Ron A Oldfield
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- research-article
Priority research directions for in situ data management: Enabling scientific discovery from diverse data sources
Tom Peterka
Argonne National Laboratory, Lemont, IL, USA
,Deborah Bard
National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center, Berkeley, CA, USA
,Janine C Bennett
Sandia National Laboratories, Livermore, CA, USA
,E Wes Bethel
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA
,Ron A Oldfield
Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, USA
,Line Pouchard
Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY, USA
,Christine Sweeney
Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, USA
,Matthew Wolf
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
International Journal of High Performance Computing Applications, Volume 34, Issue 4•Jul 2020, pp 409-427 • https://doi.org/10.1177/1094342020913628In January 2019, the US Department of Energy, Office of Science program in Advanced Scientific Computing Research, convened a workshop to identify priority research directions (PRDs) for in situ data management (ISDM). A fundamental finding of this ...
- 2Citation
MetricsTotal Citations2
- article
Reducing I/O variability using dynamic I/O path characterization in petascale storage systems
Seung Woo Son
University of Massachusetts Lowell, Lowell, USA
,Saba Sehrish
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, Batavia, USA
,Wei-Keng Liao
Northwestern University, Evanston, USA
,Ron Oldfield
Sandia National Laboratory, Albuquerque, USA
,Alok Choudhary
Northwestern University, Evanston, USA
The Journal of Supercomputing, Volume 73, Issue 5•May 2017, pp 2069-2097 • https://doi.org/10.1007/s11227-016-1904-7In petascale systems with a million CPU cores, scalable and consistent I/O performance is becoming increasingly difficult to sustain mainly because of I/O variability. The I/O variability is caused by concurrently running processes/jobs competing for I/...
- 3Citation
MetricsTotal Citations3
- research-article
Published By ACM
Published By ACM
Evaluation of methods to integrate analysis into a large-scale shock shock physics code
Ron A. Oldfield
Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, USA
,Kenneth Moreland
Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, USA
,Nathan Fabian
Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, USA
,David Rogers
Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, USA
ICS '14: Proceedings of the 28th ACM international conference on Supercomputing•June 2014, pp 83-92• https://doi.org/10.1145/2597652.2597668Exascale supercomputing will embody many revolutionary changes in the hardware and software of high-performance computing. For example, projected limitations in power and I/O-system performance will fundamentally change visualization and analysis ...
- 18Citation
- 221
- Downloads
MetricsTotal Citations18Total Downloads221Last 12 Months4
- article
Hello ADIOS: the challenges and lessons of developing leadership class I/O frameworks
Qing Liu
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
,Jeremy Logan
RDAV, University of Tennessee, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
,Yuan Tian
RDAV, University of Tennessee, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
,Hasan Abbasi
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
,Norbert Podhorszki
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
,Jong Youl Choi
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
,Scott Klasky
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
,Roselyne Tchoua
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
,Jay Lofstead
Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, USA
,Ron Oldfield
Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, USA
,Manish Parashar
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Piscataway, NJ, USA
,Nagiza Samatova,
Karsten Schwan
Georgia Tech, Atlanta, GA, USA
,Arie Shoshani
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA
,Matthew Wolf
Georgia Tech, Atlanta, GA, USA
,Kesheng Wu
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA
,Weikuan Yu
Computer Science and Software Engineering, Auburn University, Auburn, AL, USA
Concurrency and Computation: Practice & Experience, Volume 26, Issue 7•May 2014, pp 1453-1473 • https://doi.org/10.1002/cpe.3125Applications running on leadership platforms are more and more bottlenecked by storage input/output I/O. In an effort to combat the increasing disparity between I/O throughput and compute capability, we created Adaptable IO System ADIOS in 2005. ...
- 69Citation
MetricsTotal Citations69
- research-article
Published By ACM
Published By ACM
Fourier-assisted machine learning of hard disk drive access time models
Adam Crume
University of California, Santa Cruz, CA
,Carlos Maltzahn
University of California, Santa Cruz, CA
,Lee Ward
Sandia National Laboratories, Livermore, CA
,Thomas Kroeger
Sandia National Laboratories, Livermore, CA
,Matthew Curry
Sandia National Laboratories, Livermore, CA
,Ron Oldfield
Sandia National Laboratories, Livermore, CA
PDSW '13: Proceedings of the 8th Parallel Data Storage Workshop•November 2013, pp 45-51• https://doi.org/10.1145/2538542.2538561Predicting access times is a crucial part of predicting hard disk drive performance. Existing approaches use white-box modeling and require intimate knowledge of the internal layout of the drive, which can take months to extract. Automatically learning ...
