/// EuroVis 2013 - Call for Short Papers
///
http://www.eurovis.org/
For the second time, EuroVis 2013 features a short paper track. The purpose
of this track is 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 process by an international program
committee. They will be electronically archived and are fully citable
publications. Submissions for the short paper track should be 4 pages (at
most), excluding references, and 5 pages (at most), in total. They will be
orally presented at the conference. EuroVis 2013 will be held in Leipzig,
Germany, June 17-21, 2013.
Please note that we encourage authors of short papers on workshop topics to
submit to the respective workshop.
Important Dates:
*Short Papers Submission Deadline*: March 8, 2013
Acceptance Notification: April 19, 2013
Camera-ready Deadline: May 3, 2013
Conference Dates: June 17-21, 2013
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
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).
All submissions must be original works that have not been published
previously in any conference proceedings, magazine, journal, or edited book.
Further details about paper types and suggested topics can be found at:
http://www.eurovis2013.de/content/short-paper-submission/
http://www.eurovis2013.de/content/call-papers/
Short Paper Co-Chairs:
Mario Hlawitschka, University of Leipzig, Germany
Tino Weinkauf, Max Planck Institute for Informatics, Germany
Further information:
http://www.eurovis.org/