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2022 Galaxy Community Conference (GCC2022)
July 17-23, 2022
University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
#UseGalaxy2022
GCC2022 Abstracts
Presentations from the community are a core component of Galaxy Community Conferences. These include long talks, short talks, poster presentations, and demo presentations. All of these are submitted by the community and go through a peer review process before being accepted for the program.
Abstract submission is now closed, but take a look at the schedule for all the exciting talks coming up!
Posters
If you are presenting a poster at GCC2022, maximum size for a poster can be 48" x 48" (or 120cm x 120cm). The poster schedule will be posted on the schedule site with each poster being assigned number to match to a poster panel. You can place your poster on the first day for the conference and leave it up all the way until the end but please be present at the poster during your scheduled poster showing.
Key Dates
Date | What |
---|---|
Apr 12 | Abstracts due for short or long talks |
May 1 | Talk submitters notified of acceptance status |
May 20 | Deadline for confirming abstract acceptance |
Jun 3 | Poster/demo abstracts due |
Jun 17 | Poster/demo submitters notified of acceptance status |
Guidelines
We have several guidelines that will help you craft abstracts (and then presentations) that will resonate with GCC2022 participants.
- Limited to 500 words. Please be concise and to the point. Abstract submission is a web form so no graphics or references are to be included.
- Relevance to Galaxy. Does the work use, describe, extend, deploy, benchmark, etc., some part of the Galaxy ecosystem? If it does not, then it may not reviewed.
- Compelling. Is the work compelling? Will GCC2022 participants find your presentation interesting? Does the abstract describe novel work, interesting results, improvements, lessons learned, and so on?
- Open Source / Open Access. Not all presented work / resources must be open source / open access, but if it isn't, then you need a compelling reason why it isn't. For example, if you have implemented Galaxy in a company, behind a firewall, then your presentation should focus on the lessons you learned, and any contributions that were made back into the ecosystem. An abstract that merely highlights an inaccessible resource is not compelling.
- Project Update. If an abstract is a project update for a project that has previously been presented at a GCC, then it needs to describe a significant update to be considered for a talk. Minor updates submitted as talks will be offered a poster or demo spot.
Option to publish in F1000 Galaxy gateway
Following GCC, you'll have an option to publish your slides or poster in the F1000 Galaxy gateway. Besides being a great collection of Galaxy-related content, each published artifact gets a DOI, making it easier to reference in the future.
Questions?
Got questions about abstracts or abstract submission? Ask the Scientific Program Committee.