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EuroVis 2017 Short Paper Track

Call for Papers

** Extended Deadline ** Feb 27th 2017

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For the sixth time, EuroVis 2017 features a short paper track to present late-breaking results, work in progress, and follow-up extensions or evaluations of existing methods. Short papers will be peer-reviewed in a one-stage double-blind process by an international program committee. Short papers will be electronically archived and are fully citable publications. All accepted short papers will be presented orally at the conference.

 

 

Submission Information

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Submissions for the short paper track should be at most 4 pages, with an additional page allowed for references. All submissions must be original works that have not been published previously in any conference proceedings, magazine, journal, or edited book.

 

A EuroVis short paper describes a more focused and concise research contribution and is likely to have a smaller - yet still significant - scope of contribution than a full paper. Short papers draw from the same paper types as full papers, as well as the same list of suggested topics. The following descriptive examples, which are characterized in contrast to full papers, may be helpful in understanding what kinds of submissions may be suitable for short papers:

 

• A new visualization technique or system and evidence of its utility compared to known techniques or systems (described in sufficient detail to assist an expert reader in replicating the technique or system, but without exhaustive implementation detail and evaluation).

• An incremental improvement or variation of an existing visualization technique or system with convincing evaluation.

• An extensive evaluation of an existing visualization technique or system.

• A well-proven counter-example to an existing visualization technique that helps to understand its limitations.

• A new implementation approach that has demonstrably addressed a significant technical issue (without extensive evaluation of the implementation).

• A new methodology for designing or studying visualization systems that has demonstrable benefits for the EuroVis community (without extensive evaluation of the methodology).

 

For detailed paper preparation and submission instructions please refer to the guidelines in the Submitter Area on the conference web page at http://eurovis2017.virvig.es/. Note that the style for the final camera-ready version is included in that for full papers and can be found under Author Guidelines at http://eurovis2017.virvig.es/index.php/for-submitters/authors-guidelines. For any questions concerning short paper submissions please contact the co-chairs: ev2017-short@cs.upc.edu

 

 

Important Dates

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Submission deadline: 23:59GMT, Feb 27th 2017

Notification: March 27th, 2017

Camera Ready deadline: April 24th, 2017

Please see http://eurovis2017.virvig.es/ for further details.

 

 

 

EuroVis General Chairs

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Isabel Navazo and Pere-Pau Vázquez, ViRVIG Group, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Spain

 

 

Short Papers Program Co-Chairs

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Barbora Kozlikova, Masaryk University, Czech Republic

Tobias Schreck, Graz University of Technology, Austria

Thomas Wischgoll, Wright State University, United States

 

 

Short Papers Program Committee

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Peter Bak, IBM Research Lab, Haifa, Israel

Michael Behrisch, University of Konstanz, Germany

Jürgen Bernard, Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany

Johanna Beyer, Harvard University, United States

Georges-Pierre Bonneau, INRIA and University of Grenoble, France

Rita Borgo, King's College London, United Kingdom

Eli Brown, DePaul University, Chicago, United States

Guoning Chen, University of Houston, United States

Jian Chen, University of Maryland, United States

Wei Chen, Zhejiang University, China

R. Jordan Crouser, Smith College, United States

Aritra Dasgupta, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, United States

Jean-Michel Dischler, University of Strasbourg, France

Achim Ebert, University of Kaiserslautern, Germany

Carla Freitas, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brasil

Steffen Frey, University of Stuttgart, Germany

Kelly Gaither, University of Texas at Austin, United States

Christoph Garth, University of Kaiserslautern, Germany

Enrico Gobbetti, CRS4, Italy

Martin Graham, Edinburgh University, UK

Eduard Gröller, Vienna University of Technology, Austria

Markus Hadwiger, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, Saudi Arabia

Hans Hagen, TU Kaiserslautern, Germany

Hans-Christian Hege, Zuse Institute Berlin, Germany

Danny Holten, SynerScope B.V., Helvoirt, Netherlands

Ingrid Hotz, Linköping University, Sweden

Christophe Hurter, DGAC, Toulouse, France

Petra Isenberg, Inria, Saclay, France

Tobias Isenberg, Inria, Saclay, France

Won-Ki Jeong, Ulsan Institute of Science and Technology, Korea

Alark Joshi, University of San Francisco, United States

Daniel Keefe, University of Minnesota, United States

Stephen Kobourov, University of Arizona, Tucson, United States

Jörn Kohlhammer, Fraunhofer Institute for Computer Graphics Research IGD, Darmstadt, Germany

Michael Krone, University of Stuttgart, Germany

Jens Krüger, Universität Duisburg-Essen, Germany

Robert Laramee, Swansea University, United Kingdom

Heike Leitte, TU Kaiserslautern, Germany

Alexander Lex, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, United States

Lars Linsen, Jacobs University, Bremen, Germany

Ross Maciejewski, Arizona State University, Phoenix, United States

Dorit Merhof, RWTH Aachen University

Silvia Miksch, Vienna University of Technology, Austria

Torsten Möller, University of Vienna, Austria

Vijay Natarajan, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, Karnataka, India

Guido Reina, University of Stuttgart, Germany

Christof Rezk-Salama, Mediadesign University, Düsseldorf, Germany

Peter Rodgers, University of Kent, Canterbury, United Kingdom

Christian Roessl, University of Magdeburg, Germany

Paul Rosen, University of South Florida, Tampa, United States

Filip Sadlo, Heidelberg University, Germany

Thomas Schultz, University of Bonn, Germany

Michael Sedlmair, University of Vienna, Austria

Paolo Simonetto, The University of Arizona, Tucson, United States

Milos Sramek, Austrian Academy of Sciences

Jaya Sreevalsan-Nair, International Institute of Information Technology, Bangalore, India

Marc Streit, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria

Shigeo Takahashi, University of Aizu, Aizu-Wakamatsu, Fukushima, Japan

Tatiana von Landesberger, Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany

Manuela Waldner, Vienna University of Technology, Austria

Chaoli Wang, University of Notre Dame, Indiana, United States

Gunther Weber, Lawrence Berkley National Laboratory, California, United States

Rüdiger Westermann, Technische Universität München, Germany

Alexander Wiebel, Worms University of Applied Sciences, Germany

Kai Xu, Middlesex University, London, United Kingdom

Yue Zhang, Singapore University of Technology & Design, Singapore