Association for Computing Machinery
Type: | Association |
Industry: | Computing |
Founded: | 1947 |
Headquarters: | New York |
Country: | USA |
Website: | www.acm.org |
Key People | |
Alain Chesnais, President Barbara G. Ryder, Vice President Alexander L. Wolf, Secretary/Treasurer John R. White, Executive Director & CEO |
ACM (Association for Computing Machinery) is an academic society dedicated in the advancement of computing profession. It has a large membership of over 96,000 worldwide. The association serves its members and other professionals in computer sciences and its applications by providing high quality publications, conducting conferences, career resources and through its digital library.[1]
History
ACM was founded by in 1947 as Eastern Association for Computing Machinery during a meeting at Columbia University in New York. It was established due to the growing interest in computers during that time. A series of meetings and symposiums were held in different Universities regarding electronic computing machinery. In 1948, it was officially called Association of Computing Machinery and its constitution was instituted via membership approval in 1949.
In 1961, ACM established its first student chapter at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.
In 1966, ACM created the AM Turing Award in recognition to the the great contributions of British Mathematician Alan M. Turing in the computing profession. The AM Turing Award is awarded annually to individuals who presents that the technical nature of their work has a great impact in the lifetime development of computer science. This award is regarded as the Nobel Prize for Computer Science.[2]
Also in 1966, the Associations Code of Ethics and Guidelines for Professional Conduct in Information Processing was first implemented, expanded in 1972 and it was again revised in 1992 and is the current Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct of ACM. In 1994, ACM and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) collaborated to create the code of ethics and professional practices for Software Engineers which was finalized in 1999.[3] The first recipient of the award was Alan J. Perlis, an American Computer Scientist and the first head of the Computer Science Department of Carnegie-Mellon University.
Since its establishment, one of the primary concerns of ACM is the ethical issues in computing and information technology. The association is dedicated in promoting responsible practices among professionals in the computing industry.
At present, ACM has more than 96,000 members across around the world.
Activities
The association sponsors more than 150 conferences per year about computer graphics (SIGGRAPH); data communications (SIGCOMM); mobile computing (SIGMOBILE); knowledge discovery and data mining (KDD);software engineering (SIGSOFT); high performance computing (SC); human computer interaction (SIGCHI); object-oriented programming (OOPSLA)freedom and privacy (CFP) among others. ACM also promote development for the computing profession through its publications, educational programs, public awareness activities and special interest groups.
It publishes and distributes more than 40 publications of original research the leading experts in computing and information technology. Its digital library has a collection of journals, magazines and peer-reviewed articles since 1950. Its Special Interests Groups are working and coordinating activities from local to global scale to address the pressing issues confronting professionals in the field of computing and information technology.
ACM also recognize professionals and their lifetime contributions in the field of computer science and its application through different awards such as the AM Turing Award, ACM-Infosys Foundation Award in the Computing Sciences, Grace Murray Hopper Award, Paris Kanellakis Theory and Practice Award, Karl V. Karlstrom Outstanding Educator Award and the Allen Newell Award.[4]