VLDB 2022: Call for Contributions - PhD Workshop

The VLDB PhD Workshop offers an opportunity for graduate students to present and discuss their research work at a premier international conference. The workshop provides a forum that facilitates interactions among PhD students and stimulates feedback from more experienced researchers.

VLDB 2022 welcomes submissions from PhD students who have not yet received their PhD degrees. If you are in the early stages of your studies, the submission should clearly describe the problem you are working on, explain why it is important, detail why the existing solutions are not sufficient, and outline the new solutions you are pursuing. If you are further along or close to completion, the submission should be more concrete, describing your contribution so far, and what you hope to accomplish next.

Important Dates (Note: two rounds)

All deadlines below are 5 PM Pacific Time.

Submission deadline March 11, 2022
Notification of acceptance April 22, 2022
Camera-ready copy due May 15, 2022

Second round of submissions.

Submission deadline June 3, 2022
Notification of acceptance July 8, 2022
Camera-ready copy due July 22, 2022

Workshop date: September 5, 2022

Submission Guidelines

PhD workshop submissions must be submitted electronically, in PDF format, using the PhD Workshop Track on CMT: https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/VLDBPhDW2022.

Submissions must be single-author and must identify any supervisors with "supervised by" on the paper and below the author's name.

Papers are limited to a length of 4 pages (including all material) and must be formatted with the same rules as VLDB papers described here: http://vldb.org/pvldb/vol15-formatting

It is acceptable if portions of the thesis work have been published or submitted for publication. Since the submission is limited to 4 pages, it does not constitute a duplicate submission to VLDB.

We plan to publish the workshop proceedings with all accepted papers in the CEUR-WS series.

Review Process

The review and decision of acceptance will balance many factors; these include the quality of your proposal and where you are within your doctoral education program. They also include external factors, such as ensuring that the group of the accepted candidates exhibit a diversity of backgrounds and topics.

The program committee will give strongest consideration to candidates who have a clearly developed idea, who are formally considered by their institution to be working on their dissertation, and who still have time to be influenced by participation in the PhD Workshop.

PhD Workshop Chairs

Timos Sellis, Facebook
Zhifeng Bao, RMIT University

PhD Workshop Program Committee

Alfons Kemper, TUM
Cheng Long, Nanyang Technological University
Chenhao Ma, The University of Hong Kong
Diego Calvanese, Free University of Bozen
Dongxiang Zhang, Zhejiang University
Gokhan Kul, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
K. Selçuk Candan, Arizona State University
Kenneth Salem, University of Waterloo
Mario Nascimento, University of Alberta
Maya Ramanath, IIT Delhi
Michael Böhlen, University of Zurich
Muhammad Aamir Cheema, Monash University
Nesime Tatbul, Intel Labs and MIT
Nikos Mamoulis, University of Ioannina
Renata Borovica-Gajic, University of Melbourne
Shuai Ma, Beihang University
Sudeepa Roy, Duke University, USA
Yannis Velegrakis, Utrecht University and University of Trento