Guidelines for ACM Student Research Competition Posters
The PASC Conference series is an international and interdisciplinary platform for the exchange of knowledge in scientific computing and computational science with a strong focus on methods, tools, algorithms, workflows, application challenges, and novel techniques in the context of scientific usage of high performance computing.
The Conference is co-sponsored by the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) and the PASC structuring project and it is managed by the Swiss National Supercomputing Centre (CSCS). The event will be hosted at FHNW (University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland) Campus Brugg-Windisch, Switzerland.
The ACM Student Research Competition seeks submissions from students who wish to showcase their research in the form of a poster presentation at the conference.
The competition is sponsored by ACM with some travel financial support generously offered by SIGHPC.
The ACM Student Research Competition consists of a 2-page extended abstract following the ACM standard conference template. The competition is organized in several phases. The 2-page abstracts will be evaluated, and a maximum of 20 authors will be invited to present a poster at the conference for further assessment. The first round of judging will select the top six posters. Authors will be invited to present the content of their research within the conference program in a 10-minute talk. During the closing ceremony three posters will be recognized based on the final round of ranking.
SIGHPC has generously agreed to help support travel. Students traveling from within Europe will be awarded a maximum grant of $600, and a maximum allowance of $1400 will be given to the selected students traveling from other continents. Moreover, PASC25 will cover the corresponding registration fee for the selected students. As part of the application process, you will be able to select whether you need a travel grant to attend, and to indicate from where you will be traveling. Furthermore, post-event ACM will offer a medal and monetary award to the SRC student winners ($500, $300, $200 respectively, for the top three winners) in graduate/undergraduate category. The first place winners will then have the possibility to compete in the competition Grand Finals, which take place toward the end of the program year.
Poster submissions should describe topical research in HPC related to domain science, applied mathematics, computer science or software engineering. The scientific domains represented at the PASC Conference are typically organized around the following areas:
- Chemistry and Materials (incl. ceramics, metals, and polymers)
- Climate, Weather, and Earth Sciences (incl. solid earth dynamics)
- Applied Social Sciences and Humanities (incl. behavioral, economic, legal, political and business sciences, philosophy, languages, the arts, ethics in computing including climate impact of HPC, biases in machine learning, etc.)
- Engineering (incl. CFD, computational mechanics, computational engineering and materials, turbulent flows, acoustics, signal processing, etc)
- Life Sciences (incl. biophysics, genomics, bioinformatics, systems biology, neuroscience, and computational biology)
- Physics (incl. astrophysics, cosmology, plasma modelling, and quantum information sciences)
- Computational Methods and Applied Mathematics
ACM Student Research Competition PARTICIPATION REQUIREMENTS
- Participants must be currently enrolled in a university or college and have an active ACM student membership
- Team projects will be accepted from Undergraduate students. One person should be designated by the team to attend the conference and make the oral presentation. Should the designated presenter win first, second or third place in competition only they will receive the medal and monetary award. Only individual research is accepted from Graduate (Masters or PhD program) students; group research projects will not be considered. If an individual is part of a group research project and wants to participate in an SRC, they can only present their part of the research. Only they will receive the medal and monetary award (should they win).
- Qualifying research areas are those covered by the conference; see above for details.
- Students may only participate in one SRC per program year (April 1- March 31). Students that have applied to an SRC, but have not been accepted, may respond to other SRC calls for participation during the program year. However, a student who is accepted to multiple SRCs must withdraw their submission from all but one.
Further details on participating in the SRC can be found at https://src.acm.org/participate.
If you do not fulfill the above requirements, you are still invited to submit your application to the PASC Posters program.
SUBMISSION AND REVIEW PROCESS
Poster submissions should be made through the PASC25 online submission portal, and will be reviewed by domain experts from the PASC25 ACM Student Research Competition Program Committee chaired by Jay Lofstead (Sandia National Laboratories, USA).
POSTER REQUIREMENTS
We will host poster presentations on site. Poster authors whose submissions are accepted for presentation at the conference, should thus plan to travel to Switzerland and present their work on-site.
Please carry your physical poster to be hung up on poster boards (poster boards are 186 cm high x 121 cm wide).
15 December 2024: Deadline for poster submissions
28 March 2025: Decision notifications
01 May 2025: Deadline for submission of poster image (PDF)
Deadlines correspond to anywhere on earth (‘AoE’ or ‘UTC-12’).
We look forward to receiving your submissions.
CONFERENCE PARTICIPATION TERMS
Conference contributors whose submissions are accepted for presentation at the conference are expected to present their work on-site.
The PASC Conference reserves the right to remove contributions that are considered outside the scope of the conference at any time.