Eurographics Call for Short Papers

Authors are invited to submit short papers [4 pages max] which present self-contained and complete works in all areas related to computer graphics, such as rendering, modelling, visualisation, animation, simulation, virtual reality, computer vision, computer-aided design, digital fabrication and imaging. We particularly invite submissions which present tangible and practically useful improvements to the state of the art, but which are not thematically wide enough to justify an entire full paper. What we would like to see as short papers are individual smart ideas and intriguing findings that might otherwise remain unpublished, due to them standing in isolation – as opposed to falling within the context of some larger scientific endeavour, where they can be easily mentioned in the corresponding publication.

Accepted short papers will be published in the Short Papers digital media proceedings and in the Eurographics Digital Library. Authors of accepted papers will be expected to present their work as an oral presentation at the conference.

Timeline

December 20, 2019 Submission deadline
February 12, 2020 Notification to authors and reviews available
March 2, 2020
March 9, 2020
Camera ready version due

* All deadlines are at 23:59 UTC

Submission details

Submissions will be made electronically through the Eurographics Submission and Review Management (SRMv2) system. Submitted papers must be anonymous, up to 4 pages in length, and formatted according to the Eurographics Author’s guidelines (short papers LaTeX style package available in SRMv2).

Plagiarism and Prior Art

A submission to the Eurographics Short Papers program should describe an original work of the authors. Authors must not use ideas or content originating from others without properly crediting their original sources. Note that such sources are not limited to peer-reviewed publications, but also include patents, textbooks, technical reports, theses, unpublished work posted on arXiv, as well as other posts on the World Wide Web. Failure to comply with this requirement will be considered plagiarism and result in rejection.

Authors are not required to discuss and compare their work with non-peer reviewed (prepublication) works (arXiv, technical reports, theses, etc.), although they must properly cite those that inspired them and are encouraged to mention all related works they are aware of. Authors of conditionally accepted papers should be prepared to cite pre-publications listed by reviewers in their final revision as concurrent work, but are not required to detail how their work compares to or differs from these pre-publications.

Eurographics Short Papers Chairs

Alexander Wilkie, Charles University, Czech Republic

Francesco Banterle, CNR-ISTI, Italy

For any question concerning short paper submissions please contact the short paper chairs: chairs-eg2020short@eg.org