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CHI 2024 – Papers track, post-PC outcomes report

NB — The numbers might not always work out here, there are missing data from the analyses due to conflicts.

This blog post covers outcomes from the CHI 2024 Program Committee (PC) meeting, which took place from the 16-18th January 2024.

After the first round of reviews, 1651 submissions were invited to submit revisions. External reviewers and Associate Chairs (ACs) reviewed and discussed these revised submissions asynchronously and made individual binary accept/reject decisions. Submissions were there then discussed in Subcommittees at the PC meeting where final accept/reject decisions were made.

Overall acceptance rates

The Conference Program Committee accepted 1060 submissions. The overall acceptance rate for the Papers track was 26.4%. Of those submissions that were revised and resubmitted, 64% were accepted. The overall acceptance rate for “short” submissions (< 5000 words) was 10% (54/551 submissions). The overall acceptance rates for “standard” and “excessive” submissions was 29% (1006/3458 submissions). Seventeen submissions of “excessive” length were accepted (of 66,26%).

Acceptance rates by subcommittee

Submissions to the CHI Papers track are made to one of eighteen subcommittees. We considered the submission rates to these subcommittees and their respective R+R rates in other blog posts. Final acceptance rates varied between 34% (Accessibility and Aging, Access) and 18% (User Experience and Usability, UX). Figure 1 shows the acceptance rates for each subcommittee.


A bar chart, showing acceptance rates for each CHI subcomittee, ranked from low (UX, on the left) to high (Access, on the right).

Figure 1: Acceptance rates by subcommittee, CHI 2024 Papers

Recommendations

Submissions to the CHI Papers track receive recommendations from reviewers, not scores. While it may not make sense to compute and plot mean scores, we can still have a closer look at the pattern of recommendations. Do all accepted submissions have a ‘clean sweep’ of accept recommendations? What is the mix of recommendations on rejected submissions? Figure 2 shows these patterns, focusing on R+R submissions where the final recommendation from reviewers was either Accept or Reject and where there were four reviews in total (edge cases are shown below).


A bar chart showing the proportion of recommendations after the PC for R+R submissions. The y-axis is a count of submissions, the x-axis enumerates the combinations of reviews (e.g., all reject, all accept etc)

Figure 2: How do the recommendations of reviewers look after the PC for papers invited to R+R

Not all papers finished with four recommendations. A couple had six, fifty-nine had three. The following table comprises the recommendation counts of all R+R submissions that did not finish the process with four recommendations.

Decision # Accept Recommendations # Reject Recommendations Total # recommendations n
Reject 2 3 5 52
Accept 3 0 3 43
Reject 1 4 5 41
Accept 4 1 5 20
Accept 5 0 5 16
Reject 0 3 3 15
Accept 3 2 5 8
Reject 0 5 5 8
Reject 3 2 5 4
Accept 2 3 5 2
Accept 2 1 3 1
Accept 3 3 6 1
Reject 2 4 6 1

Bonus Chartjunk

The Program Committee meeting was considering over 1600 R+R submissions. It discussed and accepted or rejected these over the course of three days. It’s busy! Precision Conference, the tool that is used to manage the submission process, keeps an ‘action log’. When someone updates their review, it gets updated. When someone makes a new submission, it gets updated. When a decision is reached, the log is updated. Figure 3 shows how activity ramped up during the PC meeting. (We’ve stripped out the “sends email to contact author” and “send eRights to ACM” events – a lot of these happen at the same time and the chart is less interesting to look at.)


A histogram. Dates for the PC are shown on the x-axis. The y-axis shows how many events were added to the log during a given time period. The peaks associated with the PC meeting are clear.

Figure 3: PCS gets busy during the PC meeting!

Datatables

Figure 1 shows the acceptance rates across the PC’s subcommittees. The underlying data is provided below.

