Submission Deadline: | Sunday, September 29, 2013 Eastern Daylight Time |
Author Notification: | TBD |
The ACM Student Research Competition held at the 2012 SIGCSE conference will consist of two categories of competition, graduate and undergraduate, with prizes awarded based on judging during the conference. Research from all areas of computer science qualifies. All graduate submissions must represent a student's individual research contribution but undergraduate submissions may represent individual or team research contributions. A student must be an ACM student member to qualify for awards and travel grants.
Judges will include professional computer scientists attending the conference activities. Students' research will be evaluated on the quality and significance of the work, and the quality and clarity of both an oral and visual presentation.
The first round of the competition evaluates the research during a poster presentation. Those students who are selected by the judges to advance to the second round will continue in the competition by giving a formal, short, conference presentation of their research. The top three winners in the undergraduate and graduate categories as determined by the judges' evaluation of the conference presentations will receive the prizes of $500, $300, and $200, respectively. These winners will advance to a final student research contest round where all ACM SIG conference contest winners are evaluated to determine one overall student research contest winner. Only individual research may be submitted.
No more than three research projects will be accepted from a single department and no more than two of those can be in a single category. Departments are determined by the location of the research advisor. Submissions for the research competition should describe the results of recently completed or ongoing computer science research conducted primarily by students.
Additional competition details, including information about past winners, can be found on the ACM Student Research Competition home page (http://www.acm.org/src/).
Research projects from all areas of computer science are acceptable. The author submitting the abstract must still be a student at the time the abstract is due. Each submission should include the author's name, affiliation, postal address, and email address; research advisor's name; ACM student member number; category (undergraduate or graduate); research title; and an extended abstract (maximum 2 pages or 800 words) containing the following sections:
Include a separate paragraph (maximum of 800 characters, including whitespace) for publication in the conference proceedings that serves as a succinct description of the project.
Submit a plain ASCII-text electronic copy of the extended abstract by Sunday, September 29, 2013 @ 5:00 p.m. EDT (Eastern Daylight Time) to Dr. Ann Sobel ().
Travel grants of up to $500 may be available for students who do not have another source of funding and are ACM student members.
If you have questions about the student research competition, please contact:
Ann Sobel
Miami University (Ohio)