- 3Citation
- 122
- Downloads
MetricsTotal Citations3Total Downloads122Last 12 Months2
- research-article
Published By ACM
Published By ACM
Hobbes: composition and virtualization as the foundations of an extreme-scale OS/R
Ron Brightwell
Sandia National Laboratories, Center for Computing Research, Albuquerque, NM
,Ron Oldfield
Sandia National Laboratories, Center for Computing Research, Albuquerque, NM
,Arthur B. Maccabe
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN
,David E. Bernholdt
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN
ROSS '13: Proceedings of the 3rd International Workshop on Runtime and Operating Systems for Supercomputers•June 2013, Article No.: 2, pp 1-8• https://doi.org/10.1145/2491661.2481427This paper describes our vision for Hobbes, an operating system and runtime (OS/R) framework for extreme-scale systems. The Hobbes design explicitly supports application composition, which is emerging as a key approach for applications to address ...
- 39Citation
- 372
- Downloads
MetricsTotal Citations39Total Downloads372Last 12 Months5
- research-article
Experiences applying data staging technology in unconventional ways
Jay Lofstead
CSRI
,Ron Oldfield
CSRI
,Todd Kordenbrock
Hewlett-Packard Company
CCGRID '13: Proceedings of the 13th IEEE/ACM International Symposium on Cluster, Cloud, and Grid Computing•May 2013, pp 294-301• https://doi.org/10.1109/CCGrid.2013.27Several efforts have shown the potential of using additional compute-area resources to enhance the IO path to storage. Efforts like data staging, IO forwarding, and similar techniques can accelerate IO performance and reduce the impact of IO time to a ...
- 3Citation
- 8
- Downloads
MetricsTotal Citations3Total Downloads8
- Article
D2T: Doubly Distributed Transactions for High Performance and Distributed Computing
CLUSTER '12: Proceedings of the 2012 IEEE International Conference on Cluster Computing•September 2012, pp 90-98• https://doi.org/10.1109/CLUSTER.2012.79Current exascale computing projections suggest rather than a monolithic simulation running for the majority of the machine, a collection of components comprising the scientific discovery process will be employed in an online workflow. This move to an ...
- 5Citation
MetricsTotal Citations5
- article
Trilinos I/O Support Trios
Ron A. Oldfield
Sandia National Laboratories, Livermore, CA, USA. E-mails: {raoldfi,gdsjaar,gflofst}@sandia.gov
,Gregory D. Sjaardema
Sandia National Laboratories, Livermore, CA, USA. E-mails: {raoldfi,gdsjaar,gflofst}@sandia.gov
,Gerald F. Lofstead
Sandia National Laboratories, Livermore, CA, USA. E-mails: {raoldfi,gdsjaar,gflofst}@sandia.gov
,Todd Kordenbrock
Hewlett-Packard Company, Palo Alto, CA, USA. E-mail: [email protected]
Scientific Programming, Volume 20, Issue 2•April 2012, pp 181-196 • https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/842791Trilinos I/O Support Trios is a new capability area in Trilinos that serves two important roles: 1 it provides and supports I/O libraries used by in-production scientific codes; 2 it provides a research vehicle for the evaluation and distribution of new ...
- 6Citation
MetricsTotal Citations6
- research-article
Published By ACM
Published By ACM
Examples of in transit visualization
Kenneth Moreland
Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, USA
,Ron Oldfield
Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, USA
,Pat Marion
Kitware, Inc, Clifton Park, NY, USA
,Sebastien Jourdain
Kitware, Inc., Clifton Park, NY, USA
,Norbert Podhorszki
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
,Venkatram Vishwanath
Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, IL, USA
,Nathan Fabian
Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, USA
,Ciprian Docan
Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ, USA
,Manish Parashar
Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ, USA
,Mark Hereld
Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, IL, USA
,Michael E. Papka
Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, IL, USA
,Scott Klasky
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
PDAC '11: Proceedings of the 2nd international workshop on Petascal data analytics: challenges and opportunities•November 2011, pp 1-6• https://doi.org/10.1145/2110205.2110207One of the most pressing issues with petascale analysis is the transport of simulation results data to a meaningful analysis. Traditional workflow prescribes storing the simulation results to disk and later retrieving them for analysis and ...
