Submitted by dasayan05 t3_ymctqy in MachineLearning
Link: https://openreview.net/group?id=ICLR.cc/2023/Conference
A thread for ICLR '23 review related discussion.
- What's your score?
- Are you satisfied?
- Other comments about the review process?
Submitted by dasayan05 t3_ymctqy in MachineLearning
Link: https://openreview.net/group?id=ICLR.cc/2023/Conference
A thread for ICLR '23 review related discussion.
Are there any updated version of this year's distribution? since they are changing over time.
don't have the distribution change, but here is the code for regenerating the scores
https://github.com/HarmanDotpy/iclr2023-scores for keeping track of the current state
Is anyone able to access the 2022 stats link?
Is there an update on this for post rebuttal now? What's the new distribution?
I got 2 8s and 3 3s so a pretty big split in opinions lol. This is my first time submitting to an AI conference so not sure where that leaves my chances but not too optimistic about getting accepted.
>2 8s and 3 3s
For a total of 5 reviews? Not only a big split but also a large number (both of my submissions only have 3 reviews, and average across all papers is apparently 4.1 at present).
Congrats on your first submission :)
Having 5 reviews i suppose is unusual. I guess initially the paper has 8/8/3/3 split, which might necessitate an additional review. Unfortunately, that one is another 3
Thanks! Yeah I was a little salty we got 5 lol, the average would've been a lot better without that extra 3
My first time also, I got 5 5 6 8, hopefully with a little bit of work can increase those
Congrats on your first submission! Sounds pretty close. Good luck.
I also got 2 8s and 2 3s, the guys gave 3 must be brutal lol
to be fair, "4" wasn't an option you had as a reviewer, so it was either 3 or 5, and 5 is "slightly below acceptance threshold". So if you feel like there is a flaw in the paper (even one you could recover from in rebuttals), "3" was the natural vote to give. Personally, for most papers I rated "3", the authors could come back from it if they manage to address my concerns properly.
Two low-confidence weak accepts and one high-confidence reject. The last one made two serious mistakes (and one of them is undergrad-level CS stuff). I doubt I'll be able to change the reviewer's mind. fml
>The last one made two serious mistakes (and one of them is undergrad-level CS stuff)
That sucks!
Good luck, though. I think the confidence ratings are not always too meaningful. There might be a chance you can correct the mistake and/or AC notices and decides in your favour.
4 8s for my first submission to a big conference!
Woah, congrats 🎉
8,6,6,6 seems hopeful.. maybe?
My first submission here, and got the same score as well. Probably I will have to convince the 6 scoring reviewers and increase their ratings a bit.
It's a decent rating, but can't say for sure since AC has all the power. Don't forget to properly do a rebuttal still.
How about 6,6,6 ?
I am sorry this is my first time submitting it.
How should I read the reviews?
We look at the recommendation (score)?
So how good is accepted?
>How should I read the reviews?
I suggest reading them in full multiple times, then trying to write a synthesis of the opinions and main critiques. After that, you need to figure out how will you respond to the main critiques: will you try to fix them (if so, how?) or are those critiques incorrect or mistaken in some way (if so, how?).
​
>So how good is accepted?
No one can tell you for sure at this stage, and ultimately it's a case-by-case decision. However, you can see what past years' scores led to in terms of decisions here:
Thanks a lot for sharing extremely useful information. 🥹
You're welcome and good luck :)
So will those posters also be included in the proceedings?
Yes.
Edit: I don't believe the image of the poster itself is included, but rather the paper!
I had one reject (but their comments read as though they just hated the idea/lack of novelty) and three marginally below the accept line. One of my reviewers pulled out but I've got no idea what my score is as it says NA currently. Overall the reject annoyed me just touting its not novel but looking at the comments of the others hopefully I can change some minds.
At the very least, since the reviews and your replies are public, you can try to correct the record re misconceptions, even if you don't end up changing certain reviewers' minds. And sometimes when replying to one reviewer you can convince a different reviewer. Good luck.
The list of papers and scores is available at: https://twitter.com/shiqiang_w/status/1588714893309804545?s=20&t=f_DzcCrVtNx9jkEekd0dyQ
There are 4,849 submissions, if acceptance rate is 30%, then it should be accepted if ranked before 1,454.
I am now around 2,800, should I just aim for the next conference? Lol.
No, it's all up to the AC. You can have three 8s and still get rejected, and three 3s and still get accepted. There are plenty of examples out there.
“Quantum Machine learning” 1 1 1 1😳😳😳 Looks like it was written by a LLM
lol that would clearly violate their policy
it was flagged for ethics review
8, 3, and 3. First time submitting a ML conference and I'm curious if reviewers can update their score freely during the discussion or they can only update once at the end
I am also quite curious, my sum is the same as yours (5,6, and 3).
