The Eurographics 2016 Tutorials Committee invites you to propose tutorials
teaching the technical background of a given subject, or demonstrating its
potential creative applications. Tutorials are intended to show what can be
done, but even more importantly, how this is done and what kind of tools can
be used to do it. In a proposal for a tutorial you should consider that
tutorial attendees come from diverse backgrounds, ranging from research and
development to education and application.
We are soliciting half-day and full-day tutorial proposals at the beginning,
intermediate, or advanced level in all areas pertinent to Computer Graphics.
Half-day tutorials are about three hours, plus a coffee break in the middle.
Full-day tutorials are twice that long, plus two coffee breaks and a longer
lunch break. Tutorial proposals are about 4-5 pages in length, clearly
indicating the audience that is addressed as well as the syllabus of
instruction. They will be reviewed by the tutorial chairs, supported by
external reviewers. The final selection will be based on quality of the
submission, qualification of the presenters, relevance to the conference
topics, and balance of topics.
Each accepted half day tutorial will be granted a free conference
registration for one speaker, while each full-day tutorial will be granted a
maximum of two free conference registrations.
For any question concerning tutorial submissions please contact the papers
program co-chairs:
chairs-eg2016tutorials(a)eg.org
SUBMISSION DETAILS
Tutorial proposals (in PDF) should be submitted via email to the tutorial
co-chairs (chairs-eg2016tutorials(a)eg.org). The full proposal (4-5 pages)
should be submitted by Friday, October 23th, 2015, 23:59 UTC/GMT. The
acceptance notification date is Friday, December 4th, 2015.
The full proposal should contain the following information:
Presenter(s) details:
Name(s)
Institution(s)
email address(es)
URL(s)
Tutorial details:
Title of Tutorial
Keywords
Half or full day tutorial (either 2×90 minutes or 4×90
minutes)
A detailed outline of the tutorial.
A statement on the necessary background and potential target
audience for the tutorial.
A brief resume of the presenter(s) indicating their
background in the area the tutorial addresses.
If a (similar) tutorial was previously held, indicate the location (i.e.,
which conference), date, and the number of attendees. Please provide
information highlighting changes, improvements and/or why the tutorial
should be held again in this form.
COURSE NOTES
Sample course notes, although not required in the submission, are highly
encouraged to accompany the tutorial proposals. Notes may include original
text, formatted according to the Eurographics publication guidelines,
reprints of earlier papers (subject to copyright approval), slides and any
other material the authors consider useful. All course notes of accepted
tutorials will be distributed to conference participants online and on
USB-Sticks. The acceptance of tutorial proposals is contingent upon the
final submission of complete course notes.