Graphics Interface is the Canadian annual conference devoted to computer graphics and interactive techniques." The first GI conference was held in 1982. Together with its precursor, the biennial Canadian Man-Computer Communications Conference (CMCCC), which was first held in 1969, "it is the oldest regularly-scheduled computer graphics and human-computer interaction conference.
Graphics Interface is the oldest continuously-scheduled conference in the field. This conference consistently attracts high quality papers on recent advances in interactive systems, human-computer interaction, and graphics from around the world.
GI2010 will have joint sessions for the graphics and HCI tracks. Topics of interest at GI include (but are not restricted to):
· Shading and rendering
· Geometric modeling and meshing
· Graphics in simulation
· Image-based rendering
· Image synthesis and realism
· Medical and scientific visualization
· Computer animation
· Real-time rendering
· Non-photorealistic rendering
· Interaction techniques
· Computer-supported cooperative work
· Human interface devices
· Aesthetic design
· Virtual reality
· Augmented reality
· Data and information visualization
· Multimedia
· Mobile computing
· Affective HCI
· Haptic and tangible interfaces
· Perception
Important Dates:
Paper submission: December 16, 2009
Author notification: February 26, 2010
Final papers: March 12, 2010
Poster submission: April 21, 2010
Conference co-chairs: David Mould, Carleton University, and Sylvie Noël, Communications Research Centre of Canada
GI2010 will be held in conjunction with Artificial Intelligence 2010 and Computer and Robot Vision 2010.
For more information about the conference and to submit a paper, please visit our website at:
http://scs.carleton.ca/gi2010
You can allow your visitors to import event dates into their own calendars through the convenient webcal-links above.
Give us your opinion! Do you have any comments/additions
that you would like other visitors to see?
Switch our complete calendar on and off alongside your private calendar
I'm an enemy of what I call 'computer theology.' There's a class conflict out there. There's a techno-elite that lives in a different world.
-- Walter Mossberg
”
Eva Hornecker explains the evolving concept of Tangible Interaction.
Read Eva's insightful entry here..