But I have no high score, idk how to read these scores correctly.
So how do they decide what papers are accepted after final scores are out?
Average > 5.0?
No one can tell you for sure at this stage, and ultimately it's a case-by-case decision. However, you can see what past years' scores led to in terms of decisions here:
I think it's decided by the area chair, they read your paper and the reviews, then they decide whether to accept or reject
They can do that freely during the reviewing period, but if you want an honest answer I won't put too much hope into the submission with your current score :D
>8, 3, and 3
Very big split! In one past case of mine, I found the higher-rated one sneaked their rating down to go along with the group without saying anything. Hope that doesn't happen for you.
>I'm curious if reviewers can update their score freely during the discussion or they can only update once at the end
AFAIK they can change at any time by "editing" their original review comment. Ideally they also add some text/reply to indicate that they changed their score and why.
Whatever the outcome, congrats on your first submission!
>AFAIK
Thank you all! Yeah I'll try my best for the rebuttal since reviewers at least liked the method... They complained the writing and some of the validation
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I think it is mentioned that citing your previous work should be done in 3rd person
I've got 8, 5, 5, 3
I didn't read them yet, because of anxiety. So far I only read reviews of other papers and feel tempted to defend them :P
Awh
Scores are 8, 5, 3. The third review is very thought-out and raised valid concerns, maybe it's possible to change the score. It's my first time submitting to ICLR, and I am very satisfied with the reviews, all three of them are quite sophisticated and helpful. But unfortunately I know that this is not the case for all submissions...
56815 with confidence 23224. Reviewer with score 1 claims to not know the area and that the paper is not understandable to "general experts". Is the fact we have 5 reviews an indication that the confused reviewer's comments will be discarded?
If the 1 says they don't know the area (especially if it's a short review), most AC's will discard that rating.
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got 5,5,6,6. What are the chances of getting accepted?
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>https://twitter.com/shiqiang_w/status/1588714893309804545?s=20&t=f_DzcCrVtNx9jkEekd0dyQ
That puts you around the 38% mark, so I'd say the chances are not good.
One can update the manuscript until November 18. Has anyone seen it stated somewhere if it's until the end of the day, or until end of November 17? Could not find it in the guide for authors, but maybe I am just blind. :)
go to openreview's Tasks tab and click on pending task .. you will see the time countdown.
Thanks!
Does the page limit of 9 apply to the revision during rebuttal phase? I appreciate any answer.
Probably. You can you use the unlimited appendix though.
I think it was written on the website that it is 9 pages fixed, even during the camera ready, so it is unlikely that rebuttal would allow anything extra
Many thanks. Got 8865 after the discussion, is this good enough to get in? First submission to ICLR, finger crossed...
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One reviewer seems positive and summarized that this paper is marginally above the acceptance, but he gave a 5 score. Should I notice him or something? Will this offend him? This is my first time submitting to ICLR, and the score is 6, 5, 5, 5. So this question is indeed important for me. Is there anyone experienced who can tell me about it? Thanks!
no one is offended by anything I believe, if it's a valid and polite response. The alternative is to accept rejection, which I don't thing you would like
>no one is offended by anything I believe, if it's a valid and polite response. The alternative is to accept rejection, which I don't thing you would like
Thanks for your suggestion. I decide to add the notice of this in the end of the reply.
After the discussion period, no reviewer has changed the score yet (still 8,6,5,5), what's the chance like (first-time submission)?
Got 6, 6, 6 after rebuttal. What are the chances of being accepted?
What kind of scores do you need to get a spotlight presentation? Eg.g. you get something like 8,8,8,6, all with high confidence.
How are spotlights chosen? I guess they want a diverse set of topics right? Like if there's only one RL paper they may just choose that one?
Anyone here ever been on the committee which decided this stuff?
Spotlight/Oral are mostly case by case decision and totally up to the ACs. I don't think you can get a general rule or anything
Thanks 👍
What makes you unsatisfied? Your scores seem on the positive side.
Weaknesses reviewers claimed are not reasonable for me... And some of them absolutely misunderstood my paper even if they rated more than 6.
That sucks. Hopefully you can correct their misconceptions or at the very least set the record straight.
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tfburns t1_iv3m9qy wrote
FYI, if you are curious about your chances given your ICLR scores, you can check some scores (and resulting decisions) from previous years:
2022: https://guoqiangwei.xyz/iclr2022_stats/iclr2022_submissions.html
2021: https://github.com/evanzd/ICLR2021-OpenReviewData
And someone even made a small calculator based on 2019 data: http://horace.io/willmypaperbeaccepted/
Edit: Someone has also scraped this year's data, so you can see where your paper lies in the distribution: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1INZI9epkfBkPOlKuJFaffUCOKDns87Iqg4zovHnf-zs/edit#gid=554805545