From: bartz@gris.uni-tuebingen.de Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 16:53:43 +0100 To: groeller@cg.tuwien.ac.at Subject: 2nd CFP: IEEE Visualization 1999 ======================================================================= Second C A L L F O R P A R T I C I P A T I O N Vis99 IEEE Visualization 1999 Celebrating Ten Years Call for Participation October 24 - October 29, 1999 San Francisco Airport Hyatt San Francisco, California THE INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS, INC. IEEE COMPUTER SOCIETY Sponsored by the IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee on Visualization and Graphics In Cooperation with ACM/SIGGRAPH VISUALIZATION is a vital research and applications frontier shared by a variety of science, medical, engineering, business, and entertainment fields. The tenth IEEE Visualization conference focuses on interdisciplinary methods. Collaboration among developers and users of visualization methods across all of science, engineering, medicine, and commerce is addressed at Visualization '99. Sunday through Tuesday of Conference Week will include tutorials, symposia, and mini-workshops. Papers, panels, case studies, and late-breaking hot topics will be presented Wednesday through Friday. We invite you to participate in IEEE Visualization '99 by submitting your original research through papers, panels, case studies, late breaking hot topics, and demonstrations. Share your perspectives through panels and workshops, or your experience through tutorials. Please select the forum appropriate to your submission, where it will be considered by your peers for presentation. Particular focuses on parallel techniques in visualization and information visualization are addressed in special two-day symposia. For further information on the conference or symposia contact: Steve Bryson, Conference Co-Chair, NASA Ames Research Center - +1-650-604-4524 - Fax: +1-650-604-3957 - bryson@nas.nasa.gov Theresa-Marie Rhyne, Conference Co-Chair, Lockheed Martin/US EPA Scientific Visualization Center - +1-919-541-0207 - Fax: +1-919-541-0056 - trhyne@vislab.epa.gov See the conference web page for complete up-to-date information and submission details at http://www.erc.msstate.edu/vis99 The three conference tracks cover: Visualization Algorithms: Volume Rendering, Flow Visualization, Isosurfaces, Compression, Vector and Tensor Visualization, Sonification, etc. Visualization Techniques: Information Visualization, Databases, Human Perception, Human Factors, Multi-Variate Visualization, Virtual Reality, etc. Visualization Applications: Archaeology, Astrophysics, Aerospace, Automotive, Biomedicine, Chemistry, Education, Electronics, Environment, Finance, Mathematics, Mechanics, Molecular Biology, Physics, Virtual Reality, WWW, Java, VRML, HTML, AVS, Data Explorer, Iris Explorer, Khoros, etc. IMPORTANT DATES March 31: Conference papers, Panels, Case Studies, Tutorials, Mini-Workshops, BOF proposals, InfoVis '99 papers, and PVG '99 papers due May 30: Conference papers, Panels, Case Studies, Tutorials, Mini-Workshops, BOF proposals, and InfoVis '99, and PVG '99 selections announced June 15: Conference Late Breaking Hot Topics and Demonstration proposals due July 1: InfoVis '99 Late Breaking Hot Topics papers due July 15: Final Conference papers, final InfoVis '99 papers, and PVG '99 papers due to publisher August 1: Conference Late Breaking Hot Topics selections announced August 21: Conference Late Breaking Hot Topics final papers due to publisher August 31: Conference Late Breaking Hot Topics video submissions due September 25: Close of Early Registration October 24: Conference Commences October 25: InfoVis '99 and PVG '99 Commence Conference Papers (due March 31, 1999) Papers are solicited that present research results related to all areas of visualization. Original papers are limited to 5,000 words. The submission of NTSC VHS video (up to 5 minutes in length) to accompany the paper is strongly recommended. Please submit 7 copies of all materials to Bernd Hamann (at the address below). Accepted papers will be included in the conference proceedings; the videos will be included in the conference video proceedings. In addition, we must receive, by submission deadline, a complete paper