1 / 10

Very Briefly About ACM

Very Briefly About ACM. The computing world’s oldest and largest professional MEMBER ORGANIZATION with over 100,000 Academics, Practitioners, and Students from over 180 countries around the world (i.e.- established in 1947)

damia
Download Presentation

Very Briefly About ACM

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Very Briefly About ACM • The computing world’s oldest and largest professional MEMBER ORGANIZATIONwith over 100,000 Academics, Practitioners, and Students from over 180 countries around the world (i.e.- established in 1947) • One of the computing world’s most respected PUBLISHERS of scholarly literature and one of the world’s most heavily used publication platform’s with over 15,000,000 full-text downloads per year • The computing world’s leading CONFERENCE ORGANIZER with over 275 events annually (conferences, workshops, symposia, etc.) • A key player in helping to establish and develop US PUBLIC POLICY REFORM and EDUCATIONAL CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT in Washington D.C. (see http://usacm.acm.org/) • Organizers and Sponsors of pre-eminent computing PROFESSIONAL AWARDS & ACADEMIC HONORS, such as the “Nobel Prize” in Computing….the A.M. Turing Award

  2. Very Briefly about ACM Digital Library • The ACM Digital Library is three databases in one: • Full-text Articles published by ACM & full-text Articles published by Affiliates • Abstracting & Indexing Service covering the entire field of computing called the Guide to Computing Literature (i.e.- Scopus for CS) • Analytics Tool to help analyze CS publications, authors, & institutions

  3. A Quantitative Look at the ACM Digital Library • 370,000 Full-text Articles – combination of journals, conferences, technical magazines, newsletters, affiliated publications, etc. • 21,000 Full-text Articles added in 2012 • 2,000,000 Bibliographic Records now in the DL (journals, conference literature, books, dissertations, technical magazines, newsletters, technical reports, etc.) • 259,000 Bibliographic Records added in 2012 • 3,500+ Multimedia files (Audio & Video) • 1,780,000 Authors’ works indexed by the DL (over 11,000 have taken ownership of their pages) • 6,000+ Institutions’ works indexed by the DL • 6,000+ Publisher Imprints indexed by the DL • 660 Journals indexed by the DL • 750,000+ Conference Proceedings indexed by the DL • 65,000+ dissertations indexed by the DL • 165,000+ books indexed by the DL • 17,000,000 References in the DL • 6,100,000 Resolved References in the DL (via CrossRef)

  4. Digital Library Subject Areas • Subject and Technical Areas Covered by the ACM Digital Library • Artificial Intelligence • Cloud Computing • Graphics/Imaging • Gaming • eLearning • Interaction Design • Communication • Data mining • Databases • Design Automation • Embedded Systems • Networking • Human Computer Interaction • Wireless/Mobility • Computer Architecture • Data Structures • Distributed Computing • Security • Software • Network Architecture • Many other more specialized topics covered (i.e.- published by ACM or not published by ACM)

  5. The New Computing Classification System (CCS)

  6. What is the ACM CCS?

  7. Analytics / Profile Pages • 1st Generation Analytics Tools launched in 2011 & 2012 • 1st Generation system aggregates all of the data contained in the full-text collection and Guide at the article level. • Based on a recent workshop conducted in the fall of 2012 with members of the CS & library communities, 2nd Generation system is now under development. • 2nd Generation system will aggregate data at the people level, in addition to the article level. This will give users the ability to search people and people-based relationships more easily, using various facets such as time, co-authorship, subject areas, institutions, publications, etc. • For example, the system will have the ability to answer questions, such as: • What people published in the area of AI between 2008-2012? • What people were affiliated with MIT, Stanford, or Berkeley from 2005-2012 that worked in the field of Computer Security? • We will demo the 1st Generation system in a few minutes

  8. For Librarians Looking for Additional Info on the ACM DL Go to http://librarians.acm.org

  9. Topics Covered In Today’s Demo • Sign In – Setting up personalized features, such as binders, sharing, annotations, etc. • Basic Search • Searching the Guide and Searching the full-text DL • Advanced Search • Computing Classification System – Drilling Down by Subject Areas • Analytics / Profile Pages • Author Profile Pages / Collaborators – Useful for NSF Staff • Institutional Profile Pages • Publication Profile Pages • It would be great to include NSF Funding Data as a metadata item in system. Who to talk to about taking this forward. • Questions & Answers

More Related