EPS Conference Organization: Difference between revisions
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In November (or December) of the preceding year, the PC meets to establish the general program (emphasis, scope) and draw up a list of possible invited speakers. Previous to the meeting, there may have been a period in which EPS members could have presented (anonymous) suggestions for invited speakers (web interface, provided by the LOC). The precise dates of the various phases (see time line above) will also be established. | In November (or December) of the preceding year, the PC meets to establish the general program (emphasis, scope) and draw up a list of possible invited speakers. Previous to the meeting, there may have been a period in which EPS members could have presented (anonymous) suggestions for invited speakers (web interface, provided by the LOC). The precise dates of the various phases (see time line above) will also be established. | ||
As a rule, a specific speaker cannot be invited if he has already been an invited speaker in the preceding two conferences. This rule is meant to give up-and-coming talents a fair chance at being invited. | |||
Usually, an [http://www.iop.org IOP] representative attends the meeting to discuss the [http://iopscience.iop.org/0741-3335/ PPCF] special issue (procedure and cost). | Usually, an [http://www.iop.org IOP] representative attends the meeting to discuss the [http://iopscience.iop.org/0741-3335/ PPCF] special issue (procedure and cost). |
Revision as of 09:27, 17 June 2013
This page provides information for the Programme Committee (PC) and the Local Organizing Committee (LOC) of the European Physical Society Conference on Plasma Physics, to facilitate and streamline the organization of this annual conference held by the Plasma Physics Division of the European Physical Society.
Time line
The conference is typically held in the last week of June or the first week of July.
Approx. date | Actions | Action owner |
---|---|---|
November (preceding year) | Nomination of invited speakers | PC |
January | First announcement email | LOC |
January | Invitation of invited speakers | PC |
February | Abstract submission (2-week period) | OCS |
February | Coinciding with abstract submission: Second announcement email | LOC |
March | PC meeting to decide program | PC |
April | Abstract website ready | OCS |
April | Author confirmation emails sent | OCS |
April-May | Early registration deadline | LOC |
2 weeks before conference | Paper submission (2-week period) | OCS |
At conference | Inventory of non-presented posters | LOC |
After conference | Paper website (proceedings) ready | OCS |
After conference | Invited paper submission deadline | PC |
After conference | Request Proceedings Volume code from EPS | LOC |
After conference | Proceedings CD delivered to EPS for storage | LOC |
December | PPCF Special Issue published | IOP |
Program Committee
The main task of the Program Committee is to establish the conference program. For this purpose, it celebrates several meetings in preparation for the conference (typically, at the conference site).
Conference program
The conference lasts one week (five days). Each day, the morning session is plenary, and the afternoon session is divided into 4 parallel oral sessions and a poster session. The 4 parallel sessions correspond to the 4 topical areas:
- Magnetic Confinement Fusion (MCF)
- Beam Plasmas and Inertial Fusion (BPIF)
- Dusty and Low-Temperature Plasmas (DLTP)
- Basic and Astrophysics (BA)
Traditionally, Wednesday afternoon is kept free.
Satellite conferences are typically held on the days following the main conference; the LOC will provide rooms for those.
November meeting
In November (or December) of the preceding year, the PC meets to establish the general program (emphasis, scope) and draw up a list of possible invited speakers. Previous to the meeting, there may have been a period in which EPS members could have presented (anonymous) suggestions for invited speakers (web interface, provided by the LOC). The precise dates of the various phases (see time line above) will also be established.
As a rule, a specific speaker cannot be invited if he has already been an invited speaker in the preceding two conferences. This rule is meant to give up-and-coming talents a fair chance at being invited.
Usually, an IOP representative attends the meeting to discuss the PPCF special issue (procedure and cost).
March meeting
At the PC meeting in March, the PC will make the following decisions, based on the output from the OCS system (abstract pdf files and an Excel index file; see Section below on Submissions):
- Discuss doubtful submissions
- Reject unacceptable abstracts
- Decide whether similar presentations should be joined in a single presentation
- Decide which presentations will be orals (using the author’s Presentation Preference as a guide, and taking into account the review observations)
- Elaborate the final conference program: mainly, the distribution of Invited/Plenary, Oral, and Poster presentations over the 5 conference days (the time schedule)
- Appoint session leaders and referees for the Invited papers
- Assign the final Conference ID to each abstract (I1.001, O2.015, P2.030, etc.).
Essentially, the outcome of the meeting is (a) the conference program and (b) the above-mentioned Excel file, with one column added for the Conference ID. The PC will communicate the latter to the OCS operator in order for him to elaborate the final abstract website.
June meeting
Immediately preceding the conference, a meeting will be held. At this meeting, last-minute program changes will be discussed and post-deadline slots will be allotted.
Local Conference Organization
Conference website
The LOC provides a website with information for conference participants. It should contain, at least:
- The list of Committee Members
- The list of Invited Speakers
- The Conference program (after the PC March meeting)
- Important dates
- Instructions for authors (for the preparation of abstracts/papers, oral presentations, and posters)
- Links to the submission system
- Links to the registration system
- Information on accommodation
- Information on local transport
Some foreigners may need official 'letters of invitation' in order to apply for a travel visa at the embassy in their home country. The LOC should provide these, if needed, well ahead of the conference.
Budget
Each year's budget usually takes the preceding year's accounts as a starting point. The goal of the budget is twofold: (a) to keep the registration fee as low as possible, while (b) achieving a close balance between expenses and revenue. A part of the budget is reserved to subsidize the conference fee of participants with scarce resources.