submission form. Paper submissions (hard copy only) should be sent to Bernd Hamann, Center for Image Processing and Integrated Computing, 2343 Academic Surge Building, One Shields Avenue, University of California, Davis, CA 95616-8553, USA - +1-530-754-9157 - hamann@cs.ucdavis.edu Panel Proposals (due March 31, 1999) Panels should address the most important issues in visualization today. Panel proposals should describe the topic to be addressed and identify the prospective panelists. Each panelist should include a position statement on the topic and a short biography (limit 500 words for both per panelist). The statements will be included in the conference proceedings. Panel proposals (hard copy or email) should be sent to J. Edward Swan, Naval Research Laboratory, Code 5580, 4555 Overlook Ave. SW, Washington, D.C. 20375, USA - +1-202-404-4984 - Fax: +1-202-767-1122 - swan@ait.nrl.navy.mil Case Study Papers (due March 31, 1999) Case studies are reports on how visualization has contributed to the analysis of data. They may have an application focus or relate to the visualization process. Possible application areas include physical, life, social and information sciences, engineering, and commerce. An emphasis on lessons learned from practical experience is strongly encouraged, particularly where visualization has been employed in a real, working environment. A short paper limited to 2500 words (maximum 4 pages B/W plus 1 page color) will be included in the conference proceedings. Images and/or NTSC VHS video to accompany the paper are recommended; the video will be included in the conference video proceedings. Submit six copies of all materials. Case study submissions (hard copy only) should be sent to David Kao, NASA Ames Research Center, M/S T27A-2, Moffett Field, CA 94035-1000, USA - davidkao@nas.nasa.gov Late Breaking Hot Topics Papers (due June 15, 1999) Submissions will be accepted on Late Breaking Hot Topics that pertain to all areas of Visualization. These submissions must be original, may show work in progress, and may not exceed 1000 words or a maximum of 4 pages including images. Images and/or NTSC VHS video to accompany the paper are recommended; the video will be included in the conference video proceedings. Accepted papers will be published and distributed at the conference. Authors of accepted papers will have an opportunity to submit a revised paper. Submissions will be done electronically. Submission details can be found at the conference web site or by contracting Craig Wittenbrink at craig_wittenbrink@hpl.hp.com Videotapes should be sent to Craig M. Wittenbrink, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories, 1501 Page Mill Rd, MS3U-4, Palo Alto, CA 94304-1126, USA - +1-650-857.2329 - Fax: +1-650-852-3791 Tutorial Proposals (due March 31, 1999) Tutorials are full or half-day presentations designed to cover specific visualization methods or application areas in depth. Subjects can include, but are not limited to, standard visualization techniques, existing languages or toolkits, mathematical fundamentals, databases, usability analysis, or commercialization of software. It is the intention of the Vis '99 tutorial committee to provide one classroom equipped with workstations for hands-on instruction. Tutorials proposing to use this interactive classroom should clearly state this preference, and also how the course is designed for this setting. For more detailed information concerning submission and format content, see the conference web site, or contact Kelly Gaither, Mississippi State University, P.O. Box 9627, Mississippi State University, MS 39762, USA - +1-601-325-2067 - Fax: +1-601-325-7692 - kelly@erc.msstate.edu Mini-Workshop and Birds-of-a-Feather Proposals (due March 31, 1999) Proposals may be submitted for Mini-Workshops and evening Birds-Of-A-Feather (BOF) gatherings on visualization methods or application areas. They should deal with state-of-the-art topics and involve experts in the field. Proposals devoted to a particular discipline's methods and needs are encouraged. Mini-Workshop and Birds-of-a-Feather Proposals (hard copy or email) should be sent to Rob Erbacher, University of Idaho, Department of Computer Science, Moscow, ID 83844-1010, USA - erbacher@cs.uidaho.edu