Call for Papers: EuroVis 2005 Eurographics/IEEE-VGTC Symposium on Visualization June 1-3, 2005 www.eurovis.org * Aims and Scope: Building on the success of six Eurographics/IEEE-VGTC Symposia on Visualization (formerly known as "VisSym"), we invite you to participate in the seventh Eurographics/IEEE-VGTC Symposium on Visualization, which from 2005 will be known as "EuroVis". Papers reporting significant new research results, and case studies on the practical application of visualization in data analysis, are invited. Contributions from all areas of visualization welcome. * Topics: Suggested topics for research papers include, but are not limited to: * Distributed and collaborative visualization (including grid-based visualization) * Visualization over the internet * Computational steering * Information visualization * Data base visualization * Flow visualization * Volume rendering * Surface extraction * Compression for visualization * Human factors in visualization * Visualization systems * Large data sets * Multi-variate visualization * Time-varying data * Multi resolution techniques * Visualization in bioinformatics * Medical visualization Case studies are invited from any application area, including, but not limited to: aerospace, bioinformatics, chemistry, data mining, finance, mathematics, medicine, and physics. * Important Dates Deadline for submissions: 17 December 2004, 5:00PM GMT Notification of acceptance: 10 February 2005 Camera-ready copy due: 21 March 2005 Conference dates: 1-3 June 2005 Submission information: see www.comp.leeds.ac.uk/eurovis/submit.html * Conference Location EuroVis 2005 will be held in Leeds, a vibrant and growing university and commercial centre in north-eastern England, on the edge of the Yorkshire Dales. Leeds has a history of re-inventing itself for each age, with features from the impressive Victorian Kirkgate Market and Corn Exchange through to the modern Royal Armouries Museum and Brewery Wharf. The historic city of York is a short distance away. * Organizing Committee Ken Brodlie Leeds, UK David Duke Leeds, UK Ken Joy UC Davis, USA * International Programme Committee Dirk Bartz (DE) Georges-Pierre Bonneau (FR) Min Chen (UK) David Duce (UK) David Ebert (US) Thomas Ertl (DE) Fabio Ganovelli (IT) Eduard Groeller (AT) Bernd Hamann (US) Charles Hansen (US) Ming Hao (US) Helwig Hauser (AT) Hans-Christian Hege (DE) Nigel John (UK) Daniel Keim (DE) Wilfrid Lefer (FR) Robert van Liere (NL) Joerg Meyer (US) Isabel Navazo (ES) Gregory Nielson (US) Alex Pang (US) Valerio Pascucci (US) Ronald Peikert (CH) Frits Post (NL) Theresa-Marie Rhyne (US) Bill Ribarsky (US) Georgios Sakas (DE) Gerik Scheuermann (DE) John Shalf (US) Han-Wei Shen (US) Deborah Silver (US) Pavel Slavik (CZ) Marc Stamminger (DE) Holger Theisel (DE) Matthew Ward (US) Daniel Weiskopf (DE) Rüdiger Westermann (DE) Jarke J. van Wijk (NL) -- Dr. David Duke Email: djd@comp.leeds.ac.uk School of Computing Web: www.comp.leeds.ac.uk/djd/ University of Leeds Tel: +44 113 343 6800 Leeds, LS2 9JT, U.K. Fax: +44 113 343 5468