-involving-human-participants-and-subjects>
for further information on ethical principles that apply to this conference.
Research involving human subjects must be approved by the researchers’
respective Institutional Review Boards before the research takes place.
Authors should indicate on the submission form whether the work involves
human subjects, and, if so, if an IRB protocol has been approved for the
research. We also expect that any research follows the practices and
procedures of the institution(s) where the work is being carried out;
for example, some universities require separate approval for the use of
campus data. We expect researchers to abide by these protocols.
We recognize that different IRBs follow different procedures for
determining the status of human subject research, and approval or exempt
status from a single institution may not align with community norms. To
help the Ethics Committee review cases of concern, there is a need for
more information about the research protocol. To this end, if the work
involves human subjects, the authors must include with their submission
a copy of the form that was used to determine IRB status (approved or
exempt), sufficiently anonymized to preserve double-blind review.
If the submission describes research involving human subjects and none
of the authors are at an institution with an IRB (or equivalent), the
authors are nonetheless expected to follow a research protocol that
adheres to ethical principles, as stated in the ACM policy on research
involving human subjects. In such cases, the authors must use the Ethics
section of their appendix to explain how their research protocol
satisfies the principles of ethical research.
Some research does not involve human subjects yet nonetheless raises
questions of ethics, which may be wide-ranging and not necessarily
limited to direct effects. We encourage authors to be mindful of the
ethics of the research that they undertake; these considerations are
often not clear-cut, but often warrant thoughtful consideration. The
program committee may raise concerns around the ethics of the work, and
so we ask authors to outline these considerations explicitly in a
separate appendix section (clearly marked with an appendix section
heading “Ethics”), and when appropriate for context, in the body of the
paper. The submission form will include a way to alert reviewers of this
additional material.
Additionally, the program committee reserves the right to conduct
additional evaluations and reviews of research ethics and reserves the
right to independent judgment concerning the ethics of the conducted
research.
Contact the program committee co-chairs at imc2022pcchairs at acm.org if
you have any questions.
*Submission guidelines*
See https://conferences.sigcomm.org/imc/2022/cfp/ for further information.
--
Prof. Oliver Hohlfeld
Chair of Computer Networks
Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus-Senftenberg
https://www.b-tu.de/en/fg-rechnernetze
twitter.com/ohohlfeld
www.ohohlfeld.com
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