- 35Citation
- 266
- Downloads
MetricsTotal Citations35Total Downloads266Last 12 Months10Last 6 weeks1
- research-article
Published By ACM
Published By ACM
Extending scalability of collective IO through nessie and staging
Jay Lofstead
Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, USA
,Ron Oldfield
Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, USA
,Todd Kordenbrock
Hewlett-Packard, Nashville, TN, USA
,Charles Reiss
University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA
PDSW '11: Proceedings of the sixth workshop on Parallel Data Storage•November 2011, pp 7-12• https://doi.org/10.1145/2159352.2159355The increasing fidelity of scientific simulations as they scale towards exascale sizes is straining the proven IO techniques championed throughout terascale computing. Chief among the successful IO techniques is the idea of collective IO where processes ...
- 20Citation
- 139
- Downloads
MetricsTotal Citations20Total Downloads139Last 12 Months4Last 6 weeks2
- research-article
Published By ACM
Published By ACM
Evaluating the viability of process replication reliability for exascale systems
Kurt Ferreira
Sandia National Laboratories
,Jon Stearley
Sandia National Laboratories
,James H. Laros
Sandia National Laboratories
,Ron Oldfield
Sandia National Laboratories
,Kevin Pedretti
Sandia National Laboratories
,Ron Brightwell
Sandia National Laboratories
,Rolf Riesen
IBM Research, Ireland
,Patrick G. Bridges
University of New Mexico
,Dorian Arnold
University of New Mexico
SC '11: Proceedings of 2011 International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis•November 2011, Article No.: 44, pp 1-12• https://doi.org/10.1145/2063384.2063443As high-end computing machines continue to grow in size, issues such as fault tolerance and reliability limit application scalability. Current techniques to ensure progress across faults, like checkpoint-restart, are increasingly problematic at these ...
- 150Citation
- 810
- Downloads
MetricsTotal Citations150Total Downloads810Last 12 Months21Last 6 weeks2
- research-article
Published By ACM
Published By ACM
Six degrees of scientific data: reading patterns for extreme scale science IO
Jay Lofstead
Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, USA
,Milo Polte
Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
,Garth Gibson
Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
,Scott Klasky
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
,Karsten Schwan
Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA
,Ron Oldfield
Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, USA
,Matthew Wolf
Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA
,Qing Liu
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
HPDC '11: Proceedings of the 20th international symposium on High performance distributed computing•June 2011, pp 49-60• https://doi.org/10.1145/1996130.1996139Petascale science simulations generate 10s of TBs of application data per day, much of it devoted to their checkpoint/restart fault tolerance mechanisms. Previous work demonstrated the importance of carefully managing such output to prevent application ...
- 75Citation
- 560
- Downloads
MetricsTotal Citations75Total Downloads560Last 12 Months25Last 6 weeks4
- research-article
Published By ACM
Published By ACM
The structural simulation toolkit
A. F. Rodrigues
Sandia National Labs, Albuquerque, NM
,K. S. Hemmert
Sandia National Labs, Albuquerque, NM
,B. W. Barrett
Sandia National Labs, Albuquerque, NM
,C. Kersey
Sandia National Labs, Albuquerque, NM
,R. Oldfield
Sandia National Labs, Albuquerque, NM
,M. Weston
Sandia National Labs, Albuquerque, NM
,R. Risen
Sandia National Labs, Albuquerque, NM
,J. Cook
New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM
,P. Rosenfeld
University of Maryland, College Park, MD
,E. Cooper-Balis
University of Maryland, College Park, MD
,B. Jacob
University of Maryland, College Park, MD
ACM SIGMETRICS Performance Evaluation Review, Volume 38, Issue 4•March 2011, pp 37-42 • https://doi.org/10.1145/1964218.1964225As supercomputers grow, understanding their behavior and performance has become increasingly challenging. New hurdles in scalability, programmability, power consumption, reliability, cost, and cooling are emerging, along with new technologies such as 3D ...
