Call for Short Papers
The short paper track welcomes submissions of high-quality research on a broad range of topics related to search
and data mining on the Web and Social Web. Short papers are an opportunity to share relevant research findings,
propose and evaluate methodologies, and present new tasks or applications in a concise format. The track focuses
on solid research work, while encouraging submissions of preliminary but empirically validated ideas. Compared
to full papers, their contribution may be narrower in scope or be applied to a narrower set of application
domains. This track aims to provide an inclusive platform to exchange diverse ideas and insights, facilitating
discussions that drive innovation. We encourage submissions to the short paper track as a way to foster broader
engagement with the community and
provide an opportunity for constructive feedback, particularly for students. While we welcome early-stage work,
we recommend that submissions demonstrate a clear and thoughtful foundation to maximize the benefit of the
review process.
List of Topics
Papers accepted to WSDM will be published in the ACM Digital Library. We invite submissions on a broad range
of topics related to search and data mining on the Web and Social Web. Areas of interest include, but are not
limited to, the following topics:
Web Search
Algorithms for web-scale search; Adversarial search; Search user interfaces and interaction; Distributed
search, metasearch, peer-to-peer search; Local and mobile search; Multimedia web search, cross-lingual
search;
Query analysis and query processing; Search benchmarking and evaluation; Search user behavior and log
analysis.
Web Mining and Content Analysis
Crawling and indexing web content; Web recommender systems and algorithms; Agentic recommender systems;
Clustering, classification, and summarization of web data; Data, entity, event, and relationship extraction;
Knowledge acquisition and automatic construction of knowledge bases; Large-scale graph analysis; Semantic
search, faceted search, and knowledge graphs; Scalable algorithms for mining web data; Opinion mining and
sentiment analysis; Web traffic and log analysis; Web measurements, web evolution, and web models;
Generative
web applications;
Foundation Models and Agentic Systems
LLMs and multimodal foundation models for web tasks; Generative question answering and reasoning;
Retrieval, indexing, and ranking with foundation models; Evaluation and benchmarking of foundation models in
search/mining; Web agents; GUI agents/multi-agent systems in Web search, recommendation, and interactive
information retrieval; Continual learning and self-evolution; Memory systems of foundation models; User
interfaces and experiences powered by foundation models.
Web of Things, Ubiquitous and Mobile Computing
Geo-location data analysis; Mobility and behavior data mining; Location-based social networks; User activity modeling and exploitation.
Privacy, Fairness, Interpretability
Fairness and accountability in ranking, recommendations and advertising; Explainability in web systems;
Model and algorithm transparency; Web search and data mining under privacy constraints; Fairness and
interpretability in applications of web mining for social good.
Social Networks
Link prediction and community detection; Social network analysis and graph algorithms; Computational
social
science; Influence and viral marketing in social networks; Social sensing; Searching social and real-time
content; Social network dynamics; Sampling, experiments, and evaluation in social networks; Social media
analysis: blogs and friendship networks; Social network analysis, theories, models and applications; Social
reputation and trust.
Intelligent Assistants
Voice search, conversational search, and dialog systems; Personal assistants, dialogue models, and
conversational interaction; Task-driven search; Zero-query and implicit search.
Crowdsourcing and Human Computation
Collaborative search and question answering; Human-in-the-Loop and Collaborative Human-AI systems.
Information Integrity
Systems and algorithms for monitoring and detection of misinformation and fake news; Prevalence and
virality of misinformation; Misinformation sources and origins; Source and content credibility; Detecting
and
combating spamming, trolling, aggression, dog whistles, and toxic online behaviors; Methods for detecting
and
mitigating low quality and offensive content, bullying and hate speech, and coordinated behavior;
Polarization, extremism and radicalization; Echo chambers and filter bubbles.
Emerging and Creative Applications
Systems and algorithms for urban applications such as smart cities/digital twins; Climate,
sustainability,
and environmental intelligence systems; Online education systems; Monitoring and prevention of epidemics;
Healthcare and clinical decision support; Embodied AI systems interacting with web and real-world
environments; AI for Data-rich Science; Scientific Foundation Models.
Submission Guidelines
Link for Submissions Papers: TBD.
Deadlines
Nov 17, 2026
Papers deadline
Dec 18, 2026
Notifications
TBD
Camera Ready
Feb 15-19, 2027
Conference
All deadlines are 11:59 pm anywhere on earth.
Originality of Submissions
Submissions must represent new and original work. Concurrent submissions to other venues are not allowed.
