The ACM Transactions on Database Systems
(TODS) publishes original
archival papers in the area of databases and closely related disciplines. The
majority of the papers that have appeared in TODS address the logical and
technical foundation of data management.
The international Editorial Board is composed of recognized experts
in the various subareas of this field, all with a commitment to maintain TODS
as the premier publication in this active field. Papers can be submitted
directly to any of the editors. The Editorial Board maintains contact with ACM's
Special Interest Group on Management and Organization of Data (SIGMOD),
as well as with other societies, to encourage submittal of advanced and
original papers. When appropriate, concise results may be submitted as
technical notes; technical comments on earlier publications are welcome as
well.
TODS was founded by David
K. Hsiao, with the first issue appearing in March, 1975;
Robert W. Taylor took over the editorship five years later
and Gio Wiederhold five years after that, successively
raising the prestige and visibility of this journal.
Won Kim served from 1992 for nine years, maintaining the excellence of
the journal while increasing
coverage of systems-related issues and decreasing the time to publication.
Under the stewardship of Richard T. Snodgrass, who took over in 2001,
TODS improved its service to readers and authors by shortening
the turnaround time on all papers to a guaranteed maximum of five months,
adopting double-blind reviewing, working with conferences to
secure the best papers, and becoming the first publication to implement
all of the ACM Rights and Responsibilities.
The current Editor-in-Chief, Z. Meral Özsoyoğlu,
took over in 2007.
TODS has evolved to
become the premier database journal.
Summarizing a citation analysis of database literature, considering over
100,000 citations, the web page
http://www.acm.org/sigmod/dblp/db/about/top.html
lists the top-cited
papers and books. Thirty TODS papers appear on this list; 31 papers
were from all other journals combined. TODS also dominated all
conferences. The top-cited database paper of all time, Peter P.-S. Chen's
"The Entity-Relationship Model," appeared in the inaugural issue of
TODS.
TODS fares similarly well in a summary of estimated impact from the
Research Index database
(http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/impact.html),
which ranked journals according to their average citation rate.
TODS was judged the database journal with the most
impact, appearing in the
top four percent of the 800-odd journals and conferences analyzed.
These measures of impact correlate with journal accessibility (the causality
probably goes both ways). Of
course, the journal (including all past issues) appears
in the ACM Digital Library and is thus
available to the many individual and
institutional DL subscribers. TODS is also included in the
SIGMOD Anthology and
SIGMOD Digital Symposium Collection
CDROM publications. 5000 copies of the Anthology and DiSC have been sent all over
the world. These disparate media (print, web, CDROM, DVDROM),
widely distributed, ensure that TODS articles are easily available to
database researchers.
The existence of TODS has helped to define the field of database
research. It encompasses the development, formalization, and validation of
abstractions and models to describe database applications and the design and
implementation methods for organizing and processing data on computer
hardware.
TODS
welcomes papers on a full range of database research in the
management of diverse forms of data. Such subjects include: data
modeling, database languages, database theory, query processing,
access methods and indexing, security and privacy, transaction
management, fault tolerance, distribution, performance, data
storage, data mining, and novel applications and infrastructures
exploiting database technology.
TODS encourages papers that explore the above subjects in the context
of large distributed networks of computers, parallel or multiprocessing
computers, or new data devices (including data storage devices, data capture
devices,
and data presentation devices). TODS also encourages papers that describe
emerging data-intensive applications that cannot be satisfied by the current
database technology.
TODS welcomes papers that both lay theoretical foundations for database
management and those that provide new insights into the design and
implementation of large-scale database management systems, database
application
development tools, database access interface tools, and database connectivity
tools for heterogeneous database systems. TODS also accepts papers that
describe user and database administration experiences and issues in
large-scale real-world database installations. The emphasis on integration
of theory and practice is an attempt to encourage authors of theory papers
to consider applicability and/or implementability of the theoretical
results, while encouraging authors of systems papers to reflect on the
theoretical results that may have been used in building the systems and/or
to offer suggestions on issues that may require theoretical treatment.
TODS also solicits focused surveys on topics
relevant to TODS. These should be deep and will sometimes be quite narrow,
but should make a contribution to our understanding of an important area or
subarea of databases. More general surveys that are intended for a
broad-based Computer Science audience or surveys that may influence other
areas of computing research should continue to go to ACM Computing
Surveys. Brief surveys on recent developments in database research are more
appropriate for ACM SIGMOD
Record. TODS surveys should be educational to the
database audience by presenting a relatively well-established body of
database research.
For additional information on the types of papers TODS
will accept, see
Editorial Guidelines.
In terms of the ACM Computing
Reviews (1998) classification,
the primary area of TODS is all of area H (Information Systems), with a
strong focus on subarea H2 (Database Management). Articles in subarea H4
(Information Systems Applications) would be appropriate only if there were
a strong scientific basis in database technology.
Database systems may employ Specialized Languages (D.3.2) and unique
Datatypes and Structures (D.3.3). Effective information retrieval and
management require inferential power, and important advances are being
made in this area. Topics Deduction and Theorem Proving (I.2.3), Knowledge
Representation Formalisms and Methods (I.2.4), Learning (I.2.6), and
Problem Solving, Control Methods, and Search (I.2.8) are all relevant when
they are applied to large collections of data.
Since files provide a foundation for databases, the topic of Files
(E.5) is covered as well, and many papers expand on operating system concerns,
Storage Management (D.4.3), Reliability (D.4.5), Security and Protection
(D.4.6), Organization and Design (D.4.7), and Performance (D.4.8). TODS
publishes papers dealing with hardware systems for databases, but avoids those
about specific devices, so that the topic Storage Hardware (B.3.2) is covered
only in part.