- 277Citation
- 1,532
- Downloads
MetricsTotal Citations277Total Downloads1,532Last 12 Months200Last 6 weeks35
- Article
Managing Variability in the IO Performance of Petascale Storage Systems
Jay Lofstead,
Fang Zheng,
Qing Liu,
Scott Klasky,
Ron Oldfield,
Todd Kordenbrock,
Karsten Schwan,
Matthew Wolf
SC '10: Proceedings of the 2010 ACM/IEEE International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis•November 2010, pp 1-12• https://doi.org/10.1109/SC.2010.32Significant challenges exist for achieving peak or even consistent levels of performance when using IO systems at scale. They stem from sharing IO system resources across the processes of single largescale applications and/or multiple simultaneous ...
- 49Citation
- 459
- Downloads
MetricsTotal Citations49Total Downloads459Last 12 Months7
- article
On the Path to Exascale
Brian Barrett
Sandia National Laboratories, USA
,Ron Brightwell
Sandia National Laboratories, USA
,Sudip Dosanjh
Sandia National Laboratories, USA
,Al Geist
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA
,Scott Hemmert
Sandia National Laboratories, USA
,Michael Heroux
Sandia National Laboratories, USA
,Doug Kothe
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA
,Richard Murphy
Sandia National Laboratories, USA
,Jeff Nichols
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA
,Ron Oldfield
Sandia National Laboratories, USA
,Arun Rodrigues
Sandia National Laboratories, USA
,Jeffrey S. Vetter
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA
,Ken Alvin
Sandia National Laboratories, USA
International Journal of Distributed Systems and Technologies, Volume 1, Issue 2•April 2010, pp 1-22 • https://doi.org/10.4018/jdst.2010040101There is considerable interest in achieving a 1000 fold increase in supercomputing power in the next decade, but the challenges are formidable. In this paper, the authors discuss some of the driving science and security applications that require ...
- 4Citation
MetricsTotal Citations4
- Article
Modeling the Impact of Checkpoints on Next-Generation Systems
Ron A. Oldfield
Sandia National Laboratories
,Sarala Arunagiri
The University of Texas at El Paso, USA
,Patricia J. Teller
The University of Texas at El Paso, USA
,Seetharami Seelam
IBM TJ Watson Research Center, USA
,Maria Ruiz Varela
The University of Texas at El Paso, USA
,Rolf Riesen
Sandia National Laboratories
,Philip C. Roth
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
MSST '07: Proceedings of the 24th IEEE Conference on Mass Storage Systems and Technologies•September 2007, pp 30-46The next generation of capability-class, massively parallel processing (MPP) systems is expected to have hundreds of thousands of processors. For application-driven, periodic checkpoint operations, the state-of-the-art does not provide a solution that ...
- 27Citation
MetricsTotal Citations27
- Article
Published By ACM
Published By ACM
Parallel I/O advancements in air quality modeling systems
SC '06: Proceedings of the 2006 ACM/IEEE conference on Supercomputing•November 2006, pp 170-es• https://doi.org/10.1145/1188455.1188631This poster presents an overview of and the performance results of recent I/O advancements in the parallel CMAQ framework. These optimizations were developed as part of a collaboration between the EPA and Sandia National Laboratories. netCDF provides a ...
- 0Citation
- 61
- Downloads
MetricsTotal Citations0Total Downloads61
- article
Improving Data Access for Computational Grid Applications
Ron Oldfield
Scalable Computing Systems, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque 87185-1110
,David Kotz
Department of Computer Science, Dartmouth College, 6211 Sudikoff Laboratory, Hanover 03755
Cluster Computing, Volume 9, Issue 1•January 2006, pp 79-99 • https://doi.org/10.1007/s10586-006-4899-7High-performance computing increasingly occurs on "computational grids" composed of heterogeneous and geographically distributed systems of computers, networks, and storage devices that collectively act as a single "virtual" computer. A key challenge in ...
- 1Citation
MetricsTotal Citations1
- Doctoral Theses
Efficient i/o for computational grid applications
High-performance computing increasingly occurs on “computational grids” composed of heterogeneous and geographically distributed systems of computers, networks, and storage devices that collectively act as a single “virtual” computer. A key challenge in ...
