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This talk explores the concept of systems research using tools from P2P systems research, and suggests mechanisms to better align author and conference incentives. It discusses randomness, the importance of problem-solving creativity, completeness of evaluation, and effectiveness of presentation in computer systems research.
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Towards a Model of Computer Systems Research Tom Anderson University of Washington
P2P No centralized control Emergent behavior Heavy tailed distributions Incentives matter Randomness helps Systems Research No centralized control Emergent behavior Heavy tailed distributions? Incentives matter? Randomness hurts? P2P vs. Systems Research • This talk: • Explain systems research using tools from P2P systems research • Suggest some mechanisms to better align author and conference incentives
Randomness is Fundamental? • Little consensus as to what constitutes merit • Importance of problem? • Creativity of solution? • Completeness of evaluation? • Effectiveness of presentation? • All of the above? • Large #’s of submissions makes consistency hard to achieve • Small PC, huge workload, burnout, lack of attention to detail • Large PC, lower workload, less consistency
SIGCOMM 06 Experiment • Manage randomness explicitly • Large PC, split between “light” and “heavy” • Light + heavy PC: bin into accept, marginal, reject • With as few reviews as possible • Add reviews for papers with high variance • Add reviews for papers at the margin • Program committee meeting (just heavy PC) • Pre-accept half the papers • Pre-select 2x to discuss • Each paper under discussion read by at least 5 from heavy PC • Result: success disaster • Little basis for discriminating between papers at the boundary
Incentives for Marginal Effort • With unit merit and no noise: • Impulse function at accept threshold • With unit merit and noise, single conference: • Gaussian function at accept threshold • With unit merit, high noise, and multiple conferences: • Peak incentive well below accept threshold • Repeated attempts without improving paper • We’d like effort to reflect the underlying merit of the idea • Good ideas are pursued, even after publication • Mediocre ideas are published, and the author quickly moves on
A Modest Suggestion • Reward, like merit, should be a continuous function • Publish rank and error bars for every paper accepted at a conference • Computed automatically from individual PC ranking • Post-hoc (benefit from perspectives of all reviewers) • After some time has elapsed, re-rank • Encourage continued effort on good ideas • Like test in time, but applied to all published papers
Afternoon Discussion Topics • Double-blind vs. single-blind reviews • Should authors disclose previous reviews of the same paper? • Are author-rebuttals useful? • When should ``open reviews'' be used? • Should we review the reviewers? • CS-wide citation reporting and indexing • Travel reduction • Decoupling publication from presentation • How do we quantify the merit of a conference? • Do PCs tend to favor PC-authored papers? • How random are PC decisions? • How big is the rejected-paper tumbleweed?
Afternoon Discussion Topics • Is there a correlation between PC size and conference impact? • Does overlapping membership between PCs decrease diversity? • Is there a correlation between number of papers accepted and quality? • Do overall scores predict what gets accepted? • What do authors like and dislike about reviews? • How to handle suspected author misbehavior • How to handle suspected reviewer misbehavior • When, why, and how to shepherd • Reviews of review-management software • Proposals for new or improved review-management features