Doctoral Consortium - Call for Papers
Highlights
Dates
Submission deadline |
July 15th, 2014 |
Notifications |
August 11th, 2014 |
Camera-ready deadline |
September 10th, 2014 |
Consortium Date |
November 12th, 2014 |
Process
- Submission format: Five-page, ACM SIGCHI proceedings format
(http://www.sigchi.org/publications/chipubform). Not
anonymous.
- Submission
system: http://precisionconference.com/~icmi
- Selection process: Peer-Reviewed
- Presentation format: Talk on consortium day and participation in
the conference poster session
- Proceedings: Included in conference proceedings and ACM Digital
Library
- Doctoral Consortium Co-chairs: Marco Cristani (University of Verona) and Justine Cassell (Carnegie Mellon University)
Overview
The goal of the ICMI Doctoral Consortium is to provide PhD students with an opportunity to present their work to a group of mentors and peers from a diverse set of academic and industrial institutions, to receive feedback on their doctoral research plan and progress, and to build a cohort of young researchers interested in designing multimodal interfaces. We invite students from all PhD granting institutions who are in the process of forming or carrying out a plan for their PhD research in the area of designing multimodal interfaces. The Consortium will be held on November 12th, 2014. We expect to provide economic support to most attendees that will cover part of their costs (travel, registration, meals etc.).
Who should apply?
While we encourage applications from students at any stage of doctoral training, the doctoral consortium will benefit most the students who are in the process of forming or developing their doctoral research. These students will have passed their qualifiers or have completed the majority of their coursework, will be planning or developing their dissertation research, and will not be very close to completing their dissertation research. Students from any PhD granting institution whose research falls within designing multimodal interfaces are encouraged to apply.
Submission Guidelines
Graduate students pursuing a PhD degree in a field related to
designing multimodal interfaces should submit the following
materials:
- Extended Abstract: A five-page description of your PhD research
plan and progress in the ACM SIGCHI proceedings format. Your
extended abstract should follow the same outline, details, and
format of the ICMI short papers. The submissions will not be
anonymous. In particular, it should cover:
- The key research questions and motivation of your
research,
- Background and related work that informs your research,
- A statement of hypotheses or a description of the scope of the
technical problem,
- Your research plan, outlining stages of system development or
series of studies,
- The research approach and methodology,
- Your results to date (if any) and a description of remaining
work,
- A statement of research contributions to date (if any) and
expected contributions of your PhD work.
- Advisor Letter: A one-page letter of nomination from the
student's PhD advisor. This letter is not a letter of
support. Instead, it should focus on the student's PhD plan and how
the Doctoral Consortium event might contribute to the student's PhD
training and research.
- CV: A two-page curriculum vitae of the student.
All materials should be prepared in PDF format and submitted
through the ICMI submission system
(http://precisionconference.com/~icmi)
in the "Doctoral Consortium" track.
Review Process
The Doctoral Consortium will follow a review process in which
submissions will be evaluated by a number of factors including (1)
the quality of the submission, (2) the expected benefits of the
consortium for the student's PhD research, and (3) the student's
contribution to the diversity of topics, backgrounds, and
institutions, in order of importance. More particularly, the quality
of the submission will be evaluated based on the potential
contributions of the research to the field of multimodal interfaces
and its impact on the field and beyond. Students who are in the
process of forming their PhD research plan or are developing the
research they have planned but are not too close to completing their
degrees would most benefit from participating in the
consortium. Finally, we hope to achieve a diversity of research
topics, disciplinary backgrounds, methodological approaches, and
home institutions in this year's Doctoral Consortium cohort. We do
not expect more than two students to be invited from each
institution to represent a diverse sample. Women are especially encouraged to apply.
Financial Support
We expect to be providing most student attendees with financial
support that will cover the majority of the costs of traveling to
and attending the Doctoral Consortium and the conference. However,
the details on the number of students to be funded and funding
coverage is currently unknown, as we are currently working on
raising funds. More detail on travel support will be announced on
the Doctoral Consortium page of the main conference
website (http://icmi.acm.org/2014/).
Attendance
All authors of accepted submissions are expected to attend the
Doctoral Consortium and the main conference poster session. The
attendees will present their PhD work as a short talk at the
Consortium and as a poster at the conference poster session. A
detailed program for the Consortium and the participation guidelines
for the poster session will be available after the camera-ready
deadline.
Questions?
For more information and updates on the ICMI 2014 Doctoral
Consortium, visit the Doctoral Consortium page of the main
conference
website(http://icmi.acm.org/2014/).
For further questions, contact the Doctoral Consortium co-chairs (icmi-dc@acm.org):
- Marco Cristani, University of Verona, IT
- Justine Cassell, Carnegie Mellon University, USA