The 42nd IEEE International Conference on Computer Communications (INFOCOM 2023)

17–20 May 2023
New York area, USA
https://infocom2023.ieee-infocom.org/

Call For Papers [Main Conference]

IEEE INFOCOM is the flagship networking conference of the IEEE Communications Society. Due to residual logistic issues associated with the COVID pandemic, INFOCOM 2023 conference site has been moved to the New York area, USA (from Tokyo, Japan) with new meeting dates of May 17-20, 2023. INFOCOM 2023 will be offered in hybrid mode with the in-person conference to be held on the beautiful campus of Stevens Institute of Technology, across the Hudson river from Manhattan, New York City. After holding INFOCOM virtually for three years, we are excited to be able to offer in-person experience of INFOCOM to our attendees in 2023.

IEEE INFOCOM 2023 solicits research papers describing significant and innovative research contributions to the field of computer and data communications networks. We invite submissions on a wide range of research topics, spanning both theoretical and systems research. Topics include but are not limited to:

  • 5G and beyond networks
  • Age of Information
  • Big data and machine learning for networks
  • Cellular networks
  • Cloud computing/mobile cloud computing
  • Challenged Environments (underwater, underground)
  • Connected unmanned aerial/terrestrial/underwater systems
  • Cross-layer optimization and control
  • Crowdsourcing
  • Cyber-physical systems
  • Datacenter networking
  • Dynamic spectrum sharing
  • Energy efficiency in networks
  • Edge and fog computing/networking
  • Fault tolerance, reliability and survivability
  • Information security and privacy
  • Information-centric networking
  • Interference management and mitigation
  • Internet architecture
  • Internet of Things
  • Localization and location-based services
  • Medium access control
  • MIMO-based networking
  • mmWave, THz, VLC, full duplex communication networks
  • Mobile sensing and applications
  • Mobility management and models
  • Multimedia networking
  • Network economics and pricing
  • Network management
  • Network measurement and analysis
  • Network security and privacy
  • Network virtualization
  • Optical networks
  • Overlay and peer-to-peer networks
  • Quality-of-service and resource management
  • Quantum networking
  • Router and switch design
  • Routing and multicast
  • Scaling laws and fundamental limits
  • Smart grid applications
  • Social computing and networks
  • Software-defined networking
  • Studies on testbeds and large-scale experimental platforms
  • Vehicular networks
  • Web applications and content distribution
  • WLAN, WPAN, RFID, and NFC

IEEE INFOCOM incorporates a rigorous double-blind review process, empowered by a fully automated review assignment system that analyzes the submitted manuscripts and the representative publications of TPC members, and matches the submissions to TPC members’ expertise and interests. The automated review assignment system, termed Erie, is described in the following paper.

B. Li and Y.T. Hou. “The new automated INFOCOM review assignment system,” IEEE Network, vol.30, no.5, pp.18-24, Sept./Oct. 2016.

http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7579022/

Preprints Policy

The submitted manuscript or its title/abstract should not be posted on a public website, such as arXiv.org, or transmitted via public mailing lists. Authors will need to provide consent that their submissions may be subject to an early rejection if it is found to have more than 30% overlap with a single paper available to the public (e.g., arXiv, webpages, etc.).

Anonymous Extended Report Policy

Note that the submitted papers should not refer to an extended/technical report, even if it is anonymous. Please include what you deem to be the most important technical content within the page limitations of the submission.

Conflict of Interests (COI)

Prior to submission please make sure to update your COIs in the EDAS system.

A COI occurs when a person’s objective judgment is — or is perceived by a reasonable observer to be — compromised by an existing relationship, affiliation, or connection to a person whose work they must evaluate.

The following are considered to be specific examples of relationships that produce COIs. Individuals in such relationships should not be involved in peer review of, or making editorial decisions about, materials provided by the related parties.

  • The lifelong relationship between Ph.D. student and Ph.D. supervisor
  • Within the last 24 months or reasonably expected within the next year:
    • Working closely together (e.g., at the same institution, company or organization; or within the same organizational team)
    • Recipients of joint funding or significant professional collaboration
    • Joint authorship of an archival publication
  • Personal or family relationships that would reasonably cause others to doubt impartiality
  • Notable personal or professional rivalry/animosity (publicly known or not)

Accepted and presented papers will be published in the IEEE INFOCOM 2023 Conference Proceedings and submitted to IEEE Xplore®.

Full details regarding the submission procedures and requirements are available at http://infocom2023.ieee-infocom.org.

Important Dates

  • Abstract Due: Mon., July 25, 2022 (11:59pm EDT)
  • Full Paper Due: Mon., Aug. 1, 2022 (11:59pm EDT)
  • Notification of Acceptance: Fri., Dec. 2, 2022

Organizing Committee

Technical Program Chairs

  • Yusheng Ji (National Institute of Informatics, Japan)
  • Yanchao Zhang (Arizona State University, USA)
  • Gil Zussman (Columbia University, USA)

Technical Program Vice-Chair for Information Systems

  • Parth Pathak (George Mason University, USA)