- 0Citation
MetricsTotal Citations0
Author Profile Pages
- Description: The Author Profile Page initially collects all the professional information known about authors from the publications record as known by the ACM bibliographic database, the Guide. Coverage of ACM publications is comprehensive from the 1950's. Coverage of other publishers generally starts in the mid 1980's. The Author Profile Page supplies a quick snapshot of an author's contribution to the field and some rudimentary measures of influence upon it. Over time, the contents of the Author Profile page may expand at the direction of the community.
Please see the following 2007 Turing Award winners' profiles as examples: - History: Disambiguation of author names is of course required for precise identification of all the works, and only those works, by a unique individual. Of equal importance to ACM, author name normalization is also one critical prerequisite to building accurate citation and download statistics. For the past several years, ACM has worked to normalize author names, expand reference capture, and gather detailed usage statistics, all intended to provide the community with a robust set of publication metrics. The Author Profile Pages reveal the first result of these efforts.
- Normalization: ACM uses normalization algorithms to weigh several types of evidence for merging and splitting names.
These include:- co-authors: if we have two names and cannot disambiguate them based on name alone, then we see if they have a co-author in common. If so, this weighs towards the two names being the same person.
- affiliations: names in common with same affiliation weighs toward the two names being the same person.
- publication title: names in common whose works are published in same journal weighs toward the two names being the same person.
- keywords: names in common whose works address the same subject matter as determined from title and keywords, weigh toward being the same person.
The more conservative the merging algorithms, the more bits of evidence are required before a merge is made, resulting in greater precision but lower recall of works for a given Author Profile. Many bibliographic records have only author initials. Many names lack affiliations. With very common family names, typical in Asia, more liberal algorithms result in mistaken merges.
Automatic normalization of author names is not exact. Hence it is clear that manual intervention based on human knowledge is required to perfect algorithmic results. ACM is meeting this challenge, continuing to work to improve the automated merges by tweaking the weighting of the evidence in light of experience.
- Bibliometrics: In 1926, Alfred Lotka formulated his power law (known as Lotka's Law) describing the frequency of publication by authors in a given field. According to this bibliometric law of scientific productivity, only a very small percentage (~6%) of authors in a field will produce more than 10 articles while the majority (perhaps 60%) will have but a single article published. With ACM's first cut at author name normalization in place, the distribution of our authors with 1, 2, 3..n publications does not match Lotka's Law precisely, but neither is the distribution curve far off. For a definition of ACM's first set of publication statistics, see Bibliometrics
- Future Direction:
The initial release of the Author Edit Screen is open to anyone in the community with an ACM account, but it is limited to personal information. An author's photograph, a Home Page URL, and an email may be added, deleted or edited. Changes are reviewed before they are made available on the live site.
ACM will expand this edit facility to accommodate more types of data and facilitate ease of community participation with appropriate safeguards. In particular, authors or members of the community will be able to indicate works in their profile that do not belong there and merge others that do belong but are currently missing.
A direct search interface for Author Profiles will be built.
An institutional view of works emerging from their faculty and researchers will be provided along with a relevant set of metrics.
It is possible, too, that the Author Profile page may evolve to allow interested authors to upload unpublished professional materials to an area available for search and free educational use, but distinct from the ACM Digital Library proper. It is hard to predict what shape such an area for user-generated content may take, but it carries interesting potential for input from the community.
Bibliometrics
The ACM DL is a comprehensive repository of publications from the entire field of computing.
It is ACM's intention to make the derivation of any publication statistics it generates clear to the user.
- Average citations per article = The total Citation Count divided by the total Publication Count.
- Citation Count = cumulative total number of times all authored works by this author were cited by other works within ACM's bibliographic database. Almost all reference lists in articles published by ACM have been captured. References lists from other publishers are less well-represented in the database. Unresolved references are not included in the Citation Count. The Citation Count is citations TO any type of work, but the references counted are only FROM journal and proceedings articles. Reference lists from books, dissertations, and technical reports have not generally been captured in the database. (Citation Counts for individual works are displayed with the individual record listed on the Author Page.)
- Publication Count = all works of any genre within the universe of ACM's bibliographic database of computing literature of which this person was an author. Works where the person has role as editor, advisor, chair, etc. are listed on the page but are not part of the Publication Count.
- Publication Years = the span from the earliest year of publication on a work by this author to the most recent year of publication of a work by this author captured within the ACM bibliographic database of computing literature (The ACM Guide to Computing Literature, also known as "the Guide".