Papers that have been published in or accepted to any peer-reviewed journal or conference or workshop with
published proceedings, or that are currently under review, or that will be submitted to other meetings or
publications while under review, may not be submitted to WSDM 2027. However, submissions that are available
online (e.g., on a preprint server such as arXiv) and/or have been previously presented orally or as posters in
non peer-reviewed venues with no formal proceedings, are allowed. Additionally, the ACM has a strict policy
against plagiarism and self-plagiarism. All prior work must be appropriately cited. Please also see the ACM
guide on the use of Generative AI.
Format of Submissions
Manuscripts must be submitted in PDF according to the new ACM format published in ACM guidelines (use documentclass [sigconf,anonymous,review]{acmart}). Submissions should not exceed 9 pages including diagrams,
tables, appendices, etc. plus unrestricted space for references and an ethical consideration section (see
below). The PDF files must have all non-standard fonts embedded. Submissions must be self-contained and in
English. After uploading your submission, please verify the copy stored on the submission site. Submissions that
do not follow these guidelines, or do not view or print properly, may be rejected without review.
PDF files submitted to WSDM 2027 must be anonymized: the submitted document should not include the author
information and should not include citations or discussion of related work that would make the authorship
apparent. Explicitly revealing the manuscript authorship will result in rejection without review. Note, however,
that it is acceptable to explicitly refer in the manuscript to companies or organizations that provided
datasets, hosted experiments, or deployed solutions. The reviewers will be informed that it does not necessarily
imply that the authors are currently affiliated with the mentioned organization. To support the identification
of reviewers with conflicts of interest, the full author list must be specified at submission time. To support
faster dissemination of scientific results, we allow submissions that had earlier versions or code posted on
preprint servers such as arXiv.org or GitHub (with the understanding that these materials cannot be anonymous).
In such cases, authors should exercise extra care and should not explicitly associate their submission with such
publicly posted materials.
Supplementary Material & Reproducibility
Authors may include references to external repositories containing resources and methods, full theoretical
proofs and derivations, detailed descriptions of experimental setup, hyperparameter configurations, test
datasets, datasets or source code, but should only do so if strict author anonymity can be maintained. Looking
at supplementary material is at the discretion of the reviewers, in other words, the paper should be
self-contained as much as possible.
Wherever appropriate, the authors are encouraged to use publicly available test collections and state-of-the-art baselines, and are encouraged to share the experimental results, data, and code with the research community. In their submission, authors may refer to an anonymized GitHub repository, though this is not strictly required.
Wherever appropriate, the authors are encouraged to use publicly available test collections and state-of-the-art baselines, and are encouraged to share the experimental results, data, and code with the research community. In their submission, authors may refer to an anonymized GitHub repository, though this is not strictly required.
Authorship
Submitted manuscripts must adhere to the ACM
authorship policy. In particular, (i) each author must be the creator or originator of an idea in the
work;
(ii) each author must make substantial contributions to the work; and (iii) each author must be accountable for
the work that was done and its presentation in a publication. The
policy was recently updated to govern the use of generative AI tools in authoring papers.
If an author submits numerous manuscripts to the same conference, it is less likely that one has materially contributed to all such submissions. To this end, we limit the number of full paper submissions per author to 10 maximum. If more than 10 full paper manuscripts are submitted with the same person listed as an author, the additional manuscripts submitted after the initial 10, will be rejected without review.
If an author submits numerous manuscripts to the same conference, it is less likely that one has materially contributed to all such submissions. To this end, we limit the number of full paper submissions per author to 10 maximum. If more than 10 full paper manuscripts are submitted with the same person listed as an author, the additional manuscripts submitted after the initial 10, will be rejected without review.
Review Process
Each manuscript will be reviewed by at least three PC members and a senior PC member. The acceptance
decisions will take into account manuscript novelty, technical depth, elegance, practical or theoretical impact,
and presentation. WSDM 2027 will use a combination of single-blind reviewing and double-blind reviewing. The
manuscripts will be double-blind to regular PC members and Senior PC members, but the metadata (including
authorship) of the manuscripts will be available to Associate Chairs to check for undisclosed conflicts of
interest and to help assure the integrity of the review process. Note that papers not related to the conference
main theme and topics will be desk-rejected without review.
ACM Instructions for Authors
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. ORCID IDs are required for all 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.
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. ORCID IDs are required for all 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.
Ethical Considerations
Submitted manuscripts should include a section on the ethical implications of the proposed research. This
section will not be counted toward the nine-page limit, and should be placed before the references. In this
section, authors are asked to reflect and discuss the potential negative societal impact of their work, as they
consider appropriate. Examples of negative societal impact include fairness considerations, privacy
considerations, security considerations, safety considerations, misuse of the technology by malicious actors, as
well as possible harms that could arise even when the technology is being used as intended and functioning
correctly. If there are negative societal impacts, authors should discuss appropriate mitigation strategies.