Demonstration Proposals (due June 15, 1999) Visualization '99 is a unique opportunity to present your products or research to visualization experts from a wide variety of fields. We invite demonstrations of commercial hardware, software, integrated systems, peripherals, literature, as well as academic research. We encourage demonstrators to have technical representatives in attendance. For more information on participating in Visualization '99 demonstrations, contact Upul Obeysekare at obey@ctc.com Creative Applications Lab (due July 15, 1999) The Creative Applications Lab (CAL) is designed to let Visualization '99 attendees run their software to show off their latest work. CAL will have a variety of computers available. For details on participating in the CAL, see the conference web site or contact Kelly Gaither at +1-601-325-2067 - kelly@erc.msstate.edu Parallel Visualization and Graphics Symposium (PVG '99) Co-sponsored by the IEEE Computer Society and ACM/SIGGRAPH October 25-26, 1999 - San Francisco Airport Hyatt - San Francisco, California The First Parallel Visualization and Graphics Symposium (the successor to the Parallel Rendering Symposium) will be held October 1999 in conjunction with IEEE Visualization '99. Papers and case studies containing original work in all areas of parallel visualization and graphics are solicited. Case studies describe how parallel visualization and graphics techniques have contributed to achieving a concrete objective for a specific application. Of special interest are submissions on using clusters of commodity PCs and graphics cards for high-performance visualization and graphics tasks. Suggested topics include: - Visualization algorithms - Graphics algorithms - Frameworks and application programmer interfaces - Load balancing, scheduling - Hardware and software architectures - Performance modeling and analysis - Real-time systems for 3D virtual reality - Internet-based visualization - Visualizing extremely large datasets - High-performance computation/visualization environments Submissions: The deadline for submissions is March 31, 1999. Final papers will be limited to 8 proceedings pages plus one page of color figures. Case studies are limited to four proceeding pages plus one page of color figures. To submit a contribution, e-mail your submission in compressed postscript format to: hwshen@nas.nasa.gov. Please specify the type of submission in the subject line of your e-mail (PAPER or CASE STUDY). In addition, please send five copies of any accompanying NTSC video to the following postal address: Han-Wei Shen, NASA Ames Research Center, Mail Stop T27A-2, Moffett Field, CA 94035 - 650-604-4451 URL: http://www.acl.lanl.gov/PVG99/pvg99.html Symposium Co-Chairs James Ahrens, Los Alamos National Laboratory Alan Chalmers, University of Bristol Han-Wei Shen, MRJ/NASA Ames Committee List Kadi Bouatouch, IRISA Michael Cox, MRJ/NASA Ames Tom Crockett , ICASE David Ellsworth, MRJ/NASA Ames Pat Hanrahan, Stanford Alan Heirich, Tandem Arie Kaufman, SUNY Stony Brook Kai Li, Princeton Peggy Li, JPL Kwan-Liu Ma, ICASE Steve Molnar, UNC Chapel Hill Ulrich Neumann, USC Jamie Painter, Los Alamos Theirry Priol, IRISA Xavier Pueyo, University of Girona Sam Uselton, MRJ/NASA Ames Scott Whitman, nVidia Peter Williams, Livermore Craig Wittenbrink, HP Labs IEEE Symposium on information visualization (INFOVis '99) Sponsored by the IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee on Visualization and Graphics October 25-26, 1999 - San Francisco Airport Hyatt - San Francisco, California InfoVis '99, the fifth Information Visualization Symposium, will be held to focus on the rapidly growing area of information visualization. Increasing amounts of data and information and the availability of fast digital network access are creating a rapidly growing demand for accessing, querying and retrieving information and data. However, information technology will not transform business, science, medicine, engineering, and education if users cannot use it easily and efficiently. Technology must come to the users, taking their needs into account. If we do not involve the users, we will develop useless systems. InfoVis '99 will focus on all aspects of information visualization and human-centered