Expenses
The main expense items are:
Description | Comment | Fraction of total (%) |
---|---|---|
Renting of conference centre | Plenary room, parallel session rooms, poster area, several small meeting rooms, equipment (sound, projectors, computers, WIFI); poster boards | xx |
Refreshments, coffee breaks etc. | Provided by catering service | xx |
Registration and hotel reservation | Delegated to external company | xx |
Publication of invited papers in a Special Issue of PPCF | Handled by IOP | xx |
Revenue
Revenue is obtained from various sources. The main source of revenue is the registration fee (see list below). Further income may be obtained from support by local government and sponsoring by local companies.
Fee types, in order of decreasing amount:
- Non EPS members
- EPS Members
- Students
- Accompanying persons (this fee only covers social activities such as the reception)
Fees typically vary according to the time of registration: the fee is reduced for early registration. Fees apply to all conference participants (including Invited speakers). The typical number of participants in this conference is around 600. The European Physical Society may have bilateral agreements with other national societies regarding conference fees, so that members of these national societies may be entitled to the reduced 'EPS Members' fee. The LOC should check this with EPS.
Registration
Conference registration is handled independently from the submission of abstracts and papers. Registration implies payment of:
- The registration fee
- Optional fees associated with the conference dinner, excursions, and other items
- The cost associated with hotel reservation (if required)
It may be convenient to have registrants provide their 'Conference ID', i.e., the conference code of their abstract. That will allow linking registrations to contributions and checking whether abstract submitters will actually attend the conference.
Local organization
Apart from the items mentioned in the budget above, local organization involves:
- Conference material for conference participants: usually, a bag with:
- a printed list of contribution titles and an author list; and/or a USB stick with a copy of the abstract website
- information about the conference, the venue (a map), and the various EPS awards
- touristic information, information about restaurants, city map
- notepad and pen
- On-site registration desk, including:
- conference material pick-up
- help desk
- Sign boards (indicating the conference location and the location of the various meeting rooms, etc.)
- Poster boards, poster identification labels, poster attachment materials
- Computer connection facilities, WIFI
- Assistance personnel (microphones in meeting rooms, presentation computers) - often students
- Tables, chairs, clocks for session chairpersons (a good system to time the talks is necessary, preferably with visible alarms as the allotted time for the talk has nearly run out)
- Pointers, water for speakers
- Lunch facilities
Submissions
Various different types of conference contributions are distinguished:
- Invited contributions (both Plenary and ordinary), delivered as a talk with duration of approx. 35 or 30 minutes, respectively
- Oral contributions, delivered as a talk with a duration of approx. 15 minutes
- Poster contributions
The talk durations include some time for questions (typically 3-5 minutes), and may vary slightly per conference. Each contribution corresponds to a single presentation, i.e., oral and invited talks do not get a corresponding poster space (as is done at some other conferences).
All conference contributors will need to submit an abstract well before the conference (see timeline above). Shortly before the conference, Oral and Poster contributors will need to submit a 4-page paper (invited papers are handled separately, see below). Currently, these submissions are all handled by the Online Conference System at low cost.
Abstract submission
Submissions of all abstracts (corresponding to Invited, Oral, and Poster contributions) are currently handled by the Online Conference System. No email submissions are admitted. The system sends out an automatic confirmation email message after each submission.
Once submissions are complete, the OCS operator will attempt to correct mistakes (repeated submissions, erroneous submission formats, ...) and prepare files for the March PC Meeting (abstract pdf files, an Excel index file).
Late (only special cases) and post-deadline submissions are handled via email (by the PC). Acceptable post-deadline contributions should satisfy some minimal requirements regarding significance, immediacy and/or novelty, as established by the PC.
Conference ID
In the PC March meeting, the PC will assign a Conference ID to each abstract. Traditionally, the Conference ID has the following structure: XY.nnn, where
- X = a letter: I, O, or P for Invited, Oral, or Poster
- Y = a number: 1...5 for Monday...Friday
- nnn = a sequence number
Other numbering schemes are possible, e.g., replacing nnn by mnn, where m = 1...4 indicates each of the four main topics (MCF, BPIF, DLTP, BA).
Abstract website
After the PC March meeting, the OCS operator will
- send out semi-automatic confirmation email messages to the contributors, informing them of the acceptance of their abstract, their Conference ID, and providing additional relevant conference information (provided by the LOC);
- elaborate the final abstract website on the basis of the set of Conference IDs produced by the PC.
This abstract website (sometimes referred to as the 'book of abstracts', although it ceased being a book long ago) is linked to from the LOC's website. It may also be provided to the conference participants as part of the conference material (e.g., on a USB stick).
Paper submission
4-page papers
Submissions of 4-page papers (corresponding to Oral and Poster contributions) are currently handled by the Online Conference System. When submitting their papers, the contributors must provide their Conference ID. Unlike the abstracts (refereed by the PC), the 4-page papers are not refereed. However, only contributions that have actually been presented at the conference are eligible for publication in the conference Proceedings. This requires the LOC to make a list of empty poster boards at the conference, in order to be able to remove submitted 4-page papers that were not presented. Based on this information, the final paper website (or 'proceedings') will be elaborated by the OCS operator, after the conference.
Invited papers
Invited papers, with a length of 8 (ordinary invited) or 12 (plenary invited) pages, are not submitted via the OCS system, but directly to the journal in which they will be published (a special issue of Plasma Phys. Control. Fusion). They will be subjected to the usual refereeing process of the journal (although the referees are determined by the PC, generally from among the PC members and invited speakers, to speed up the refereeing process). The cost of publication is borne by the conference.
Additional material and ideas
- High quality EPS conference logo template: PDF vector format; PNG format
- Shared documents between PC, LOC and OCS (Excel or Word type documents) can be handled efficiently on-line using Google Docs.