Subcommittee Number of accepted submissions Total number of submissions Acceptance rate
Access 101 300 34%
Critical 68 218 32%
Devices 39 142 28%
Privacy 57 209 28%
Systems 81 283 28%
Apps 62 235 26%
Health 78 318 24%
PeopleQual 61 260 24%
Viz 42 173 24%
Design 65 295 22%
Games 35 157 22%
Ibti 42 198 22%
CompInt 56 283 20%
IntTech 65 314 20%
Learning 53 268 20%
PeopleMixed 44 219 20%
PeopleStat 52 252 20%
UX 59 327 18%

Figure 2 shows the variety of recommendation permutations reached by reviewers on R+R submissions. The more esoteric permutations are given in a table, but here is the full dataset:

Decision # Accept Recommendations # Reject Recommendations Total # recommendations n
Accept 4 0 4 825
Reject 0 4 4 244
Reject 1 3 4 144
Accept 3 1 4 94
Reject 2 3 5 52
Accept 3 0 3 43
Reject 1 4 5 41
Reject 2 2 4 27
Accept 4 1 5 20
Accept 5 0 5 16
Reject 0 3 3 15
Accept 2 2 4 10
Accept 3 2 5 8
Reject 0 5 5 8
Reject 3 2 5 4
Accept 2 3 5 2
Accept 1 3 4 1
Accept 2 1 3 1
Accept 3 3 6 1
Reject 2 4 6 1

A full breakdown of the countries from which submissions were received (and whether one or more submission from that country/territory was accepted) to the Papers track is given below.

Country/
Territory
Authorships on rejected submissions Authorships on accepted submissions Total authorships Proportion of authorship on accepted papers
United States of America 3094 1958 5052 38%
China 1263 404 1667 24%
Germany 825 316 1141 28%
United Kingdom 716 293 1009 30%
Canada 436 257 693 38%
South Korea 372 192 564 34%
Australia 353 147 500 30%
Japan 352 131 483 28%
Netherlands 224 76 300 26%
Switzerland 145 75 220 34%
Finland 166 44 210 20%
Denmark 108 63 171 36%
Taiwan 128 30 158 18%
France 106 47 153 30%
Singapore 77 52 129 40%
Austria 98 28 126 22%
Sweden 62 41 103 40%
India 68 32 100 32%
Portugal 46 42 88 48%
Italy 63 4 67 6%
Bangladesh 52 6 58 10%
Ireland 38 18 56 32%
Hong Kong S.A.R. 31 24 55 44%
Spain 28 25 53 48%
New Zealand 38 12 50 24%
Israel 38 10 48 20%
Belgium 33 11 44 24%
Brazil 34 8 42 20%
Norway 29 4 33 12%
Luxembourg 21 11 32 34%
Poland 21 5 26 20%
Turkey 17 5 22 22%
Philippines 21 0 21 0%
Cyprus 15 0 15 0%
Czech Republic 15 0 15 0%
Qatar 13 1 14 8%
Kenya 13 0 13 0%
Iran 10 2 12 16%
Saudi Arabia 4 6 10 60%
Ecuador 7 2 9 22%
Estonia 5 2 7 28%
Pakistan 7 0 7 0%
Macedonia 6 0 6 0%
Malawi 0 6 6 100%
Slovenia 4 2 6 34%
South Africa 6 0 6 0%
Uruguay 6 0 6 0%
Romania 2 3 5 60%
Malaysia 3 1 4 24%
United Arab Emirates 4 0 4 0%
Iceland 3 0 3 0%
Mexico 3 0 3 0%
Nigeria 2 1 3 34%
Rwanda 3 0 3 0%
Bahrain 2 0 2 0%
Ghana 1 1 2 50%
Macau S.A.R 1 1 2 50%
Peru 2 0 2 0%
Russia 2 0 2 0%
Republic of Serbia 1 1 2 50%
Thailand 2 0 2 0%
Argentina 1 0 1 0%
Armenia 1 0 1 0%
Chile 1 0 1 0%
Colombia 0 1 1 100%
Costa Rica 1 0 1 0%
Croatia 1 0 1 0%
Egypt 0 1 1 100%
Indonesia 0 1 1 100%
Jordan 1 0 1 0%
Kazakhstan 1 0 1 0%
Namibia 1 0 1 0%
Sri Lanka 1 0 1 0%
United Republic of Tanzania 0 1 1 100%
Ukraine 1 0 1 0%
Vietnam 1 0 1 0%
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