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DigiPro 2016 : The Digital Production Symposium | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://dp2016.digiproconf.org/cfp/ | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
The Digital Production Symposium (DigiPro 2016) promotes the sharing of ideas, insights and techniques for the production of top quality digital visual effects and animation. DigiPro brings together scientists, engineers, artists and producers in a tight-knit environment, working to close the gap between research results and industry needs.
We invite submissions on any topic with impact on digital motion picture production. Topics of interest include the traditional academic areas (such as rendering, simulation, and animation), emerging production technologies (such as cinematic VR and virtual production), as well as less-published production topics (such as pipelines, production management, and the artist-engineer partnership). Submissions may range from theory and algorithms, to engineering decisions, workarounds, and rules of thumb. To see what kinds of papers were included in previous years, you can browse the programs: http://dp2015.digiproconf.org/program http://dp2014.digiproconf.org/program http://dp2013.digiproconf.org/program http://dp2015.digiproconf.org/program Submitted papers will be reviewed by an international program committee, and accepted papers will be both presented at the symposium and published in the ACM Digital Library. Submitted papers may either be in standard technical paper format (SIGGRAPH-like, double-column, usually 2-8 pages), or in the form of a short production talk that explains a technique or a lesson learned. Talks may be submitted as a slide deck, a video with voice-over, or an extended abstract, so long as it conveys the content, style, and value of the talk. Submissions must be in PDF for printed material or slides, and standard formats for video (Quicktime, MPEG, AVI). The conference presentation is usually 25 minutes, including questions, though at the committee’s discretion, shorter or longer duration may be allocated to suit the needs of a particular presentation. The length of either paper or presentation should be commensurate with the amount of valuable information — a 2 page paper or a 5 minute talk is appropriate for some topics, whereas an 8 page paper or 20 minute talk may be appropriate for a more comprehensive treatment of a bigger topic. What have you discovered that our community ought to know? Tell us, at DigiPro 2016. |
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