Short Papers
EuroVis short papers present late-breaking results, work in progress, follow-up extensions, or evaluations of existing methods. Short papers may cover all areas of visualization and describe more focused and concise research contributions and are likely to have a smaller — yet still significant — scope of contribution than full papers. Short papers draw from the same paper types as full papers, as well as the same list of suggested topics.
The following descriptive examples may be helpful in understanding what kinds of submissions may be suitable for short papers:
- A new visualization approach and sufficient evidence of its utility.
- Incremental improvements or variations of known approaches and their convincing evaluation.
- An extensive evaluation of existing techniques or systems.
- Well-proven counter examples that enhance our understanding of the strengths, weaknesses, and limitations of existing visualizations.
- Discussions or reflections – potentially controversial – of current visualization practice that substantially advance our understanding of visualization.
- A new implementation approach that has demonstrably resolved a significant technical issue.
- A new methodology for designing or studying visualization systems that has demonstrable benefits for the EuroVis community.
- Novel practical applications of established visualization techniques and evidence of their usefulness.