DC I/O Abstract Template
Contents
Title
Design Computation Conference (DC/IO) Abstract template Sub-titles are not captured in Xplore
Authors
1ST GIVEN NAME SURNAME1, 2ST GIVEN NAME SURNAME2, 3ST GIVEN NAME SURNAME3, ETCETC. 1Dept. name of the organization (of Affiliation), City, Country. 2Dept. name of the organization (of Affiliation), City, Country. Etc. 1email@address.com or ORCID, 2 email@address.com or ORCID, 3 email@address.com or ORCID,
Title
Main Image
The body of your abstract begins here. It should be an explicit summary of your presentation that states the problem, the methods used, and the major results and conclusions. Do not include scientific symbols, acronyms, numbers, bullets or lists in the abstract. It should be single-spaced in 8.5-point Times New Roman. The first part of your abstract should state the problem you set out to solve or the issue you set out to explore and explain your rationale for pursuing the project. The problem or issue might be a research question, a gap in critical attention to a computational design method, a societal concern, etc. The purpose of your study is to solve this problem and/or add to the body of knowledge of Computational Design in the understanding of the issue. This section of the abstract should explain how you went about solving the problem or exploring the issue you identified. Your abstract should also describe the research methods; this section should include a concise description of the process by which you conducted your research. Next, your abstract should list the results or outcomes of the work you have done so far. If your project is not yet complete, you may still include preliminary results or your hypotheses about what those results will be. Finally, your abstract should close with a statement of the project’s implications and contributions to its field. It should convince readers that the project is interesting, valuable, and worth investigating further. In particular, it should convince the conference registrants to attend your presentation. The content of the abstract will be the basis for acceptance of the paper presentation at the international research conference.
The conference publications are peer-reviewed and include the classic structure of a literature review, hypothesis, methodology, results, and conclusion but they give particular emphasis to the structured statement of the computational method used and how this method represents a progression in the field of research. Accepted papers have to demonstrate testable evidence in the progression of a working hypothesis of a computational method for design.
Be sure to adhere to the word limit for the abstract (300 to 500 words) and two pages maximum. These directions are written in the format required for the abstract of the paper for the Design Computation Conference. We recommend that you use the MS Word document text formatting and use it as the template for your abstract as it contains all necessary formats and styles.