- Available for download = the total number of works by this author whose full texts may be downloaded from an ACM full-text article server. Downloads from external full-text sources linked to from within the ACM bibliographic space are not counted as 'available for download'.
- Average downloads per article = The total number of cumulative downloads divided by the number of articles (including multimedia objects) available for download from ACM's servers.
- Downloads (cumulative) = The cumulative number of times all works by this author have been downloaded from an ACM full-text article server since the downloads were first counted in May 2003. The counts displayed are updated monthly and are therefore 0-31 days behind the current date. Robotic activity is scrubbed from the download statistics.
- Downloads (12 months) = The cumulative number of times all works by this author have been downloaded from an ACM full-text article server over the last 12-month period for which statistics are available. The counts displayed are usually 1-2 weeks behind the current date. (12-month download counts for individual works are displayed with the individual record.)
- Downloads (6 weeks) = The cumulative number of times all works by this author have been downloaded from an ACM full-text article server over the last 6-week period for which statistics are available. The counts displayed are usually 1-2 weeks behind the current date. (6-week download counts for individual works are displayed with the individual record.)
ACM Author-Izer Service
Summary Description
ACM Author-Izer is a unique service that enables ACM authors to generate and post links on both their homepage and institutional repository for visitors to download the definitive version of their articles from the ACM Digital Library at no charge.
Downloads from these sites are captured in official ACM statistics, improving the accuracy of usage and impact measurements. Consistently linking to definitive version of ACM articles should reduce user confusion over article versioning.
ACM Author-Izer also extends ACM’s reputation as an innovative “Green Path” publisher, making ACM one of the first publishers of scholarly works to offer this model to its authors.
To access ACM Author-Izer, authors need to establish a free ACM web account. Should authors change institutions or sites, they can utilize the new ACM service to disable old links and re-authorize new links for free downloads from a different site.
How ACM Author-Izer Works
Authors may post ACM Author-Izer links in their own bibliographies maintained on their website and their own institution’s repository. The links take visitors to your page directly to the definitive version of individual articles inside the ACM Digital Library to download these articles for free.
The Service can be applied to all the articles you have ever published with ACM.
Depending on your previous activities within the ACM DL, you may need to take up to three steps to use ACM Author-Izer.
For authors who do not have a free ACM Web Account:
- Go to the ACM DL http://dl.acm.org/ and click SIGN UP. Once your account is established, proceed to next step.
For authors who have an ACM web account, but have not edited their ACM Author Profile page:
- Sign in to your ACM web account and go to your Author Profile page. Click "Add personal information" and add photograph, homepage address, etc. Click ADD AUTHOR INFORMATION to submit change. Once you receive email notification that your changes were accepted, you may utilize ACM Author-izer.
For authors who have an account and have already edited their Profile Page:
- Sign in to your ACM web account, go to your Author Profile page in the Digital Library, look for the ACM Author-izer link below each ACM published article, and begin the authorization process. If you have published many ACM articles, you may find a batch Authorization process useful. It is labeled: "Export as: ACM Author-Izer Service"
ACM Author-Izer also provides code snippets for authors to display download and citation statistics for each “authorized” article on their personal pages. Downloads from these pages are captured in official ACM statistics, improving the accuracy of usage and impact measurements. Consistently linking to the definitive version of ACM articles should reduce user confusion over article versioning.
Note: You still retain the right to post your author-prepared preprint versions on your home pages and in your institutional repositories with DOI pointers to the definitive version permanently maintained in the ACM Digital Library. But any download of your preprint versions will not be counted in ACM usage statistics. If you use these AUTHOR-IZER links instead, usage by visitors to your page will be recorded in the ACM Digital Library and displayed on your page.
FAQ
- Q. What is ACM Author-Izer?
A. ACM Author-Izer is a unique, link-based, self-archiving service that enables ACM authors to generate and post links on either their home page or institutional repository for visitors to download the definitive version of their articles for free.
- Q. What articles are eligible for ACM Author-Izer?
- A. ACM Author-Izer can be applied to all the articles authors have ever published with ACM. It is also available to authors who will have articles published in ACM publications in the future.
- Q. Are there any restrictions on authors to use this service?
