— Apologies for cross-posting —
ACM UMAP 2021: Call for Demo and LBR Papers
Important Dates
• Submission of demos and LBR papers: March 26, 2021
• Notification of acceptance: April 19, 2021
• Camera-ready versions of accepted papers: May 7, 2021
• Conference: June 21-25, 2021
Note: The submissions times are 11:59 pm AoE time (Anywhere on Earth)
ACM UMAP 2021 – User Modeling, Adaptation and Personalization is the premier international
conference for researchers and practitioners working on systems that adapt to individual
users, to groups of users, and that collect, represent, and model user information.
ACM UMAP 2021 invites Demonstrations and Late-Breaking Results (LBR) papers of innovative
UMAP-based systems (including research prototypes). You are encouraged to submit your Demo
or LBR by March 26th, 2021.
Submission formats
For more details, see below!
Demonstrations
• Max. 3 pages + max. 1 additional page for references
• (Required) unpublished page describing how they would present the demo virtually and/or
in person
• (Optional) video or external material demonstrating the system
• Publication in ACM UMAP 2021 Adjunct Proceedings
• Presentation as a (potentially virtual) demo + poster at the conference
Late-Breaking Results
• Max. 7 pages + max. 2 additional pages for references
• (NEW: required) unpublished page with a list of questions the authors aim to get
feedback on
• Publication in ACM UMAP 2021 Adjunct Proceedings
• Presentation as a (potentially virtual) poster at the conference
Submission via
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=acmumap2021
Demonstrations
Demonstrations will showcase research prototypes and commercially available products in a
dedicated session. Demo submissions must be based on an implemented and tested system that
pursues one or more innovative ideas in the interest areas of the conference.
Demonstrations are an excellent and exciting way to showcase implementations and to get
valuable feedback from the community. Each demo submission must make clear which aspects
of the system will be demonstrated, and how these will be demonstrated on-site as well as
online.
To better identify the value of demos, we also encourage authors to submit a pointer to a
screencast (max. 5 minutes on Vimeo or YouTube) or any external material related to the
demo (e.g., shared code on GitHub).
Descriptions of demonstrations should have a length of max. 3 pages + 1 page of references
in the new ACM single-column style. On an extra page (not to be published), submissions
should include a specification of the technical requirements for demonstrating the system
at UMAP 2021. Given uncertainties surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic, this extra page
should also describe if/how the demo can be presented in a virtual setting (e.g. with a
video or a live link to the system).
Late-Breaking Results
Late-Breaking Results (LBR) are research-in-progress that must contain original and
unpublished accounts of innovative research ideas, preliminary results, industry
showcases, and system prototypes, addressing both the theory and practice of User
Modeling, Adaptation and Personalization. In addition, papers introducing recently started
research projects or summarizing project results are welcome as well.
We encourage researchers and practitioners to submit a late-breaking work as it provides a
unique opportunity for sharing valuable ideas, eliciting useful feedback on early-stage
work, and fostering discussions and collaborations among colleagues.
Late-Breaking Results papers have a length of up to 7 pages + 2 pages of references in the
new ACM single-column style and will be presented to the conference as (in-person and
virtual) posters. On an extra page (not to be published), submissions should include a
list of questions that the authors aim to get feedback on during the poster session at
UMAP 2021.
Submission and Review Process
Papers will be reviewed single-blind and do not need to be anonymized before submission.
Papers (demo and LBR) must be formatted according to the new workflow for ACM
publications. The templates and instructions are available here:
https://www.acm.org/publications/taps/word-template-workflow.
Authors should submit their papers as single-column. The templates are available here (we
strongly recommend the usage of LaTeX for the camera-ready papers to minimize the extent
of reformatting):
• LaTeX (use \documentclass[manuscript,review,anonymous]{acmart} in the
sample-authordraft.tex file for single-column):
https://www.acm.org/binaries/content/assets/publications/consolidated-tex-t…
• Overleaf (use \documentclass[manuscript,review,anonymous]{acmart} for single-column):
https://www.overleaf.com/latex/templates/acm-conference-proceedings-master-…
• MS Word:
https://www.acm.org/binaries/content/assets/publications/taps/acm_submissio…
Note: Accepted papers will require a further revision to meet the requirements and page
limits of the camera-ready format required by ACM. Instructions for the preparation of the
camera-ready versions of the papers will be provided after acceptance.
Submit your papers in PDF format via EasyChair for ACM UMAP 2021 Demos and Late-Breaking
Results at
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=acmumap2021 (choose “New Submission”
and make sure to select “UMAP 2021 Demo and LBR”).
The review process will be single-blind, i.e. authors’ names should be included in the
papers. Submissions will be reviewed by at least two independent reviewers. They will be
assessed based on their originality and novelty, potential contribution to the research
field, potential impact in particular use cases, and the usefulness of presented
experiences, as well as their overall readability.
Papers that exceed the page limits or do not adhere to the formatting guidelines will be
returned without review.
Publication and Presentation
Accepted Demo and Late-Breaking Results papers will be published in the ACM UMAP 2021
Adjunct Proceedings in the ACM Digital Library. All categories will be presented at the
poster reception of the conference, in the form of a poster and/or a software
demonstration following poster format. This form of presentation will provide presenters
with an opportunity to obtain direct feedback about their work from a wide audience during
the conference. Due to the uncertainties regarding the COVID-19 pandemic, the poster
session may be partially or fully virtual.
At least one author of each accepted paper must register for the conference and present
the paper there.
Late-Breaking Results and Demo Chairs
• Bart Knijnenburg, Clemson University, South Carolina, USA
• Eva Zangerle, Universität Innsbruck, Austria— Apologies for cross-posting —