Full and Short Paper
Submissions
Work in Progress, TVX in Industry, Doctoral Consortium, Workshops
Demos
Submission deadline:
30th April 2014
Submission deadline:
3rd February 2014
Notification of acceptance:17th March 2014
Submission deadline:
31st March 2014
Notification of acceptance:
20th April 2014
Submission deadline:
7th April 2014
Notification of acceptance:20th April 2014
TVX is the ACM International Conference on Interactive Experiences for Television and Online Video. TVX is the leading international conference for presentation and discussion of research into online video and TV interaction and user experience. The conference brings together international researchers and practitioners from a wide range of disciplines, ranging from human-computer interaction, multimedia engineering and design to media studies, media psychology and sociology. In addition to standard research paper presentations the conference includes a wide range of formats for presentation and discussion of research, including Industry Papers, Demos, Works-in-Progress, and also provides the opportunity to participate in the TVX Grand Challenge Competition, the Doctoral Consortium, and to run and attend tutorials and workshops on specialist topics in TV and online video interaction and user experience.
We solicit original submissions in the following categories:
Courses
Choose a course to attend
Short and Full Paper Submissions(3rd February 2014)
Work-In-Progress Submissions(31st March 2014)
Doctoral Consortium(31st March 2014)
WorkshopsSubmit to a workshop (31st March 2014)
TVX in Industry Submissions(31st March 2014)
Demo Submissions(7th April 2014)
Grand Challenge(30th April 2014)
TVX Anonymization Policy
TVX Full and Short Papers review process will continue to use blind reviewing. Authors are expected to remove author and institutional identities from the title and header areas of the paper, as noted in the submission instructions (Note: changing the text colour of the author information is not sufficient). Also, please make sure that identifying information does not appear in the document’s meta-data (e.g., the ‘Authors’ field in your word processor’s ‘Save As’ dialog box).
Further suppression of identity in the body of the paper is left to the authors’ discretion. We do expect that authors leave citations to their previous work unanonymized, so that reviewers can ensure that all previous research has been taken into account by the authors. However, authors are encouraged to cite their own work in the third person, e.g., avoid “As described in our previous work [10], … ” and use instead “As described by