Conferences and Journals for Computer Vision Area
The above address you can find most of the conference and journals according to types:
If you do not know which journal to pick, and you would like to try the Elsevier publisher, they offer a finder tool which you input the tittle and abstract, they can offer you a list of recommended journals.
This website do publicize the review from the top conference, which can help a lot for people without experience.
The meaning of publishing research work on both conference and journal:
When an article is presented at a conference, it is generally not complete. The general practice is to present a preliminary analysis at the conference and reserve the detailed analysis for a full paper. The purpose of presenting your research at a conference is to inform people about your study and get feedback from them to improve your methodology. So, it is okay to develop a previously published conference paper into a full-length manuscript and publish it in a journal later on. This is an acceptable practice, provided you clearly disclose the conference paper and include at least 30% new material in the journal paper.
The following content is cited from here.
Conference papers refer to articles that are written with the goal of being accepted to a conference: typically an annual (or biannual) venue with a specific scope where you can present your results to the community, usually as an oral presentation, a poster presentation, or a tabled discussion. The review process for conference papers is typically within a fixed window: everyone submits for a certain deadline, then the review committee (program committee) collaborates to review and discuss papers, then all authors are notified with accept/reject at the same time. Since the review process has a fixed schedule (to meet the schedule of the physical meeting), conference review times are quite predictable.
Conference papers are typically published in collections called “proceedings”: sometimes these are printed by university presses, by professional organizations, by big-name publishers, or simply online.
Journal papers refer to an article that’s published in an issue of the journal. The frequency of issues for different journals varies from one-a-month to once-a-year, or anything in between; it may not even be regular. The review process for journals often does not have a fixed deadline or schedule: though journals may promise things like “reviews in six weeks”, in my experience, this rarely if ever holds true. However, instead of conferences that typically have only accept/reject decisions, journals typically have a rolling review schedule and reviewers can opt to ask the authors for revisions, meaning that there might be multiple review phases (often limited to three, at which stage the paper is rejected/accepted).
Since conference papers have a fixed schedule and provide the authors a venue for discussion and feedback, they are generally for earlier-term work or for “announcing/marking an idea”, or for finding collaborators. Furthermore, conference papers tend to have fixed page-limits, which restricts the content to preliminary findings.
Journal papers tend to have generous page-limits (or none at all), but typically require the work to be more comprehensive and self-contained in return.
In general, in most fields, papers in well-recognized journals tend to have more prestige than papers in well-recognized conferences (esp. in terms of metrics). But this is a simplification.
While in some fields, conference papers are akin to talk abstracts, in areas like computer science, conference papers can be very meaty and there is a high churn of papers in conferences. Top conferences can have acceptance rates around 10%, and as such, A+ conference papers are often held in high regard within the community: these venues are far more competitive than many of the best journals. Still, even in the CS area, metric-wise (for hiring, positions, funding, etc.), journals will often still count for more than a conference following the norm in other academic fields.
Here is a link for all. This article includes the top conferences and journals.
The first Season
ICCV
Main conference:Main conference: paper Registration Deadline (closed) March 10, 2017 (23:59 GMT)
Paper Submission Deadline (closed) March 17, 2017* (23:59 GMT) Supplementary Material Submission March 27, 2017 (23:59 GMT)
Workshops and tutorials:Proposal Submission Deadline February 15, 2017 (Wednesday) Notification to Organizers March 31, 2017 (Friday)
ECCV
Main conference:Submission Deadline Mar 14, 2016 Notification Due Jul 1, 2016 Final Version Due Jul 25, 2016
The Second Season
NIPS
AI and machine learning
Deadline for Paper Submissions:
Fri May 19, 2017 20:00 PM UTC
BMVC :British Machine Vision Conference
Conference Series : British Machine Vision Conference
Link: http://bmvc2017.london/ When Sep 4, 2017 — Sep 7, 2017 Where London Submission Deadline May 2, 2017 Notification Due Jul 4, 2017 Final Version Due Jul 18, 2017
The Last season
CVPR
Main conference: paper Submission Deadline 2016 November 15, 6:00 p.m. Pacific Standard Time (Los Angeles), same time of day as above deadline.
ICLR: International Conference on Learning Representations (More like discussion some pros and cons)
Conference Track
Submission Deadline: 5:00pm Eastern Daylight Time (EDT), November 4th 5th, 2016
Review Period: until December 16nd, 2016
Rebuttal/discussion: December 17th, 2016 to January 20th, 2017
Decision Notification: February 6th, 2017
Workshop Track
Submission Deadline: 5:00pm Eastern Daylight Time (EDT), February 17th, 2017
Discussion Period: until March 10th, 2017
Decision notification: March 17th, 2017