this post was submitted on 12 Aug 2025
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It's in the proceedings of the conference in July: https://www.workshop-proceedings.icwsm.org/pdf/2024_44.pdf
Proceedings are the publication part of conferences. Every conference paper ends up in proceedings, it is the only public conference artifact maintained after the conference ends outside of recordings of talks.
As I said, conference quality and review varies wildly and by field. In math, for example, conferences are more prestigious and no, it is not "easy" to just do a conference instead of publishing in a journal. This is also true in many computer science, statistics, and machine learning fields, which is vaguely where this might fall, as a soft application of the methods. The entire subfield in which they are publishing is a joke, so I do not expect anything about social media topic modeling or sentiment analysis to be particularly insightful or academically honest, but this actually applies to many fields with seemingly "rigorous" peer review, which is frequently a very poor filter. Many boring and redundant papers get published in major journals simply because they come from famous labs, for example. And good papers are rejected for petty or self-interested reasons.
Publication in a conference proceeding doesn't usually count as "publication" in the usual sense. Proceedings aren't peer reviewed. The only qualification is being accepted at the conference, and since anyone can (and does) put on a conference, that doesn't carry a tremendous amount of weight.
Being accepted at the conference is peer review. The process is often identical to submitting to a journal. Submit, get accept/reject/opportunity to resubmit with improvements, and if accepted, attend the conference, often giving a talk.
Conference organizers constantly have to recruit reviewers for this purpose.
Proceedings include the accepted papers.
And you are just wrong about the weight / prestige. It varies by field. In biology, conferences are much less prestigious. In engineering, sometimes conferences are the only thing anyone ever cares about and submits papers to. And there are many cases that blend the two, such as ACM, where conference papers can go into journal issues as well, and this spans many fields.