Authors are invited to submit original contributions related to the workshop topics, including research papers, case studies, position papers, and interactive systems or prototypes. Submissions should present novel research results, practical experiences, methodological advances, or critical reflections relevant to information visualization, digital cultural heritage, semantic exploration, and AI-supported approaches for digital collections.
Submitted contributions must be written in English and should follow the Springer CCIS formatting guidelines. Papers are expected to be between 8 pages + unlimited references. Accepted papers will be published in the workshop proceedings in the Springer Communications in Computer and Information Science (CCIS) series.
Submissions will undergo a peer-review process and will be evaluated based on:
Relevance to the workshop topics
Originality and innovative contribution
Methodological rigor and technical quality
Practical relevance and potential impact
Clarity and quality of presentation
At least one author of each accepted paper must register for the workshop and present the work during the event.
Authors should submit their manuscripts electronically through the Microsoft CMT submission system. All papers must be submitted in PDF format and should follow the Springer CCIS formatting guidelines.
Submission portal:
https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/
The Microsoft CMT service will be used for managing the submission and peer-review process for this workshop.
Authors should prepare their manuscripts according to the Springer CCIS formatting guidelines and submit the paper in PDF format through the Microsoft CMT submission system.
To submit:
Access the workshop submission page on Microsoft CMT.
Log in or create a Microsoft CMT account.
Complete the submission information.
Upload the manuscript PDF and confirm the submission.
Full instructions to submit in the Microsoft CMT servicecan be found here.
The Microsoft CMT service was used for managing the peer-reviewing process for this conference. This service was provided for free by Microsoft and they bore all expenses, including costs for Azure cloud services as well as for software development and support.