KDD 2009 Annotation Project
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
A KDD 2009 Annotation Project is a Research Project that resulted in the creation of annotated abstracts datasets for the KDD-2009 Conference Proceedings.
- See: Knowledge Discovery in Databases, KDD-2009, Annotated Document, KDD-2009 Annotated Abstracts Notes, KDD-2009 Annotated Abstracts Dataset.
References
2009
- (Elder et al., 2009) ⇒ John P. Elder, Francoise Fogelman-Soulie, Peter A. Flach, and Mohammed J. Zaki (2009). "KDD-09: Proceedings of the 15th ACM SIGKDD International Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining, Paris, France, June 28 - July 1, 2009". ACM 2009, ISBN:978-1-60558-495-9
- QUOTE: KDD'09 received a record number of 659 submissions, more than 10% up from last year. The Research Track received 537 submissions and the Industrial and Government Applications Track received 122 submissions (an increase of nearly half over last year). For the Research Track, the program committee accepted 105 papers, 50 of which (9.3% of the submitted papers) were chosen for a 25 minute oral presentation and the remaining 55 (10.2%) for a 15 minute presentation. The corresponding numbers for the Industrial Track are 12 (9.8%) and 22 (18.0%). All accepted papers are given up to 9 pages in the proceedings, and all accepted papers are also given poster presentation opportunities in one of the two evening poster sessions during the conference.
In addition to the paper presentations, the conference features nine tutorials, eleven workshops, one panel, the hugely successful KDD-Cup competition, a demo session, an exhibition, evening industry sessions (new!), and three invited talks by David Hand (Imperial College London, UK), Heikki Mannila (University of Helsinki, Finland) and Stanley Wasserman (Indiana University, USA). The Industrial Track includes two additional invited presentations by Ravi Kumar (Yahoo! Research, USA) and Ashok Srivastava (NASA Ames, USA).
- QUOTE: KDD'09 received a record number of 659 submissions, more than 10% up from last year. The Research Track received 537 submissions and the Industrial and Government Applications Track received 122 submissions (an increase of nearly half over last year). For the Research Track, the program committee accepted 105 papers, 50 of which (9.3% of the submitted papers) were chosen for a 25 minute oral presentation and the remaining 55 (10.2%) for a 15 minute presentation. The corresponding numbers for the Industrial Track are 12 (9.8%) and 22 (18.0%). All accepted papers are given up to 9 pages in the proceedings, and all accepted papers are also given poster presentation opportunities in one of the two evening poster sessions during the conference.