CTS2013 Introduction
May 21 2013
Sheraton San Diego
Geoffrey [email protected]
http://www.infomall.org http://www.futuregrid.org
School of Informatics and ComputingDigital Science Center
Indiana University Bloomington
The International Conference on Collaboration Technologies and Systems
A Short History
1999 Oakland, Michigan2000 Las Vegas, Nevada2002 San Antonio, Texas2003 Orlando, Florida (my first)2004 San Diego, California2005 Saint Louis, Missouri2006 Las Vegas, Nevada2007 Orlando, Florida2008 Irvine California2009 Baltimore, Maryland2010 Chicago, Illinois2011 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania2012 Denver, Colorado2013 San Diego, California
Conference Scope
• As usual this year’s conference spans collaboration technologies through HCI via social networking/computing, Big Data, P2P, devices/sensors, e-health, semantic web, security, robotics, gaming, crowd sourcing, emergency response, communities, design, innovation, learning and MOOC’s.
Big Data Ecosystem in One Sentence
Use Clouds running Data Analytics Collaboratively processing Big Data to solve problems in X-Informatics ( or e-X)
accessed with light weight clients
X = Astronomy, Biology, Biomedicine, Business, Chemistry, Crisis, Energy, Environment, Finance, Health, Intelligence, Lifestyle, Marketing, Medicine, Pathology, Policy, Radar,
Security, Sensor, Social, Sustainability, Wealth and Wellness Spans Industry (AHEAD?) and Science (research)
Conference Statistics I• There was a total of 153 paper submissions to main
and all other tracks from 37 countries. The top five countries with most submissions were: the USA with about 36%, followed by Italy (9.6%) France (7.4%), Germany (4.8%), and Saudi Arabia (4%).
• In the main track, each manuscript underwent a minimum of four rigorous reviews plus two independent evaluations.
• The acceptance rate this year was about 34.21% (26 papers were accepted in the main track out of 76 submitted).
Conference Statistics II• Sixty-one manuscripts were accepted in the symposia,
workshops and special sessions, 8 invited talks, 4 poster papers, 3 doctoral dissertation colloquium abstracts, and 6 research posters abstracts.
• The Conference has ten symposia, workshops and special sessions, all with rigorously reviewed papers (a minimum of three reviews per manuscript).
• Each of the symposia, workshops and special sessions handled their papers separately but maintained similar standards for paper evaluation and acceptance as much as possible.
• The proceedings include a total of 104 contributions (regular papers, short papers, poster papers, extended abstracts, etc.), both invited and accepted from the submissions.