ACM SIGIR is the Association for Computing Machinery's Special Interest Group on Information Retrieval. SIGIR focuses on all aspects of information storage, retrieval and dissemination, including research strategies, output schemes and system evaluations. For more information, see:
The SIGIR conference has a history that dates back to 1971. In that year, Jack Minker and Sam Rosenfeld organised the ACM SIGIR Information Storage and Retrieval Symposium. The first official SIGIR conference was held in 1978 in Rochester, New York in the USA chaired by James Iverson. The second conference in Dallas, Texas in the USA was chaired by Robert Korfhage. The third conference moved across the Atlantic to Cambridge, UK, chaired by Keith van Rijsbergen in cooperation with the British Computer Society (BCS). The Cambridge conference started the tradition of alternating between a North American and non-North American location. Today, SIGIR alternates in a three year cycle between a North American location, a European location, and another location. In 2008, SIGIR was held in Singapore. In 2009 it will be held in Boston, in 2010 it will be held in Geneva, and in 2011 it will be in Beijing.