SIGMOD is the Association for Computing Machinery's Special Interest Group on Management of Data, which specializes in large-scale data management problems and databases.

The annual ACM SIGMOD Conference, which began in 1975, is considered one of the most important in the field, and received an A* ranking over all edition of the CORE Conference Ranking system. While traditionally this conference had always been held within North America, it took place in Paris in 2004, Beijing in 2007, Athens in 2011, Melbourne in 2015, Amsterdam in 2019, Santiago de Chile in 2024 and Berlin in 2025. The acceptance rate of the ACM SIGMOD Conference, averaged from 1996 to 2012, was 18%, and it was 17% in 2012. Important publications of database systems appear first at SIGMOD, for example, the PostgreSQL database system created by Michael Stonebraker was presented in 1986, for which he received the ACM Turing Award in 2014.

In association with SIGACT and SIGAI, SIGMOD also sponsors the annual ACM Symposium on Principles of Database Systems (PODS) conference on the theoretical aspects of database systems. PODS began in 1982, and has been held jointly with the SIGMOD conference since 1991.

Each year, the group gives out several awards to contributions to the field of data management. The most important of these is the SIGMOD Edgar F. Codd Innovations Award (named after the computer scientist Edgar F. Codd), which is awarded to "innovative and highly significant contributions of enduring value to the development, understanding, or use of database systems and databases". Additionally, SIGMOD presents a Best Paper Award to recognize the highest quality paper at each conference, and Jim Gray Dissertation Award to the best Ph.D. thesis in data management.

Initially, SIGMOD offered one submission cycle per year, a frequency that increased stepwise to four rounds by 2024. Until 2022, papers from accepted submissions were published in subsequent proceedings. From 2023 onwards, the publication model changed to a rolling release similar to a journal.

Symposium on Principles of Database Systems (PODS)

The ACM Symposium on Principles of Database Systems (PODS) is an international research conference on database theory, and has been held yearly since 1982. It is sponsored by three Association for Computing Machinery SIGs, SIGAI, SIGACT, and SIGMOD. Since 1991, PODS has been held jointly with the ACM SIGMOD Conference, a research conference on systems aspects of data management.

PODS is regarded as one of the top conferences in the area of database theory and data algorithms. It holds the highest rating of A* in the CORE2021 ranking. The conference typically accepts between 20 and 40 papers each year, with acceptance rates fluctuating between 25% and 35%.

Venues of SIGMOD/PODS conferences

YearLocationLink
2027Huntington Beach
2026Bangalore
2025Berlin
2024Santiago de Chile
2023Seattle
2022Philadelphia
2021Xi'an (partly virtual with a local event in Xi'an, Shaanxi, China)
2020Portland (Held fully virtual due to COVID-19 pandemic in the United States)
2019Amsterdam
2018Houston
2017Chicago (Previously planned for Raleigh but moved in protest of HB2 )
2016San Francisco
2015Melbourne
2014Snowbird
2013New York
2012Scottsdale
2011Athens
2010Indianapolis
2009Providence
2008Vancouver
2007Beijing
2006Chicago
2005Baltimore
2004Paris
2003San Diego
2002Madison
2001Santa Barbara
2000Dallas
1999Philadelphia
1998Seattle
1997Tucson
1996Montreal
1995San Jose
1994Minneapolis
1993Washington, DC
1992San Diego
1991Denver
1990Atlantic City
1989Portland
1988Chicago
1987San Francisco
1986Washington, DC
1985Austin
1984Boston
1983San Jose, California
1982Orlando, Florida
1981Ann Arbor
1980Santa Monica
1979Boston
1978Austin
1977Toronto
1976Washington, DC
1975San Jose

Gallery

  • 2019 in Amsterdam
  • 2023 in Seattle

See also

External links