information interfaces, and on ways in which advances in interactive computer graphics hardware, mass storage, and data visualization can be used to visualize information. Submissions are solicited in all areas of information visualization and human-centered information interfaces, including, but not limited to, such topics as: - Interactive information visualization - Multi-dimensional informationvisualization - Information presentation - Visualization of complex information - Information visualization for heterogeneous audiences - Visualizing the internet and WWW - Browsing and other Navigation methods - Visualization Algorithms - Visualization of Algorithms - Visualization of textual information - Visualization and Knowledge Discovery - Graph / Network Visualizations - Geographic Visualizations Submissions: The deadline for submission is March 31, 1999. Papers should be at most 8,000 words including an abstract, affiliation, and keywords, and should present previously unpublished original results. Please submit 8 copies of your paper. Video submissions (NTSC VHS) with papers are welcome (4 copies), but are not required. Videos will assist reviewers' assessment of the papers. Submit to: Graham Wills, Lucent Technologies Bell Labs, Room 2F-323, 263 Shuman Blvd., Naperville IL 60566, USA - +1-630-979-7338 - Fax: +1-630-713-4982 - gwills@research.bell-labs.com URL: http://www.infovis.org/infovis99/cfp.html InfoVis Late Breaking Hot Topics (due July 1, 1999) Submissions will be accepted on Late Breaking "Hot Topics" that pertain to all areas of Information Visualization. These submissions must be original, may show work in progress, and may not exceed 1,000 words or a maximum of 4 pages including images. Images to accompany the paper are recommended. Accepted papers will published and distributed at the conference. Authors of accepted papers will have an opportunity to submit a revised paper. Submissions of printed papers (8 copies, due July 1, 1999) should be sent to Nahum Gershon, The MITRE Corporation, 1820 Dolly Madison Blvd., McLean, VA 22102, USA - 701-883-7518 - Fax: 703-883-3615 - gershon@mitre.org Symposium Chair Stephen G. Eick, Visual Insights, Lucent Technologies Bell Labs Program Co-Chairs Graham Wills, Lucent TechnologiesBell Labs Daniel Keim, University of Halle Late Breaking Hot Topics Nahum Gershon, MITRE John Dill, Simon Fraser University Steering Committee Stuart Card, Xerox PARC Stephen G. Eick, Visual Insights, Lucent Technologies Bell Labs Steven Feiner, Columbia University Nahum Gershon, MITRE George Robertson, Microsoft Research IEEE Visualization '99 Conference Committee Conference Co-Chairs: Steve Bryson, NASA Ames Research Center Theresa-Marie Rhyne, Lockheed Martin U.S. EPA Scientific Visualization Center Program Co-Chairs: Deborah Silver, Rutgers University Lloyd Treinish, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center Papers Co-Chairs: David Ebert, University of Maryland, Baltimore County Markus Gross, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) Bernd Hamann, University of California, Davis Case Studies Co-Chairs: Kwan-Liu Ma, ICASE David Kao, NASA Ames Research Center Panels Co-Chairs: J. Edward Swan II, Naval Research Laboratory David Kenwright, MRJ Technology Solutions Hanspeter Pfister, Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories Late Breaking Hot Topics Co-Chairs: Amitabh Varshney, State University of New York at Stony Brook Craig M. Wittenbrink, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories Hans Hagen, University Kaiserslautern Tutorials Co-Chairs: Kelly Gaither, Mississippi State University Frits H. Post, Delft University of Technology Rachael Brady, National Center for Supercomputing Applications Creative Applications Laboratory Co-Chairs: Russell M. Taylor II, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Polly Baker, National Center for Supercomputing Applications Kelly Gaither, Mississippi State University Mini-Workshops and BOFs Co-Chairs: Rob Erbacher, University of Idaho Steve Talent, Motorola SPS Computational Technologies Lab Parallel Visualization and Graphics Symposium Liaison: Han-Wei Shen, MRJ Technology Solutions Information Visualization Symposium Liaison: Stephen G. Eick, Visual Insights, Lucent