SRC proposal submission system is now closed

The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) Special Interest Group on the Design of Communication (SIGDOC) invites you to submit a proposal to this year’s ACM Student Research Competition (SRC) sponsored by Microsoft. The SRC offers a unique forum for undergraduate and graduate students to present their original research at a well-known ACM sponsored conference before a panel of judges and attendees.

The SRC consists of several rounds of competition, beginning with the initial submission process. Up to 15 undergraduate and 15 graduate students will be selected, based on their proposals, to enter the SRC that will be held at SIGDOC, September 23-24, 2016, in Silver Spring, MD.

The selected students will receive travel grants from Microsoft that will pay a portion of their travel to the conference. ACM’s SRC program covers expenses up to $500 for all students invited to an SRC (students are responsible for their conference registration and SIGDOC membership, which begins at $19/year).

The SRC consists of two rounds of competition at the conference, as well as the possibility to move on to a grand finals competition at a later date. Students interested in submitting proposals should be prepared to come to the conference with a poster and an oral presentation (with accompanying PowerPoint) based on their proposal topic.

Undergraduate and graduate students are invited to submit proposals of up to 800 words on topics related to the design of communication, including user experience, information architecture, documentation, interaction design, and user research methods, in research, education, industry, recreation, and social exchanges. Contributions may include studies of design processes, research methods, pedagogical practices, deployment analyses, and situated use studies related to the design and use of communication systems and artifacts.

Topics of Interest

Proposals should address topics including, but not limited to:

Content strategy

Technical communication

User experience

International and intercultural communication design

Learning systems/environments

Open source design solutions

Collaborative platforms

Design methods and principles

Digital humanities and design

Project management

Information design and architecture

Computer-mediated communication

Experience architecture

Submissions are due February 8, 2016. By February 29, 2016, proposal reviews will be completed and students will be notified whether they are accepted to present at the conference.

First Round Competitions

The first round of competition is a poster session. This is your opportunity to present your research in the areas specified in the Call for Submissions. Judges will review the posters and speak to participants about their research; a group of semi-finalists will be chosen to present at the second round of the competition.

Second Round Competitions

Semi-finalists continue by giving a short presentation of their research before a panel of judges, with a supporting PowerPoint presentation. Evaluations are based on the presenter’s knowledge of his/her research area, contribution of the research, and the quality of the oral and visual presentation. Three winners will be chosen in each category, undergraduate and graduate, receiving $500, $300, and $200, respectively.

The SRC Grand Finals

First-place undergraduate and graduate student winners from the SRC will advance to the SRC Grand Finals. A different panel of judges evaluates these winners against each other via the Web. Three undergraduates and three graduates will be chosen as the SRC Grand Finals winners. They are invited, along with their advisors, to the annual ACM Awards Banquet, where they receive formal recognition.

The requirements for participation in the SRC are:

You must be a current ACM student member (rates begin at $19/year)

If selected to participate in the SRC, you must register for the SIGDOC 2015 conference

You must be a graduate or undergraduate student at the time of proposal submission

You must submit an extended abstract of no more than 800 words on a topic of relevance to the host conference, SIGDOC 2016

Only undergraduates may propose team-based research. Graduate students must propose individual research projects . For undergraduate teams, one person should be designated by the team to attend the conference and make the oral presentation. This person along with another team member will be eligible for travel reimbursement for up to $500.00.

. If you propose to the SRC, you cannot propose to the main SIGDOC conference (and vice versa). You must choose which one to participate in

To learn more about the SRC, visit http://src.acm.org/index.html

If you would like to see the names of the winners from SIGDOC 2015’s SRC, click here

If you have questions, email the Student Research Competition chair, Dr. Stephanie Vie, at Stephanie.Vie@ucf.edu

The SRC is generously sponsored by