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11th ACM Conference on Computers and Accessibility

October 26-28, 2009
Pittsburgh, PA, USA

 

Doctoral Consortium

The Eleventh International ACM SIGACCESS Conference on Computers & Accessibility (ASSETS 2009) invites doctoral students to apply for participation in the Doctoral Consortium. This consortium provides a great opportunity to doctoral students to share and discuss their research with other students, and a panel of established researchers. Funding is provided by the National Science Foundation, Grant number IIS-0925357.

Participants of the ASSETS 2009 Doctoral Consortium

The ASSETS Doctoral Consortium brings together both student and faculty participants.

Chair

Picture of John Black
Chair
Richard Ladner
Email
Institution
University of Washington (USA)

Faculty Panel Members (confirmed)

Picture of Chieko Asakawa
Panel Member
Chieko Asakawa
Email
Institution
IBM Tokyo Research Lab (Japan)
Picture of Krzysztof Gajos
Panel Member
Krzysztof Gajos
Email
Institution
Harvard University and Microsoft Research (USA)
Picture of Henry Kautz
Panel Member
Henry Kautz
Email
Institution
University of Rochester (USA)
Picture of Richard Simpson
Panel Member
Richard Simpson
Email
Institution
University of Pittsburgh (USA)

How the Consortium Will Work

The Consortium will be held on Sunday, October 25, 2009 in Pittsburgh, PA, USA. During the Consortium, each student will make a formal presentation about his or her doctoral research. Feedback will be given by each member of the faculty panel, as well as by the other student participants. Discussion will be encouraged.

The feedback will be geared toward helping student participants understand and articulate how their work is positioned, relative to other research on Assistive Technologies, Universal Accessibility, and Universal Usability. Feedback will also address whether their topics are adequately focused for thesis research projects, whether their methods are correctly chosen and applied, and whether their results are being appropriately analyzed and presented.

Student participants will also present their research in the main conference during a poster session that is dedicated specifically to the work of the Doctoral Consortium participants. This will allow conference attendees to interact with, and ask questions of, the Doctoral Consortium participants, and will allow the participants the opportunity to get feedback from a larger audience.

Goals of the Consortium

The overall goals of the Consortium are to:

The overall purpose of the Consortium is to encourage and prepare a group of promising young researchers dedicated to Assistive Technologies, Universal Accessibility, and Universal Usability.

Who Should Apply

The purpose of the Doctoral Consortium is to provide feedback to Doctoral candidates at an early stage of their research, in order to help guide and shape their research program. Students submitting proposals to the Doctoral Consortium may also submit a different piece of work to the Student Research Competition, but may not submit the same work to both the Doctoral Consortium and the Student Research Competition.

Note: Student work that is complete, or near to completion, should be submitted as either a technical paper or a poster.

Relevant Topics

Relevant topics for the Consortium include, but are not limited to:

How to Apply

Each Doctoral Consortium application must contain the following materials:

  1. Cover Letter: The cover letter should contain the following information:
    • A statement of interest in participating in the Doctoral Consortium
    • The full name of University and Department in which the candidate is earning his/her doctorate degree
    • The name of the supervising professor
    • Full contact information, including address, telephone number, fax number, and email address
    • The title of the research, and keywords pertinent to the research
    • The URL of the candidate's web page (if any)
  2. Project Summary: The Research Summary must be two pages long in the ACM conference format including: title, author information, abstract, keywords, thesis research summary, and references. This extended abstract must clearly address:
    • The problem that the proposed research is addressing.
    • The motivation behind this research, including a broad comparison with the related literature.
    • The proposed solution, including a brief description of the proposed methodology to the solution.
    • The stage of the candidate's program of study, including the status of the research (i.e. what has been done to date, and what still needs to be done).
    • The envisioned contributions to the accessibility field.
    • What the candidate hopes to gain from the Doctoral Consortium.
    • Bibliographical references.
  3. Letter of Recommendation: A letter from the primary thesis advisor/supervisor that briefly states what the advisor/supervisor expects the student to gain from, and contribute to the consortium.
  4. The candidate's CV The candidate is required to submit a CV (maximum of 2 pages) that relates her/his background, relevant experience, and research accomplishments.

Submission Format:

The Cover Letter, the Project Summary, the Letter of recommendation, and the candidate's CV should be submitted to the ASSETS 2009 Submission site as separate .pdf documents by Midnight HAST (GMT-10:00) on July 17, 2009.

Student Participant Selection Process

The Doctoral Consortium applications will be evaluated based on the following criteria:

Publication

Following the Doctoral Consortium, the participants will be invited to submit revised and updated papers for publication in the January 2010 issue of the SIGACCESS Newsletter.

Sign Language Interpreting or Captioning

Upon request, American Sign Language interpreting or captioning will be provided for the Doctoral Consortium, and all other ASSETS events. Requests for an interpreter or captioner must be indicated on the conference registration form when registering for ASSETS 2009.

Travel and Hotel Expenses

The US National Science Foundation grant has provided funding to fully cover hotel, and (early) conference registration expenses for the Doctoral Consortium participants. Airfare expenses will also be covered for all participants, based on estimates made in early 2009. If airfares increase significantly during 2009 and that funding is not entirely adequate, then attendees might need to cover a portion of their airfare.

Important Dates

Apply for the Doctoral Consortium

Submit your application here.

Funding

NSF Logo Funding provided by the National Science Foundation, Grant number IIS-0925357.

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Updated by Jeffrey P. Bigham on June 07, 2009