The Asia Pacific Web (APWeb) and Web-Age Information Management (WAIM) Joint Conference on Web and Big Data is aiming at attracting professionals of different communities related to Web and Big Data who have common interests in
interdisciplinary research to share and exchange ideas, experience and the underlying techniques and applications, including Web technologies, database systems, information management, software engineering and big data.
APWeb and WAIM are two separated leading international conferences on research, development and applications of Web technologies and database systems. Previous APWeb conferences were held in Beijing (1998), Hong Kong (1999), Xi’an
(2000), Changsha (2001), Xi’an (2003), Hangzhou (2004), Shanghai (2005), Harbin (2006), Huangshan (2007), Shenyang (2008), Suzhou (2009), Busan (2010), Beijing (2011), Kunming (2012), Sydney (2013), Changsha(2014), Guangzhou (2015), and
Suzhou (2016). Previous WAIM conferences were held in Shanghai (2000), Xi’an (2001), Beijing (2002), Chengdu (2003), Dalian (2004), Hangzhou (2005), Hong Kong (2006), Huang shan (2007), Zhangjiajie (2008), Suzhou (2009), Jiuzhaigou (2010),
Wuhan (2011), Harbin (2012), Beidaihe (2013), Macau (2014), Qingdao (2015), Nanchang (2016) and Beijing (2017).
Starting in 2017, the two conference committees have agreed to launch a joint conference. With the increased focus on Big Data, the new joint conference is expected to attract more professionals from different industrial and academic
communities, not only from the Asia Pacific countries but also from other continents.
The second APWeb-WAIM joint conference on Web and Big Data 2018 will take place in Macau SAR.
Important Dates
Abstract Deadline
February 14th, 2018 (PST)
Full Paper Deadline
February 14th, 2018 (PST)
Author Notification Deadline
April 21st, 2018
Camera Ready Deadline
May 1st, 2018
The APWeb-WAIM Joint Conference on Web and Big Data 2018 covers but is not limited to the following topics:
database and Web applications
Big data analytics
Big data management
Caching and replication
Cloud computing
Content management
Crowdsourcing
Data and information quality
Data management for mobile and pervasive computing
Data management on new hardware
Data mining
Paper Publication
The proceedings of APWEB/WAIM 2018 will be published by Springer in the Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series, one volume for the main conference and one volume for the workshops. Both will be indexed by EI. All the best papers
and a few selected papers will be recommended to special issues of World Wide Web: Internet and Web Information Systems (WWWJ), and Data Science and Engineering (DSE).
Paper Submission
Submissions must not exceed 15 pages in LNCS format, including references. All submissions must be in PDF format. Authors should avoid the use of non-English fonts to avoid problems with printing and viewing the submissions. All accepted
papers MUST follow strictly the instructions for LNCS Authors. Springer LNCS site offers style files and information: http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-6-793341-0p
APWEB/WAIM 2018 will employ double-blind reviewing process, every research paper submitted to APWEB/WAIM 2018 will undergo a "double-blind" reviewing process: the PC members and referees who review the paper will not know the identity of
the authors. To ensure anonymity of authorship, authors must prepare their manuscript as follows:
Authors' names and affiliations must not appear on the title page or elsewhere in the paper.
Funding sources must not be acknowledged on the title page or elsewhere in the paper.
Research group members, or other colleagues or collaborators, must not be acknowledged anywhere in the paper.
The paper's file name must not identify the authors of the paper. It is strongly suggested that the submitted file be named with the assigned submission number. For example, if your assigned paper number is 352, then name your
submission file 352.pdf.
Source file naming must also be done with care, to avoid identifying the authors' name in the paper's associated metadata. For example, if your name is Jane Smith and you submit a PDF file generated from a .dvi file called
Jane-Smith.dvi, your authorship could be inferred by looking into the PDF file.
It is the responsibility of authors to do their very best to preserve anonymity. Papers that do not follow the GUILDLINES here, or otherwise potentially reveal the identity of the authors, are subject to immediate rejection.