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iPRES 2015 Call for Contributions - PAPER DEADLINE EXTENDED TO APRIL 29

After several requests, the iPRES Organizing Committee has extended the PAPER (both short and long) to Wednesday, April 29th. We know the spring is a very busy time for many of us in the digital preservation community but this is the last extension possible.

Please also note that panel, workshop, and tutorial submissions (all require just an abstract) are due May 15th.

Key Dates

Short and long papers (full text) due - April 29, 2015 (previously April 20, 2015)

Panel, workshop, and tutorial submissions (abstract) due - May 15, 2015

Submitters notified of review decisions for papers, panels, workshops and tutorials - June 22, 2015

Poster and demo submissions (abstract) due - June 29, 2015

Conference registration open - June 30, 2015

Submitters notified of review decisions for poster and demos - July 13, 2015

Preview versions of all submissions due, to include in conference participants packet - September 20, 2015

Earlybird registration closes - October 1, 2015

iPRES Conference - November 2-6, 2015

Final versions of conference contributions (including revisions based on conference feedback and activities) due - November 20, 2015

iPRES is the premier international conference on the preservation and long term management of digital materials. The iPRES 2015 will be held on November 2-6, 2015 in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Contributions are currently being sought that present research and innovative practice in digital preservation.

The iPRES 2015 conference is seeking contributions from research and innovative practice in digital preservation.

The conference site is:
http://ipres2015.org

This call is available at:
http://ipres2015.web.unc.edu/call-for-contributions/

Author information and guidelines are at:
http://ipres2015.web.unc.edu/author-info-guidelines/

Contribution topics

We welcome contributions that address at least one of the following topics:

Institutional opportunities and challenges

- local, regional and national approaches

- legislative context and requirements

- institutional contexts for preservation

- collaboration and alignment

- collection content profiling

- research data management

- personal archiving

- documenting authenticity and integrity

- demonstrating benefits and incentives

- providing and documenting added value

- evaluating options: products, tools, registries, services, service providers

- exploring the potential of bartering


Infrastructure (organizational and technological) opportunities and challenges

- bit preservation

- scalability

- complex formats

- large data sets, e.g. web data or research data

- system architectures and requirements

- distributed and cloud-based implementations

- digital forensics

- standards-based practice


Frameworks for digital preservation

- models

- standards and practice

- core concepts

- business models

- sustainability and economic viability


Preservation strategies and workflows

- preservation strategies (e.g., migration, emulation, normalization)

- preservation metadata management

- preservation planning and action

- archival storage and archival packages

- acquisition, ingest, and submission packages

- long-term access management and dissemination packages

- measuring and mediating risks

- content-specific approaches (e.g., GIS, digital art, audiovisual, research data, web-based content, models)


Innovative practice

- implementations

- repositories

- issues and wins

- lessons learned

- the future of digital preservation


Training and education

- educational needs

- evaluating curricula and impacts

- innovative offerings

- support for lifelong learning

- career management


Program strands

iPRES 2015 is being structured around two key strands - research and innovative practice. Papers are invited for both strands.

The purpose of this distinction is to promote work from both a research and innovative practice perspective and work that is clearly rooted in the actual experience of institutions undertaking digital preservation. We expect that there will be work that manages to encapsulate both of these strands, and that is welcomed.

All papers for iPRES 2015 should:

- be leading edge

- be innovative

- help inform debate around what digital preservation is.


Paper types

Full and Short papers

Full papers (8 to 10 pages) will report research work with novel contributions and/or practical engagement with digital preservation problems that show a demonstrable advance in the practice of digital preservation.

Short papers (3 to 5 pages) can focus on new challenges and work in progress, whether in the research or innovative practice strand.

All contributions must report on novel and previously unpublished work and will be peer-reviewed by at least 3 members of the Program Committee.

The accepted papers will be published in the iPRES 2015 proceedings.

A best paper award will be offered and recommended for publication in an appropriate journal.


Posters and demonstrations

Submissions (up to 2 pages) are encouraged for posters reporting on emerging issues or work in progress, and also for demonstrations of innovative solutions. These submissions should describe the work to be presented and its contribution beyond the state of the art. Posters and demonstrations will be presented in a dedicated session during the conference.

All contributions will be peer-reviewed. The accepted poster and demonstration submissions will be published in the proceedings.

A best poster award will be offered.

Panels

Proposals for thematic panels to be held during the main conference program can be submitted by 3 to 5 experts. Acceptance will be judged on the merits of the proposal and relevance for the expected audience. Proposals must detail the subject, motivation and panelists.

Workshops

Proposals for thematic workshops are welcome. Proposals must detail the subject, scope, program strand and intended content. Ideally, workshops should be open to public registration and participation. Acceptance will be judged on the merits of the proposal, requirements for its organization, and local capability to support it (which should not be a major constraint).

Tutorials

Tutorials must be on a single topic, addressed at either an introductory level or an in-depth, expert level. Submissions for tutorials should be a maximum of 2 pages, including a brief abstract and an outline of the content, the duration (half-day 3 hours or full-day 6 hours), a description of the intended audience and the expected learning outcomes, and a short biography of the presenter(s).



Peer review and inclusion in iPres 2015 Proceedings

All submissions will be subject to peer review. Those that are accepted for inclusion in the conference will be published in the iPRES 2015 proceedings. For full and short papers, the full text will be published. For posters, demonstrations, workshops, tutorials and panels, abstracts will be published. After receiving results of the peer review, authors will have an opportunity to edit their submissions for the final proceedings. In order to ensure inclusion in the proceedings, authors should submit final text by August 15, 2015.

Publication and Pre-publication at iPres 2015

iPRES is a venue where individuals from across the globe hash out ideas, share results and propose further actions to address the challenges and opportunities of digital preservation. This year, we would like to take further advantage of these rich exchanges by changing how the final proceedings are published.

Participants at the conference will receive full pre-publication drafts of papers and abstracts of workshops, tutorials, panels, posters, and demos. Authors will be encouraged to link their own papers to others, to deal with criticisms or comments received, and to clear up any inaccuracies or misunderstandings. In addition panelists and workshop hosts will be invited to report their sessions more fully, and the program committee will commission a number of thematic syntheses to act as an accessible commentary to the whole conference. Authors will be given a short period after the conference to update their contributions to take account of discussion, debate and conference developments. Please note that pre-conference versions will be published if no revised version is provided.


Additional opportunities

Submissions are also encouraged for associated activities outside the formal program. Responsibility for planning and management of these would be with the submitting organization. The Program Committee would appreciate being notified and consulted about such activities in order to best coordinate efforts with the conference program.


Conference Organizing Committee

Jonathan Crabtree, Odum Institute for Research in Social Science  (Posters and Demos Co-Chair)

William Kilbride, Digital Preservation Coalition (Workshops and Tutorials Co-Chair)

Leo Konstantelos, University of Melbourne (Program Co-Chair)

Christopher (Cal) Lee, University of North Carolina (General Co-Chair)

Yukio Maeda, University of Tokyo (Posters and Demos Co-Chair)

Nancy McGovern, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Libraries (Program Co-Chair)

Helen Tibbo, University of North Carolina (General Co-Chair)

Eld Zierau, Royal Library of Denmark (Workshops and Tutorials Co-Chair)

--
Dr Leo Konstantelos | Manager, Digital Scholarship
Research & Collections | The University of Melbourne

Platform Manager, Social & Cultural Informatics Platform (SCIP)

Level 2, Thomas Cherry Building, The University of Melbourne, Victoria 3010 Australia
+61 3 90356125 | E [log in to unmask]
http://library.unimelb.edu.au/digitalscholarship


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