Technologies Bell Labs Publications Chair: Torsten Moeller, The Ohio State University Video Proceedings Chair: Robert J. McDermott, University of Utah Demonstration Co-Chairs: Upul Obeysekare, Concurrent Technologies Corporation L. Eric Greenwade, Lockheed Martin Idaho Technologies Robert Grzeszczuk, Silicon Graphics, Inc. Publicity Co-Chairs (Domestic): Pak Chung Wong, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Michael E. Goss, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories Publicity Co-Chairs (European): Michael Bender, University Kaiserslautern Dirk Bartz, University of Tuebingen Audio-Visual Chair: Michael Cox, MRJ Technology Solutions Networking Chair: Steve Lau, Lawrence Berkeley National Labs Security Co-Chairs: Steve Lau, Lawrence Berkeley National Labs L. Eric Greenwade, Lockheed Martin Idaho Technologies Registration Chair: Nancy Grady, Oak Ridge National Laboratory Finance Co-Chairs: Loretta Auvil, National Center for Supercomputing Applications Rachael Brady, National Center for Supercomputing Applications Maria Marsilio, Silicon Dynamics Local Arrangements Co-Chairs: Ling-Jen Chiang, MRJ Technology Solutions Sandra Johan, NASA Ames Research Center Student Volunteers Co-Chairs: Mike Chupa, Mississippi State University Marjan Trutschl, University of Massachusetts, Lowell IEEE Visualization '99 Program Committee Mike Bailey, SDSC/UC San Diego Chandrajit Bajaj, University of Texas, Austin David Banks, Mississippi State University Stephen A. Benton, MIT R. Daniel Bergeron, University of New Hampshire George Pierre Bonneau, LMC-IMAG Brian Cabral, Silicon Graphics, Inc. Daniel Cohen-Or, Tel-Aviv University Sabine Coquillart, INRIA Donna Cox, NCSA Michael Cox, MRJ at NASA Ames Research Center Leila Defloriani, University of Genoa Rae A. Earnshaw, University of Bradford Stephen G. Eick, Visual Insights, Lucent Technologies Bell Labs Jose Encarnacao, Fraunhofer Institut Graphische Datenverarbeitung Norberto Ezquerra, Georgia Intitute of Technology Steve Feiner, Columbia University James D. Foley, MERL A. Robin Forrest, University of East Anglia Henry Fuchs, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Issei Fujishiro, Ochanomizu University Richard S. Gallagher, R.S. Gallagher and Associates Nahum Gershon, The MITRE Corporation Sarah Gibson, MERL Martin Goebel, National German Research Center for Information Technology Bob Haimes, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Charles Hansen, University of Utah Andrew J. Hanson, Indiana University Lambertus Hesselink, Stanford University William Hibbard, University of Wisconsin, Madison Karl Heinz Hoehne, University of Hamburg Victoria Interrante, University of Minnesota Rob Jacob, Tufts University Chris Johnson, University of Utah Daniel A. Keim, University of Halle Ron Kikinis, Harvard Medical School Fred Kitson, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories Stanislav Klimenko, Institute for High Energy Physics Tosiyasu Kunii William E. Lorenson, GE Corporate R&D Center Robert Moorhead, Mississippi State University Shigeru Muraki, Electrotechnical Laboratory (ETL), Tsukuba, Japan Art Olson, Research Institute of Scripps Clinic Hans-George Pagendarm, DLR, German Aerospace Center Alex Pang, University of California, Santa Cruz Hans-Peter Pfister, MERL Mike Rhodes, Toshiba America William Ribarsky, Georgia Institute of Technology Phil Robertson, CISRA Wolfgang Strasser, University of T¸bingen Nadia Magnenat Thalmann, University of Geneva Samuel P. Uselton, MRJ/NASA Ames Andries van Dam, Brown University Jarke J. Van Wijk, Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands Michael Vannier, Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology Val Watson, NASA Ames Research Center William Wright, Visible Decisions, Inc. Roni Yagel, Elbit Medical Imaging, Israel Michael Zelernik, RAHD Oncology Products/University of Utah Steering Committee Arie Kaufman, State University of New York at Stony Brook Greg Nielson, Arizona State University Larry Rosenblum, Naval Research Laboratory ====== 8< ======= 8< ======= 8< ======= 8< ======= 8< ======= 8< ====== Dirk Bartz University of Tuebingen Phone: +49-7071/29-76361 Email: bartz@gris.uni-tuebingen.de Fax: +49-7071/29-5466 WWW: http://www.gris.uni-tuebingen.de/~bartz