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VLDB 2005 Panel Database Publication Practices. Status Report on The VLDB Journal. Kyu-Young Whang. *Jointly prepared by Tamer Özsu, Andreas Heuer , and Holger Meyer. Editorial Board. Current Editors-in-Chief M. Tamer Özsu (coordinating EIC) Elisa Bertino Kyu-Young Whang
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VLDB 2005 PanelDatabase Publication Practices Status Report on The VLDB Journal Kyu-Young Whang *Jointly prepared by Tamer Özsu, Andreas Heuer, and Holger Meyer
Editorial Board • Current Editors-in-Chief • M. Tamer Özsu (coordinating EIC) • Elisa Bertino • Kyu-Young Whang • New editors-in-chief • Elisa Bertino (new coordinating EIC) • Klaus Dittrich (a new EIC) • Kyu-Young Whang • 36 editors - Americas: 16, Europe: 13, Asia: 7 • Tenure is 6 years. 1/3 retire every two years • Topical coverage, in particular in emerging areas, is considered
Special Issues • VLDB Conference special issue • Around six best papers per year from the VLDB conference • Thematic issue • 2005: Data Management, Analysis and Mining for the Life Sciences (4/21) • Terry Gaasterland, H.V. Jagadish and Louiqa Raschid
Special Issues (cont’d) • Earlier thematic issues • 2004: Stream Data Management (5/23/2) • Joseph Hellerstein and Johannes Gehrke • 2003: Semantic Web (6/20/4) • Yelena Yesha, Vijay Atluri, Anupam Joshi • 2002: XML data management (6/25) • Alon Halevy and Peter Fankhauser • 2001: E-services (7/19) • Fabio Casati, Dimitrios Georgakopuolos, Ming-Chien Shan • 2000: Database support for the Web (5/14) • Paolo Atzeni and Alberto Mendelzon • 1998: Multimedia (6/33) • M. Tamer Özsu and Stavros Christodoulakis
Partnership with ACM • Started in January 2003 • ACM provides the full-text of the VLDB Journal to subscribers of the ACM Portal/Digital Library • ACM markets the VLDB Journal to its members at a price comparable to ACM’s own journals
Overall Turnaround Time 1) 1) Measured for all rounds that were initiated in a given year (i.e., for both original submissions and revisions)
Acceptance Time 2) 2) Time from initial submission to accept decision
End-to-End Time 3) 3) Time from initial submission to publication
Acceptance Rate 4) 4) Percentage of those manuscripts submitted that year that were ultimately accepted
Subscriptions 333
Paper Downloads (full-text) 52,582
How do we do? • Quality • Has the highest impact in ISI citation index ranking in the category of “Computer Science, Information Systems” • VLDB J.(4.545), TOIS(3.533), Information Systems(3.327), TODS(1.957), TKDE(1.223), etc. • Erhard Rahm’s study shows significant increase in references after 2000 • The paper downloads have increased substantially
How do we do? (cont’d) • Review process • Review times are still long, with significant variability • We aretrying hard to shorten it • Accessibility • Presence in ACM Digital Library helps enhance accessibility
Discussion Point Journals vs. Conferences
Conferences • Fast dissemination is the biggest merit • We are concerned about “papers being lost in the noise” (Good papers are rejected) • But, we also have to worry about incomplete/incorrect papers being accepted (Bad papers are accepted) • Papers claim fancy things, but there is insufficient or faulty proof that they work; experiments are not credible • This problem is becoming more serious as the review quality of the papers isdegrading Problems: Many papers tend to be incorrect or incomplete Reasons: Conferences lack the processes of revision and rebuttal
Journals • Journals handle these problems more properly by interactions between the authors and reviewers through a thorough revision process (typically, two rounds) • Authors have good chances to have potentially incorrect reviews rectified through a rebuttal process • Theseprocesses are essential since correctness and completeness are of prime importance for archival journals • Bad side: slow dissemination • By the time you are rejected in two years, someone else has published an incomplete version of a similar idea in a conference
Inherent Differences • Conferences • fast dissemination • allowing some immaturity • Journals • archival purposes • requiring correctness and completeness
Bridging the Gap between Journals and Conferences • Journals • Trying to shorten the review time • On-line availability helping fast dissemination • Conferences • Allowing revisions (e.g., rolling over some rejected papers to the same referees) • Allowing rebuttals (e.g., permitting author feedback as in SIGMOD 2005) We are making some progress, but complete merger remains a major challenge
Number of References 5) Top five papers 5) Prepared by Erhard Rahm All papers
Number of References (cont’d) 5 year average 10 year average