We are seeking presentations on iRODS-related activities. Each presentation will be delivered in one of the following formats:
- 20-min Talk: Explanation of novel iRODS application or development, with Q&A
- 40-min Talk + Demonstration: Explanation plus a live technology exhibition, with Q&A
Individuals who wish to present at the UGM must submit an abstract for evaluation by the meeting's program committee.
- May 15: Deadline for Abstracts for Talks/Papers
- June 12: Deadline for Talk/Papers
The iRODS Consortium is pleased to present the annual iRODS UGM Best Student Technology Award.
The
DICE team (including Reagan Moore, Arcot Rajasekar, and Hao Xu),
along with the iRODS Consortium, has funded this $200 award into the future and to encourage submissions of
ongoing iRODS-related work from students around the world. Examples may include, but are not limited to,
a new iRODS client or library, an integration with existing infrastructure, or a particular piece of policy.
To be eligible, the student (from undergraduate to doctoral) must be a named author on the submission and present their work at the User Group Meeting.
Submissions will be judged based on the technology, not the presentation.
The award will be announced by the beginning of the conference.
Employees of the iRODS Consortium are ineligible.
In the abstract, presenters should summarize how they have used or extended iRODS to impact individuals, society, science, or systems and technology.
- Impact on Individuals – Advancements in data management, information retrieval, human-computer interaction, etc.
- Impact on Society – Archival preservation, policy development, intellectual property, information access, resource management, emergency preparedness, etc.
- Impact on Science – Collaboration, information architecture, knowledge management, competitive intelligence, digital curation, records and archives management, etc.
- Impact on Systems & Technology – User interface, plugin development, benchmarking, process automation, workflows, rules, policy, etc.
Abstracts will be judged on such criteria as quality of content, significance and impact, method, design, innovation, originality, and fit with the meeting theme.
Authors of accepted talks and demonstrations will be invited to present at the User Group Meeting.
Presenters are also invited to submit papers (4-10 pages) for inclusion in the User Group Meeting Proceedings.
You do not need to be a member of the iRODS Consortium to present at the User Group Meeting.
Talks and demonstrations should have at least one of the following objectives:
(a) to present case studies and use cases of iRODS in action
(b) to report on the development of innovative iRODS technology and examine its benefits and limitations
(c) to report on benchmarking efforts and analyze the outcomes and lessons learned
(d) to propose best practices and evaluate their efficacy and limitations
(e) to report original, unpublished research
(f) to analyze and critique data management theories and concepts as they apply to iRODS
All findings must be substantiated by analysis, experimentation, application, or theoretical development.
Presenters are encouraged to submit a paper for publication in the formal Proceedings of the iRODS User Group Meeting 2020, which will be made available as PDF and on Amazon.
Papers should be approximately 4-10 pages long, submitted in .PDF format based on one of the templates below: