The Association for Computing Machinery, or ACM, was founded in 1947 as the
world's first scientific and educational computing society. Its membership is around 83,000 as
of 2007. Its headquarters are in New York City.
Activities
Two Penn Plaza site of the ACM headquarters in New York City
ACM is organized into over 170 local chapters and 34 Special Interest Groups
(SIGs), through which it conducts most of its activities. Additionally, there are over 500 college and university chapters. The first student chapter was founded in
1961 at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.
Many of the SIGs, like SIGGRAPH, SIGPLAN and
SIGCOMM, sponsor regular conferences which have become famous as the dominant venue for
presenting new innovations in certain fields. The groups also publish a large number of specialized journals, magazines, and
newsletters.
ACM also sponsors other computer science related events such as the worldwide ACM International Collegiate Programming Contest (ICPC), and has
sponsored some other events such as the chess match between Garry Kasparov and the
IBM Deep Blue computer.
Services
ACM Press publishes a prestigious academic journal, Journal of
the ACM, and general magazines for computer professionals, Communications of the ACM (also known as Communications or CACM) and
Queue. Other publications of the ACM include:
- ACM Crossroads, the most popular student computing journal in USA
- A number of journals, specific to subfields of computer science, titled ACM Transactions. Some of the more prominent
transactions include:
- ACM Transactions on Computer Systems (TOCS)
- ACM Transactions on Database Systems (TODS)
- ACM Transactions on Graphics (TOG)
- ACM Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems (TOPLAS)
Although Communications no longer publishes primary research, and is not considered a prestigious venue, many of the
great debates and results in computing history have been published in its pages. Examples include:
- Edsger W. Dijkstra's famous letter inveighing against the use of GOTO ("Go To statement considered harmful", CACM 11(3):147-148, March 1968).
- Dijkstra's original paper on the THE operating system. This paper's
appendix, arguably even more influential than its main body, introduced semaphore-based synchronization ("Structure of the 'THE'-Multiprogramming System", CACM
11(5):341-346, May 1968).
- Ronald L. Rivest, Adi Shamir, and Leonard M. Adleman's first public-key cryptosystem (RSA) ("A Method for
Obtaining Digital Signatures and Public-Key Cryptosystems", CACM 21(2):120-126, February 1978).
- The "Revised report on the algorithm language ALGOL 60": A landmark paper in programming language design describing the result of the international ALGOL committee (CACM 6(1):1-17, January 1963).
- Kristen Nygaard and Ole-Johan Dahl's
original paper on Simula-68 ("Simula: An ALGOL-based simulation language", CACM
9(9):671-678).
- the issue of what to call the then-fledgling field of computer science.[citation needed]
- the issue of changing ACM's name, since the "machinery" in question is no longer the size of a house and is now measured in
micrometres (all three attempts at changing ACM's name have failed).[citation needed]
ACM has made almost all of its publications available online at its Digital Library and also has a Guide to Computing Literature. It also offers insurance and other services to its members.
Digital Library
The (ACM Digital Library) contains a
comprehensive archive of the organization's journals, magazines, and conference proceedings. Online services include a forum
called Ubiquity and Tech News digest.
ACM requires the copyright of all submissions to be assigned to the organization as a condition of publishing the work.
[1] Authors may post the
documents on their own websites, but they are required to link back to the digital library's reference page for the paper. Though
authors are not allowed to charge for access to copies of their work, downloading a copy from the ACM site requires a paid
subscription.
Competition
ACM's primary historical competitor has been the IEEE Computer Society, which
is the largest subgroup of the Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers. The IEEE focuses more on hardware and standardization issues than theoretical computer science, but there is considerable overlap with the ACM's agenda. They occasionally cooperate
on projects like developing computer science curricula. [2]
There is also a mounting challenge to the ACM's publication practices coming from the open
access movement. Some authors see a centralized peer-review process as less relevant and publish on their home pages or on
unreviewed sites like arXiv. Other organizations have sprung up which do their peer review
entirely free and online, such as Journal of Artificial
Intelligence Research (JAIR), Journal of Machine Learning Research
(JMLR) and the Journal of Research and
Practice in Information Technology.
Fellows
The ACM Fellows Program was established by Council of the Association for Computing Machinery in 1993 "to recognize and
honor outstanding ACM members for their achievements in computer science and information technology and for their significant
contributions to the mission of the ACM."
There are presently about 500 Fellows out of about 60,000 professional members.
A full list can be found on ACM's Website.
Special Interest Groups
- Further information: Special Interest Group
- SIGACCESS: Accessibility and Computing
- SIGACT: Algorithms and Computation Theory
- SIGAda: Ada Programming Language
- SIGAPL: APL Programming Language
- SIGAPP: Applied Computing
- SIGARCH: Computer Architecture
- SIGART: Artificial Intelligence
- SIGBED: Embedded Systems
- SIGCAS: Computers and Society
- SIGCHI: Computer-Human Interaction
- SIGCOMM: Data Communication
- SIGCSE: Computer Science Education
- SIGDA: Design Automation
- SIGDOC: Design of Communication
- SIGecom: Electronic Commerce
- SIGEVO: Genetic and Evolutionary Computation
- SIGGRAPH: Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques
- SIGMM: Multimedia
- SIGIR: Information Retrieval
- SIGITE: Information Technology Education
- SIGKDD: Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining
- SIGMETRICS: Measurement and Evaluation
- SIGMICRO: Microarchitecture
- SIGMIS: Management Information Systems
- SIGMM: Multimedia [3]
- SIGMOBILE: Mobility of Systems, Users, Data and Computing
- SIGMOD: Management of Data
- SIGOPS: Operating Systems
- SIGPLAN: Programming Languages
- SIGSAC: Security, Audit, and Control
- SIGSAM: Symbolic and Algebraic Manipulation
- SIGSIM: Simulation and Modeling
- SIGSOFT: Software Engineering
- SIGUCCS: University and College Computing Services
- SIGWEB: Hypertext, Hypermedia, and Web
Conferences
The ACM sponsors numerous conferences listed below. Most of the special interest groups also have an annual conference. ACM
conferences are often very popular publishing venues and are therefore very competitive. For example, the 2006 WWW conference
only accepted 14% of the long papers that were submitted, and CIKM only accepted 15% in 2005.
- CIKM: Conference on Information and Knowledge
Management
- DAC: Digital Automation Conference
- FCRC: Federated Computing Research
Conference
- GECCO: Genetic and Evolutionary
Computation Conference
- Graphics Hardware
- Hypertext: Conference on Hypertext and
Hypermedia
- JCDL: Joint Conference on Digital Libraries
- OOPSLA: International conference on Object-Oriented Programming, Systems, Languages, and
Applications
- WWW: International
conference on World Wide Web
Leadership
The President of the ACM for 2006–2008 is Stuart Feldman of Google.
ACM is led by a Council consisting of the President, Vice-President, Treasurer, Past President, SIG Governing Board Chair,
Publications Board Chair, three representatives of the SIG Governing Board, and seven Members-At-Large. This institution is often
referred to simply as "Council" in Communications of the ACM.
Infrastructure
ACM has five “Boards” that make up various committees and subgroups, to help Headquarters staff maintain quality services and
products. These boards are as follows:
- Publications Board
- SIG Governing Board
- Education Board
- Membership Services Board
- Professions Board
ACM's Committee on Women in Computing
ACM's committee on women in computing is set up to support, inform, celebrate, and
work with women in computing. Dr. Anita Borg was a great supporter of ACM-W. ACM-W provides
various resources for women in computing as well as high school girls interested in the field. ACM-W also reaches out
internationally to those women who are involved and interested in computing.
See also
External links
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