Special Interest Group on Information Retrieval

SIGIR is the Association for Computing Machinery's Special Interest Group on Information Retrieval. The scope of the group's specialty is the theory and application of computers to the acquisition, organization, storage, retrieval and distribution of information; emphasis is placed on working with non-numeric information, ranging from natural language to highly structured data bases.

ACM Special Interest Group on Information Retrieval
Parent organization
Association for Computing Machinery
Websitesigir.org

Conferences

The annual international SIGIR conference, which began in 1978, is considered the most important in the field of information retrieval. SIGIR also sponsors the annual Joint Conference on Digital Libraries (JCDL) in association with SIGWEB, the Conference on Information and Knowledge Management (CIKM), and the International Conference on Web Search and Data Mining (WSDM) in association with SIGKDD, SIGMOD, and SIGWEB.

SIGIR conference locations

Number Year Location
22 1999 Berkeley, California
23 2000 Athens
24 2001 New Orleans
25 2002 Tampere
26 2003 Toronto
27 2004 Sheffield
28 2005 Salvador, Bahia
29 2006 Seattle
30 2007 Amsterdam
31 2008 Singapore
32 2009 Boston
33 2010 Geneva
34 2011 Beijing
35 2012 Portland, Oregon
36 2013 Dublin
37 2014 Gold Coast, Queensland
38 2015 Santiago
39 2016 Pisa
40 2017 Tokyo
41 2018 Ann Arbor
42 2019 Paris
43 2020 Xi'an, China

Awards

The group gives out several awards to contributions to the field of information retrieval. The most important award is the Gerard Salton Award (named after the computer scientist Gerard Salton), which is awarded every three years to an individual who has made "significant, sustained and continuing contributions to research in information retrieval". Additionally, SIGIR presents a Best Paper Award [1] to recognize the highest quality paper at each conference. "Test of time" Award [2] is a recent award that is given to a paper that has had "long-lasting influence, including impact on a subarea of information retrieval research, across subareas of information retrieval research, and outside of the information retrieval research community". This award is selected from a set of full papers presented at the main SIGIR conference 10-12 years before.

gollark: Would it not *say* stackoverflow?
gollark: Impressive.
gollark: Wow, cool, a java error!
gollark: *Support the Campaign for Remembering SI Prefixes!*
gollark: Millihashes/second? That's not much.

See also

References

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