- A. No. An author does not need to subscribe to the ACM Digital Library nor even be a member of ACM.
- Q. What are the requirements to use this service?
- A. To access ACM Author-Izer, authors need to have a free ACM web account, must have an ACM Author Profile page in the Digital Library, and must take ownership of their Author Profile page.
- Q. What is an ACM Author Profile Page?
- A. The Author Profile Page initially collects all the professional information known about authors from the publications record as known by the ACM Digital Library. The Author Profile Page supplies a quick snapshot of an author's contribution to the field and some rudimentary measures of influence upon it. Over time, the contents of the Author Profile page may expand at the direction of the community. Please visit the ACM Author Profile documentation page for more background information on these pages.
- Q. How do I find my Author Profile page and take ownership?
- A. You will need to take the following steps:
- Create a free ACM Web Account
- Sign-In to the ACM Digital Library
- Find your Author Profile Page by searching the ACM Digital Library for your name
- Find the result you authored (where your author name is a clickable link)
- Click on your name to go to the Author Profile Page
- Click the "Add Personal Information" link on the Author Profile Page
- Wait for ACM review and approval; generally less than 24 hours
- Q. Why does my photo not appear?
- A. Make sure that the image you submit is in .jpg or .gif format and that the file name does not contain special characters
- Q. What if I cannot find the Add Personal Information function on my author page?
- A. The ACM account linked to your profile page is different than the one you are logged into. Please logout and login to the account associated with your Author Profile Page.
- Q. What happens if an author changes the location of his bibliography or moves to a new institution?
- A. Should authors change institutions or sites, they can utilize ACM Author-Izer to disable old links and re-authorize new links for free downloads from a new location.
- Q. What happens if an author provides a URL that redirects to the author’s personal bibliography page?
- A. The service will not provide a free download from the ACM Digital Library. Instead the person who uses that link will simply go to the Citation Page for that article in the ACM Digital Library where the article may be accessed under the usual subscription rules.
However, if the author provides the target page URL, any link that redirects to that target page will enable a free download from the Service.
- Q. What happens if the author’s bibliography lives on a page with several aliases?
- A. Only one alias will work, whichever one is registered as the page containing the author’s bibliography. ACM has no technical solution to this problem at this time.
- Q. Why should authors use ACM Author-Izer?
- A. ACM Author-Izer lets visitors to authors’ personal home pages download articles for no charge from the ACM Digital Library. It allows authors to dynamically display real-time download and citation statistics for each “authorized” article on their personal site.
- Q. Does ACM Author-Izer provide benefits for authors?
- A. Downloads of definitive articles via Author-Izer links on the authors’ personal web page are captured in official ACM statistics to more accurately reflect usage and impact measurements.
Authors who do not use ACM Author-Izer links will not have downloads from their local, personal bibliographies counted. They do, however, retain the existing right to post author-prepared preprint versions on their home pages or institutional repositories with DOI pointers to the definitive version permanently maintained in the ACM Digital Library.
- Q. How does ACM Author-Izer benefit the computing community?
- A. ACM Author-Izer expands the visibility and dissemination of the definitive version of ACM articles. It is based on ACM’s strong belief that the computing community should have the widest possible access to the definitive versions of scholarly literature. By linking authors’ personal bibliography with the ACM Digital Library, user confusion over article versioning should be reduced over time.
In making ACM Author-Izer a free service to both authors and visitors to their websites, ACM is emphasizing its continuing commitment to the interests of its authors and to the computing community in ways that are consistent with its existing subscription-based access model.
- Q. Why can’t I find my most recent publication in my ACM Author Profile Page?
- A. There is a time delay between publication and the process which associates that publication with an Author Profile Page. Right now, that process usually takes 4-8 weeks.
- Q. How does ACM Author-Izer expand ACM’s “Green Path” Access Policies?
- A. ACM Author-Izer extends the rights and permissions that authors retain even after copyright transfer to ACM, which has been among the “greenest” publishers. ACM enables its author community to retain a wide range of rights related to copyright and reuse of materials. They include:
- Posting rights that ensure free access to their work outside the ACM Digital Library and print publications
- Rights to reuse any portion of their work in new works that they may create
- Copyright to artistic images in ACM’s graphics-oriented publications that authors may want to exploit in commercial contexts
- All patent rights, which remain with the original owner