Skip to main content (Press Enter).
Sign in
Skip auxiliary navigation (Press Enter).
Contact Us
Code of Conduct
aom.org
TIM on Bluesky
Skip main navigation (Press Enter).
Toggle navigation
Home
Conferences
Annual Meeting
2024 Chicago
2023 Boston
2022 Seattle
2021 Virtual
2020 Virtual
2019 Boston
2018 Chicago
2017 Atlanta
2016 Anaheim
2015 Vancouver
2014 Philadelphia
2013 Orlando
2012 Boston
2011 San Antonio
2010 Montreal
2009 Chicago
2008 Anaheim
2007 Philadelphia
2006 Atlanta
2005 Honolulu
2004 New Orleans
2003 Seattle
Specialized Conferences
News
Newsletter March 2026
Newsletter June 2025
Newsletter April 2025
Newsletter December 2023
Newsletter July 2023
Newsletter March 2023
Newsletter December 2022
Newsletter Archive
Sponsorship
Opportunities
Current Sponsors
Our Team
2025-2026 Division Officers
Responsibilities
Leadership Directory
Research Committee
Team History
2024-2025 Division Officers
2023-2024 Division Officers
2022-2023 Division Officers
2021-2022 Division Officers
2020-2021 Division Officers
2019-2020 Division Officers
2018-2019 Division Officers
2017-2018 Division Officers
2016-2017 Division Officers
2015-2016 Division Officers
2014-2015 Division Officers
2013-2014 Division Officers
2012-2013 Division Officers
2011-2012 Division Officers
2010-2011 Division Officers
2009-2010 Division Officers
2008-2009 Division Officers
2007-2008 Division Officers
2006-2007 Division Officers
2005-2006 Division Officers
2004-2005 Division Officers
Past Division Chairs
About TIM
About TIM
TIM Awards
TIM Distinguished Scholars
TIM Emerging Scholars
TIM Lifetime Award 2024
TIM Lifetime Award 2023
Governance Documents
Prospective AOM/TIM Member?
Community
Using Connect@AOM
TIM on Bluesky
TIM on Twitter
TIM Discussion
TIM-troductions
Document and File Library
Events
Our Events
Community
TIM Discussion
View Thread
Discussion: View Thread
Expand all
|
Collapse all
Call for submissions to VIP: Visualization In Practice Workshop at IEEE VIS 2017 -- deadline June 16
1.
Call for submissions to VIP: Visualization In Practice Workshop at IEEE VIS 2017 -- deadline June 16
Like
Brian Fisher
Posted 05-18-2017 19:34
Options Dropdown
Call for Papers (due June 16)
Visualization Solutions in the Wild
The 2017 Workshop on Visualization in Practice (VIP) is an opportunity for visualization practitioners and researchers to meet and share experiences, insights, and ideas in applying the latest visualization and visual analytics research to real world problems. VIP targets work at the interface between visualization research and specific application domains. It is highly interdisciplinary and focused on delivering actual value to users. This year, we specifically focus on visualization solutions in the wild, i.e. on tools, systems, or frameworks which are actively used. The workshop will cover all aspects from their initial conception and design, the process of getting them into use, and the long-term work of extending and sustaining them.
The 2017 VIP workshop will be held on Monday 2nd October in conjunction with
IEEE VIS
in Phoenix, Arizona (October 1-6).
Topics
Vis in Practice is a forum for vis practitioners and application-oriented researchers to exchange ideas about the use of state-of-the-art visualization and visual analytics methods on real world problems. This year, we are looking for descriptions of visualization solutions that have proven their benefit in a real-world application setting. Successful submissions will put a strong focus on demonstrating practical impact in a variety of ways, including but not limited to:
User Involvement.
The goal of a practical visualization solution should be to address a specific visualization and/or problem posed by a prospective user group, oftentimes experts from other domains. Interaction with users is tricky; they frame their analysis problem in their own terms, which are often nontrivial for visualization experts to understand, and they may find it hard to gauge how their work can benefit from state-of-the-art visualization methods. This leads to interesting questions:
How do we involve users throughout the development? How can we understand their problem domains?
How do we communicate the added value of modern visualization approaches?
Can we identify best practices that transcend specific applications?
Application-driven Design.
Generally, no uniquely defined, "correct" approach exists for any given visualization problem. Developing a working solution requires identifying viable options, weighing them, and eventually selecting a small subset. To this end, authors might answer these questions:
What process did you follow to design your solution? Did you use specific visualization methodologies or visualization-theoretic models?
What design decisions did you face? What options did you consider? How did you make a selection?
How did your solution improve the existing situation?
Systems Aspects.
Oftentimes, solutions will be a large system rather than a one-method, fire-and-forget approach. Such systems generally require a lot of infrastructure building, a major development effort in its own right.
How can we manage this extra effort?
How can we make solutions sustainable?
Should we consider an open, community-based development approach?
Knowledge Transfer.
Practical visualization solutions will by definition live on the interface between visualization research and a specific application domain. Their development will be driven by an exchange of knowledge across this interface.
What does it take to transfer an existing visualization method from a lab setting to a specific application problem? What pitfalls might we encounter? How can we overcome them?
What parts of the problem remain challenging?
Are there open problems that warrant more attention by the visualization research community?
Although we do not expect individual submissions to cover all of these aspects, successful papers will feature a strong take-home message for a visualization-centric audience. We ask authors to contribute something beyond a "user manual" for a solution targeting a narrow application use case.
Submission
We solicit submissions of extended abstracts of up to
four
pages excluding references. Submissions should be prepared according to the IEEE conference paper format guidelines (
http://junctionpublishing.org/vgtc/Tasks/camera.html
). Optionally, you may submit a video (MPEG, AVI, or Quicktime format, duration at most 5 minutes) showing your application or methods in action. This will be most helpful for demonstrating the effectiveness of your approach. If you would like to have your video included in the conference USB stick, it should not exceed 100MB.
Abstracts will be reviewed for their potential applicability to the VIP workshop audience and their potential impact on the visualization community at large. Additionally, they will be reviewed for timeliness, clarity, and overall quality of writing. Note that research novelty is explicitly not the primary criterion for evaluation at the VIP workshop. Based on the outcome of the review process, authors of successful submissions will be invited to either present their work in a talk during the Vis in Practice workshop on October 2 or to prepare a poster for the VIP poster session, which will be held along with the VIS main poster session on October 4.
All submissions for the 2017 Workshop on Visualization in Practice should be submitted via the Precision Conference System (
http://precisionconference.com/~vip17
). Submissions must be received on or before June 16, 2017 to be considered. In order to maintain interactive and exciting presentations and posters, we require that at least one presenter per accepted submission attend the workshop.
Important Dates
Submission Deadline: Friday June 16, 2017
Notification of Acceptance: Friday July 14, 2017
Final Submission (Camera-ready): Wednesday July 26, 2017
Workshop presentations: Monday October 2, 2017
Workshop poster session: Wednesday October 4, 2017
All deadlines are at
5:00pm Pacific Time (PDT)
.
If you have questions about this workshop or requests for help with submission problems please contact the chairs at
vip@ieeevis.org
.
--
Brian D. Fisher, Ph.D.
Professor
|
School of Interactive Arts and Technology
Faculty of Communication, Art and Technology
|
Simon Fraser University
×
New Best Answer
This thread already has a best answer. Would you like to mark this message as the new best answer?
Copyright Academy of Management. All rights reserved.
Powered by Higher Logic
×
Community Tags
Add a tag
x
User Tags may not contain the following characters: @ # $ & :