All dates are 11:59 pm, Anywhere on Earth (AoE):
Submission Deadline: May 31, 2025
Competition Dates: June 1st, 2025 until July 15th, 2025.
Decision Notification: At the CFD workshop.
Length: Videos should be no longer than 3 minutes in length.
This cap is determined by Youtube; longer videos may not be able to get posted.
Note: This is a maximum and not a video length recommendation. It is possible that shorter videos may perform better.
Submission: Email videos (as an attachment or with the download link) to contact.cfdworkshop@gmail.com.
Please include “CFD2025 Video Submission” in the subject line.
Please include a list of authors and emails in the email body.
Submission should be sent prior to June 1, 2025 (we will accept videos after this date).
Timeline: We will post videos on Youtube and Youtube Shorts simultaneously on June 1, 2025. Social media engagement metrics will be measured on July 15th, 2025.
Review Process: The program committee will review submissions based on several criteria:
Number of views, likes, comments, and shares
Clarity of explanation
Originality, creativity, innovation and effort
Relevance to topic
*Participation in the video competition is open to all. It is NOT required to register or attend the CFD workshop in order to participate in the video competition.
The Third IJCAI Workshop on Computational Fair Division (CFD) invites researchers, practitioners and students to submit demonstrations to a novel short-form video competition!
The past fifteen years have witnessed significant growth in research, techniques, and insights within computational fair division and multiagent systems. While progress continues in academic conferences and research departments at universities and large tech companies, these advancements have been slow to reach the broader public. Our goal is to leverage social media to increase visibility, engagement, and impact around fair division concepts. In particular, we encourage researchers, practitioners, and students to create and submit short-form videos to be posted and shared on Youtube and Youtube Shorts.
The submissions with the highest engagement will be featured.
The submission topic should be related to computational fair division, similar to the papers and posters presented at the workshop. Our goal is to foster audience engagement, so we welcome a broad interpretation of this prompt. We especially encourage submissions that highlight computational approaches to fairness-related tasks.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
Traditional topics!
Fair allocation of indivisible goods or chores
House allocation or matching
Combinatorial auctions
Recent popular applications!
Agentic AI or LLM approaches to fair division
Practical applications (healthcare, education, sustainability, etc.)
Empirical analysis and benchmarks
Some content ideas include:
Visual demonstrations of concepts commonly encountered in everyday life
Walkthroughs of online platforms or GitHub tutorials
Discussions on the history of fair division or the context of resource allocation within AI
Chalkboard-style explanations of concepts or algorithms
Presentations of mathematical frameworks or proofs of theorems
And more...
We welcome presentations that are also submitted to the IJCAI Demonstrations Track.
Submissions must be original. We particularly encourage submissions that are recorded (or animated, etc.) by hand, although generative-AI-assisted submissions are welcome.