Acceptance
For each accepted paper (including main, findings, and short tracks), at least one author must register for
the conference (with either a 3-day or 5-day registration) and present the paper at the conference in person.
Each paper requires its own 3-day or 5-day registration. If a single registration is used to cover more than one
main-track paper, an additional paper presentation fee will apply for each extra paper. WSDM 2027 will be an
in-person conference, with no provisions for remote presentations. If authors are unable to present their work
for any reason, they are expected to find a proxy to present the work on their behalf. The organizers reserve
the right to remove any paper that is not presented during the conference from the proceedings.
Conflict of Interest (COI) Policy
All authors and reviewers must declare conflicts of interest in CMT. A domain conflict (entered in
Education & Career History) must be declared for employment at the same institution or company, regardless of
geography/location, currently or in the last 12 months. A personal conflict should be declared when the
following associations exist:
– candidate for employment at the same institution or company
– received an honorarium, stipend, or grant from the institution or company within the last 12 months (except where of a modest nature, such as reimbursement of seminar expenses, honorarium for examination of a thesis, and so on).
– co-author on book or paper in the last 24 months
– co-principal investigator on a funded grant or research proposal in the last 24 months
– actively working on any project together
– family relationship or close personal relationship
– graduate advisee/advisor relationship, regardless of time elapsed since graduation
– deep personal animosity
– received an honorarium, stipend, or grant from the institution or company within the last 12 months (except where of a modest nature, such as reimbursement of seminar expenses, honorarium for examination of a thesis, and so on).
– co-author on book or paper in the last 24 months
– co-principal investigator on a funded grant or research proposal in the last 24 months
– actively working on any project together
– family relationship or close personal relationship
– graduate advisee/advisor relationship, regardless of time elapsed since graduation
– deep personal animosity
In general, we expect authors, PC, the organizing committee, and other volunteers to adhere to ACM’s Conflict of
Interest Policy as well as the ACM’s Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct.
Violations of Originality, Dual Submission or Conflicts of Interest
Submitted manuscripts that do not meet the length, formatting or originality requirements, or are
concurrently submitted to two venues (including manuscripts with significant overlap), are subject to desk
rejection without review. At the discretion of the PC Chairs and the Steering Committee, egregious violations
(including plagiarism) may lead to additional penalties such as a temporary or permanent ban from the venue and
sponsoring SIGs venues, as well as an escalation to the ACM Committee on Professional Ethics (COPE). Likewise,
failure of an author to disclose all COIs, or cases of a referee providing a review on a paper for which they
have an undisclosed COI, may lead to similar penalties. You are encouraged to contact the PC Chairs if you have
questions as to the originality conditions, dual submission, or conflict of interest policy.
Acknowledgment
The Microsoft CMT service was used for managing the peer-reviewing process for this conference. This service was
provided for free by Microsoft and they bore all expenses, including costs for Azure cloud services as well as for
software development and support.
ACM Open Access Policy
Starting January 1, 2026, ACM will fully transition to Open Access. All ACM publications, including those
from ACM-sponsored conferences, will be 100% Open Access. Authors will have two primary options for publishing
Open Access articles with ACM: the ACM Open institutional model or by paying Article Processing Charges (APCs).
With over 1,800 institutions already part of ACM Open, the majority of ACM-sponsored conference papers will not
require APCs from authors or conferences (currently, around 70-75%).
Authors from institutions not participating in ACM Open will need to pay an APC to publish their papers, unless they qualify for a financial or discretionary waiver. To find out whether an APC applies to your article, please consult the list of participating institutions in ACM Open and review the APC Waivers and Discounts Policy. Keep in mind that waivers are rare and are granted based on specific criteria set by ACM. Understanding that this change could present financial challenges, ACM has approved a temporary subsidy for 2027 to ease the transition and allow more time for institutions to join ACM Open.
Authors from institutions not participating in ACM Open will need to pay an APC to publish their papers, unless they qualify for a financial or discretionary waiver. To find out whether an APC applies to your article, please consult the list of participating institutions in ACM Open and review the APC Waivers and Discounts Policy. Keep in mind that waivers are rare and are granted based on specific criteria set by ACM. Understanding that this change could present financial challenges, ACM has approved a temporary subsidy for 2027 to ease the transition and allow more time for institutions to join ACM Open.
The subsidy will offer:
TBD
Program Chairs and Associate Program Chairs
Associate Program Chairs
- Raymond Wong, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
- Ninghao Liu, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
- Jing Shao, Shanghai AI Lab/Shanghai Jiao Tong University
- Xia Hu, Shanghai AI Lab
- James Caverlee, Texas A&M University
- Yi Chang, Jilin University