Researchers at the University of California San Diego have been honored with a Best Paper Award at the International Conference on Data Engineering (ICDE) 2026 for their groundbreaking work on a new middleware platform called MICRO. This lightweight system enables relational and graph databases to work together seamlessly, potentially revolutionizing how scientists, businesses, and AI systems analyze complex data across multiple platforms.
The award-winning research, presented at the prestigious ICDE conference, addresses a long-standing challenge in data management: the difficulty of combining structured data from relational databases with the interconnected nature of graph databases. MICRO acts as a bridge, allowing these disparate systems to communicate and share data efficiently without requiring extensive reconfiguration or specialized expertise.
According to the UC San Diego team, the MICRO platform could significantly accelerate data analysis in fields ranging from scientific research to business intelligence. For instance, researchers studying complex biological networks or social interactions could leverage both relational and graph data in a single query, while AI systems could access richer datasets for training and inference.
The award underscores the importance of interoperability in modern data ecosystems. As data volumes grow and systems become more specialized, tools like MICRO are critical for unlocking insights that would otherwise remain siloed.
The researchers hope that their work will lead to broader adoption of hybrid database solutions in both academic and commercial settings.
Details of the MICRO platform, including its architecture and performance benchmarks, were unveiled at ICDE 2026 in San Diego, California. The team is now exploring partnerships with industry leaders to bring the technology to market.