Panels at JCDL are intended to draw together communities of interest, including those with strong traditions in the digital library community as well as those involving emerging issues of interest to members of the community at large. The panels typically last about 60 – 90 minutes and include an extended round-table discussion among the selected participants and the audience members. All proposals are welcome to suggest panel formats that will engage and inform the audience and, if accepted, JCDL will work to provide appropriate facilities and setups to enable the panel techniques. Panels can be comprised of short position statements followed by discussion or can be structured as conversations that engage audience members from the outset. While topics are open, JCDL aims to secure at least one panel relating to this year’s theme: Digital Libraries in the Age of AI: Challenges and Opportunities.
Submissions should include:
The proposal should be no more than two pages + unlimited references in the current ACM two-column conference format available via https://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template for LaTeX (“sigconf”), Overleaf (ACM Conference Proceedings Primary Article Template), and Word (Interim Template for Word).
Submissions are to be made via EasyChair: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=jcdl2024
By submitting your article to an ACM Publication, you are hereby acknowledging that you and your co-authors are subject to all ACM Publications Policies, including ACM’s new Publications Policy on Research Involving Human Participants and Subjects. Alleged violations of this policy or any ACM Publications Policy will be investigated by ACM and may result in a full retraction of your paper, in addition to other potential penalties, as per ACM Publications Policy.
Please ensure that you and your co-authors obtain an ORCID ID, so you can complete the publishing process for your accepted paper. ACM has been involved in ORCID from the start and we have recently made a commitment to collect ORCID IDs from all of our published authors. We are committed to improve author discoverability, ensure proper attribution and contribute to ongoing community efforts around name normalization; your ORCID ID will help in these efforts.
All dates are Anywhere on Earth (AoE)
This year’s panel chairs are:
We encourage questions or informal inquiries in advance of the submission deadline.
Previous successful panel examples include:
Who can submit an excellent review for this manuscript in the next 30 days? — Peer Reviewing in the age of overload
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10265918
Research data without borders: How the sections of the NFDI work on cross-cutting topics across disciplines and consortia
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10266154
At the Nexus of Data and Collections: New Affordances in the Age of Mass-Scale Digital Libraries
https://doi.org/10.1145/3197026.3205366
Issues of Dealing with Fluid Data in Digital Libraries
https://doi.org/10.1145/2910896.2926738
“Can We Really Show This”?: Ethics, Representation and Social Justice in Sensitive Digital Space
https://doi.org/10.1109/JCDL.2017.7991626
Can Research Librarians Make Contributions to Decision-making as Intelligence Analysts? The Prospects and Challenges
https://doi.org/10.1145/3197026.3205365
Conceptual Models and Ontological Schemas for Semantically Sustainable Digital Libraries
https://doi.org/10.1145/3383583.3398545
Data and Information Literacy Education: Methods, Models, and Challenges
https://doi.org/10.1145/3383583.3398546
Institutionalizing and Sustaining Virtual Reality Experiences
https://doi.org/10.1109/JCDL.2019.00053
Preserving Born-Digital News
https://doi.org/10.1145/2910896.2926739
The Quill Project: Designing a Research Platform for Engaged Learning
https://doi.org/10.1145/3197026.3205367
Creation of a DL by the Communities and for the Communities
https://doi.org/10.1109/JCDL.2019.00054
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