MM4SG: Hate, Troll, Cyberbullying, Scams and Abuse Detection
MM4SG: Fake News, Misinformation, Rumor and Event Detection
MM4SG: Multimodal Sentiment Analysis
MM4SG: Disaster Response and Crisis Management in the Web
MM4SG: Multimodal Healthcare applications using Web data
MM4SG: Multimodal content analysis for sustainable development goals (SDGs)
MM4SG: New Datasets for Multimodal Content Analysis on the internet
MM4SG: Multimodal content generation and analysis
MM4SG: Large Language Models for Multimodal Model Content Analysis on the internet
MM4SG: Foundation Models for Multimodal Content Analysis on the internet
MM4SG: Socially Responsible Multimodal Content Analysis: Fairness, Bias, Accountability, and Transparency
WWW2025 Fast Track - Papers rejected and/or withdrawn from WWW 2025 that wish to be submitted to MM4SG can use the same submission link. These submissions should include the review comments in an appendix. Such papers will bypass the peer-review process, with acceptance decisions made directly by the meta-reviewers.
In the Appendix, the authors should include a section titled “Improvements,” where they briefly outline whether they have addressed any of the issues raised in the main review and, if so, how these revisions were implemented. Only minor revisions are expected, and it is acceptable if no revisions are made where the work is already deemed to be in good shape. Major changes are not permitted, and any attempt to modify or manipulate review comments is strictly prohibited.
For this, portals are open from 20-26th 11.59 AOE January.
Deadlines: The submission deadlines are strict and no extensions, regardless of circumstances, will be allowed. Placeholder/dummy abstracts are forbidden.
Authorship: The ACM has an authorship policy stating who can be considered an author in a submission as well as the use of generative AI tools. Every person named as the author of a paper must have contributed substantially to the work described in the paper and/or to the writing of the paper and must take responsibility for the entire content of a paper.
Authorship means accountability for the work. As such, Large Language Models (LLMs) (e.g., ChatGPT) cannot be considered authors. You can use LLMs to rephrase your text, but you are solely responsible for the text in the paper.
Every author of a submission should have an OpenReview account with accurate personal information (i.e., correct first name and last name, and a valid preferred email address). Otherwise, the submission will be desk-rejected.
Anonymity. The review process will be double-blind. The submitted document should omit any author names, affiliations, or other identifying information. This may include, but is not restricted to acknowledgments, self-citations, references to prior work by the author(s), and so on. Please use the third-person to identify your own prior work. You may explicitly refer in the paper to organizations that provided datasets, hosted experiments, or deployed solutions and tools.
Formatting Requirements: Submissions must be in English, in double-column format, and must adhere to the ACM template and format (also available in Overleaf). Word users may use the Word Interim Template and the recommended setting for LaTeX is:
\documentclass[sigconf, anonymous, review]{acmart}.
Submissions must be a single PDF file
Long Papers: 8 (eight) pages as main paper, with unlimited pages for references and an optional Appendix (that can contain details on reproducibility, proofs, pseudo-code, etc). The first 8 pages should be self-contained, since reviewers are not required to read past that.
Short Papers: 4 (four) pages as main paper, with unlimited pages for references and an optional Appendix (that can contain details on reproducibility, proofs, pseudo-code, etc). The first 4 pages should be self-contained, since reviewers are not required to read past that.
Originality and Concurrent Submissions: Submissions must present original work---this means that papers under review at or published/accepted to any peer-reviewed conference / journal with published proceedings cannot be submitted. Submissions that have been previously presented orally, as posters or abstracts-only, or in non-archival venues with no formal proceedings, including workshops or PhD symposia without proceedings, are allowed. Authors may submit anonymized work that is already available as a preprint (e.g., on arXiv or SSRN) without citing it. The ACM has a strict policy against plagiarism, misrepresentation, and falsification that applies to all publications.
Ethical Use of Data and Informed Consent. Authors are encouraged to include a section on the ethical use of data and/or informed consent of research subjects in their paper, when appropriate. You and your co-authors are subject to all ACM Publications Policies, including ACM's Publications Policy on Research Involving Human Participants and Subjects (posted in 2021). Please ensure all authors are familiar with these policies.
Publication: All accepted papers will be allowed the same maximum page length in the proceedings (12 pages, of which 8 are content pages), which will be published by ACM and will be accessible via the ACM Digital Library. Accepted papers will require a further revision to meet the requirements of the camera-ready format required by ACM. Camera-ready versions of accepted papers can and should include all information to identify authors, and should acknowledge any funding received that directly supported the presented research. In addition, all papers are required to submit a brief pre-recorded video, which will appear on ACM Digital Library, along with the PDF of the papers.
Registration: To be included in the proceedings, every accepted paper must be covered by a distinct conference registration, e.g., two papers require two registrations, even if they have overlapping authors. This registration requirement applies universally, regardless of attendance or presentation mode.
Presentation: Every accepted paper must be presented at the conference. No-show papers may be withdrawn from the proceedings. There will be two forms of presentation:
Oral Presentation: Among the accepted papers, a subset will be selected for oral presentation. Generally we expect oral presentations to be in-person, but may allow a few online presentations by authors with significant travel difficulties.
Poster Presentation: All papers will be asked to produce a poster on-site. An e-copy will appear on Whova. To facilitate authors in getting their hard-copy posters on-site, the conference offers a local poster printing service for a fee, which you may access at this link (to be provided). Organizer will bring the posters on-site.
Reproducibility. Authors are strongly encouraged to make their code and data publicly available after the review process. We are encouraging the (optional) use of the "Artifacts Available" badge in ACM's Digital Library. If you release any code, dataset, or similar artifact to accompany your paper, and host it in a publicly available, archival repository for research artifacts that provides a Document Object Identifier (DOI), you are welcome to apply for this badge. A special subcommittee will check the artifacts of all accepted papers for availability and relatedness to the paper after the acceptance notification.
Fore more, refer: https://www2025.thewebconf.org/research-tracks