See Also
Two-page Papers Call for LBR submission details
Student Posters Call for SP submission details
Guide to Successful Late-Breaking Submissions for
tips on submitting LBR and SP
Designing and Presenting a Poster for advice on creating
student posters
Late-Breaking Review Process for information on
how LBR and SP submissions will be reviewed
Late-Breaking Chairs
Nigel Bevan & Gilbert Cockton
Email: chi98-lbr@acm.org
Email: chi98-studentp@acm.org
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Frequently asked
questions, and answers, about submitting Two-Page Papers and Student
Posters.
- Can I get the deadline extended?
- Do you really mean that?
- How many organizations need to contribute to papers
in a suite?
- What if I do not have a laser printer and cannot
generate the required format?
- What if I cannot generate exactly the standard format?
- What size paper should I use?
- Can my paper be less than 2 pages?
- Can my paper be more than 2 pages?
- Do figures count in the two page
limit?
- It is easy for me to get some color screen shots, so
should I include them
so the reviewers can see my system?
- Why do I have to submit paper and electronic
versions?
- What formats should I use for the electronic copy
on disk?
- Should I send materials in original size for
the sketch if I am submitting
a student poster?
- How will my submission be assigned for
review?
- How will my submission be reviewed?
- When do I hear the final decision?
- Will I be able to register for the conference at
the early registration
fee once I hear that my submission is
accepted?
- Will I be able to change the two page description
after acceptance?
- If I have a student poster accepted, what are my
responsibilities
at the conference?
- 1. Can I get the deadline extended?
- No! We
will not extend the deadline no matter who you are and no matter
what your
excuse is. If your submission is not physically in the office
of the
designated Co-Chair by 5:00 PM (17:00) local time at receiving address
on
Thursday, January 8, 1998 we will not be able to include it in the
review
process. We anticipate many submissions and we have a very tight
schedule,
so we simply cannot tolerate any delays in processing
submissions.
- 2. Do you really mean that?
- Yes! There
really and truly is a firm deadline. Even if you send it
by courier and
they promise to deliver it on time, if it's not here by that
deadline it
will be rejected. The moral of the story is: plan ahead!
Send it early
with few extra days as a safety
margin.
- 3. How many organizations need to contribute to papers
in a suite?
- The overview and summary paper must have authors
from more than one
institution. The set of results papers must include work from
more than one institution,
and should cover a balanced range of approaches.
Ideally, authors should
come from more than one
country.
- 4. What if I do not have a laser printer and cannot
generate the required format?
- Please try to borrow one. If this
is not possible, just use a typewriter
or whatever printer you do have.
Reproduce the standard format as well as
you can, and make sure you stay
within the page
limit.
- 5. What if I cannot generate exactly the standard format?
- Try to match it as much as possible. This is an
area where common
sense should prevail. We might reject your two-page paper
if you use a tiny
font to squeeze 8 pages of text into the 2-page limit,
but we will certainly
not reject you just because your printer doesn't have
a Times Roman font.
Find a serif font that matches as closely as possible,
and try to make the
general characteristics match (e.g., use Helvetica-like
sans serif font
for subtitles, use the specified font sizes and page
layouts). The better
your paper matches the specifications, the happier you
will be when you
see it in
print.
- 6. What size paper should I use?
- For
submissions, you can use any standard letter-sized paper, such
as A4 or 8.5 x 11 inch paper. Please keep the dimensions of the printed
text
to the proceedings format no matter what size paper you use.
- 7. Can my paper be less than 2 pages?
- In
principle, yes. But if you do not have enough to say to fill the
two pages
think about whether you are really ready to submit this
work.
- 8. Can my paper be more than 2 pages?
- Absolutely not! We have already figured the price of publishing based
on
the number of pages allocated to the different categories. Two pages
is the
limit for late-breaking
submissions.
- 9. Do figures count in the two page
limit?
- Yes - the two page limit is imposed on everything that will
actually
appear in the CHI 98 Summary if your submission is
accepted.
- 10. It is easy for me to get some color screen shots, so
should I include them
so the reviewers can see my system?
- Color
plates are expensive to reproduce. You should include them only
if they
provide critical support for your submission. If black and white
figures
can support your points just as easily, consider including them
instead. We
cannot guarantee at this stage that color figures can be included
into the
CHI 98 Summary. Color figures must appear on a separate page at
the end of
the manuscript. However, consider saving the color shots and
using them in
your display if you are submitting a student poster or use
them as slides
if you are submitting a two-page
paper.
- 11. Why do I have to submit paper and electronic
versions?
- The paper version will be used for the printed proceedings
if your submission is accepted. Variations between computer
systems mean
that if we were to print your electronic version it might not
produce acceptable
camera-ready copy (it might extend over more than two
pages, for example).
Because of the short reviewing cycle, we will use the
electronic version to help accelerate the reviewing process.
- 12. What formats should I use for the electronic copy
on disk?
- Because the two-page papers will be reviewed by email, we
need electronic copies that we can email easily while still preserving your
formatting. We will be using Rich-Text Format (RTF) for this.
Please follow the instructions for saving a file on the disk, and also
email a copy to us. For instance a submission titled "Specification of
virtual reality interfaces" by John Smith should be saved in RTF format as
a file called SMITHJ.RTF. The file should be copied onto a disk which is
included with the submission. It should also be sent as an attachment to
an email message. For late breaking results the email should be sent to
chi98-lbr@acm.org with the subject "CHI 98 Paper: Specification of virtual
reality interfaces". For student posters the email should be sent to
chi98-studentp@acm.org with the subject "CHI 98 Poster: Specification of
virtual reality interfaces".
- 13. Should I send materials in original size for
the sketch if I am submitting
a student poster?
- No. Present the
poster in reduced size (one single page) to indicate
the layout of the
poster combined with short descriptions of the various
parts and/or reduced
size graphics. The sketch should provide a good overall
feeling of the
visual quality of the
poster.
- 14. How will my submission be assigned for
review?
- Each reviewer will select the keywords describing areas
in which they
have expertise. We have also asked them to identify (via the
keywords) those
areas in which they have no experience. We will use the
matching phrases you provide
to identify appropriate
reviewers.
See Late-Breaking Review Process for more
information on
how late-breaking submissions will be reviewed.
- 15. How will my submission be reviewed?
- Briefly, your submission will be assigned to 3 reviewers. The
reviewers
will provide evaluations both in the form of scores (e.g.,
for overall
quality), and in comments. The actual accept/reject decisions
will be made
at a meeting of the Co-Chairs and associate chairs in February
based on
the reviewer
comments.
See Late-Breaking Review Process for more
information on
how late-breaking submissions will be reviewed.
- 16. When do I hear the final decision?
- Authors will be notified of acceptance or rejection by email by 15
February
1998 (or by surface mail sent by 15 February 1998 if they do not
have
email).
- 17. Will I be able to register for the conference at
the early registration
fee once I hear that my submission is
accepted?
- Yes! Authors of late breaking results and informal
presentations will
be notified of acceptance and will be allowed to
register at that time at
the early
fee.
- 18. Will I be able to change the two page description
after acceptance?
- No. Publication schedules do not permit
revisions. If accepted, the
two-page submissions will be printed as
received.
- 19. If I have a student poster accepted, what are my
responsibilities
at the conference?
- At the time their poster is
to be displayed (some time before the conference), authors will set up their
poster with any accompanying
material (handouts of papers, handouts of the
display, etc.). Later, there will be
scheduled times when poster authors need to
be at their poster. We encourage
authors to spend as much time as possible at their
posters - especially
during conference breaks - as many attendees use this
time to browse
through the posters. We encourage you to post the times you
will be present
at your poster for discussion.
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