Dates
Tracks
Plenary
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Mon 2 Sep

Displayed time zone: London change

08:45 - 10:30
08:45
30m
Day opening
Introduction: Margaret Burnett, Luke Church, Michael Coblenz, Mariana Marasoiu
Graduate Consortium
Margaret Burnett Oregon State University, Luke Church University of Cambridge | Candela Inc, Michael Coblenz University of California, San Diego, Mariana Marasoiu University of Cambridge
09:15
15m
Talk
Nicolas Fahrni: Connecting Interdisciplinary K-12 Education through Computational Thinking - A Feasibility Study
Graduate Consortium
09:30
15m
Talk
Jinyoung Hur: Conversational Agents for Teaching Computing-Related Conversational Skills
Graduate Consortium
Jinyoung Hur University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
09:45
15m
Talk
Ningzhi Tang: Towards Effective Validation and Integration of LLM-Generated Code
Graduate Consortium
Ningzhi Tang University of Notre Dame
10:00
30m
Meeting
Group discussion 1
Graduate Consortium

10:30 - 11:00
10:30
30m
Coffee break
Break
Catering

11:00 - 12:30
11:00
15m
Talk
Lázaro Costa: Towards a Conversational User Interface for Aiding Researchers with Reproducibility
Graduate Consortium
Lázaro Costa Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto & HASLab/INESC
11:15
15m
Talk
Fairuz Nawer Meem: Effective Integration and Use of Non-Development LLMs in Software Development
Graduate Consortium
Fairuz Nawer Meem George Mason University
11:30
15m
Talk
Shawal Khalid: A Comprehensive Approach to Supporting Blockchain Developers
Graduate Consortium
Shawal Khalid Virginia Tech
11:45
15m
Talk
Tom Beckmann: Text Editing, with Structure
Graduate Consortium
Tom Beckmann Hasso Plattner Institute
12:00
30m
Meeting
Group Discussion 2
Graduate Consortium

12:30 - 14:00
12:30
90m
Panel
Lunch: Faculty "Ask Me Anything"
Graduate Consortium

15:30 - 16:00
15:30
30m
Coffee break
Break
Catering

16:00 - 17:30
16:00
15m
Talk
Qing Xia: Supporting spreadsheet users in knowledge sharing
Graduate Consortium
Qing (Nancy) Xia University College London
16:15
15m
Talk
Daniel Manesh: Supporting Code Performances
Graduate Consortium
Daniel Manesh Virginia Tech
16:30
15m
Talk
Daniel Stachnik: An Explorable and Visual Formal Specification
Graduate Consortium
Daniel Stachnik Hasso Plattner Institute
16:45
30m
Meeting
Group Discussion 4
Graduate Consortium

17:15
15m
Day closing
Last words
Graduate Consortium

Tue 3 Sep

Displayed time zone: London change

10:30 - 11:00
10:30
30m
Coffee break
Break
Catering

15:30 - 16:00
15:30
30m
Coffee break
Break
Catering

Wed 4 Sep

Displayed time zone: London change

10:30 - 11:00
10:30
30m
Coffee break
Break
Catering

10:30
30m
Other
Alan Blackwell - Book signing
Catering
Alan Blackwell University of Cambridge
Link to publication
12:30 - 14:00
12:30
90m
Meeting
SC Meeting
Catering

15:30 - 16:00
15:30
30m
Coffee break
Break
Catering

18:15 - 22:00
18:15
3h45m
Dinner
Dinner
Catering

Thu 5 Sep

Displayed time zone: London change

10:30 - 11:00
10:30
30m
Coffee break
Break
Catering

Fri 6 Sep

Displayed time zone: London change

Accepted Papers

Title
Daniel Manesh: Supporting Code Performances
Graduate Consortium
Daniel Stachnik: An Explorable and Visual Formal Specification
Graduate Consortium
Deepa Muralidhar: The Effect of Progressive Disclosure in the Transparency of Explainable Artificial Intelligence Systems
Graduate Consortium
Fairuz Nawer Meem: Effective Integration and Use of Non-Development LLMs in Software Development
Graduate Consortium
Gregory Croisdale: Interfaces to Support Exploration and Control of Generative Models
Graduate Consortium
Italo Santos: Empowering Diversity: Leveraging Cognitive Styles to Support Newcomers in Open Source Projects
Graduate Consortium
Jinyoung Hur: Conversational Agents for Teaching Computing-Related Conversational Skills
Graduate Consortium
Junran Yang: Building Interactive Systems for Scalable Data Exploration
Graduate Consortium
Lázaro Costa: Towards a Conversational User Interface for Aiding Researchers with Reproducibility
Graduate Consortium
Nicolas Fahrni: Connecting Interdisciplinary K-12 Education through Computational Thinking - A Feasibility Study
Graduate Consortium
Ningzhi Tang: Towards Effective Validation and Integration of LLM-Generated Code
Graduate Consortium
Qing Xia: Supporting spreadsheet users in knowledge sharing
Graduate Consortium
Shawal Khalid: A Comprehensive Approach to Supporting Blockchain Developers
Graduate Consortium
Tom Beckmann: Text Editing, with Structure
Graduate Consortium

Call for Participation

The 2024 Graduate Consortium will be a joint event between VL/HCC and PPIG. This is a special opportunity for cross-pollination of ideas and friendships between the two related communities, which we hope will lead to new collaboration opportunities and diversity of research interests.

We invite submissions on any topic within the areas of interest of VL/HCC and/or PPIG, as well as around the main conferences’ annual themes (see below).

The Graduate Consortium is a friendly meeting in which you can get constructive feedback and guidance on your work from peers and more seasoned academics. Please read on for the details on how to participate, and if you have any questions, please direct them to the GC chairs at vlhcc2024gc@easychair.org. We look forward to hearing about your work!

Special theme

Recent advances in computing have led to further co-mingling between computers and human society. People now live surrounded by, and as part of, many socio-technical systems. However, as these systems have grown in complexity, they have also become increasingly difficult for humans to understand and direct toward productive and meaningful ends.

This year’s event seeks to encourage graduate students’ and other researchers’ thinking about generative AI systems and people’s sense of agency as they might be interacting and programming such systems, looking to discuss issues such as creating usable interfaces for using generative AI tools while empowering users fairly and equitably, generative AI design approaches from a human perspective, or challenges and opportunities that generative AI systems pose for peoples’ experiences of agency. Submissions along this theme are especially encouraged, but all topics within the areas of interest of VL/HCC and/or PPIG are welcome.

Why You Should Participate

  • Present your work to a smaller, more attentive audience
  • Get detailed, constructive feedback from a diverse panel of experts
  • Meet, learn from, and exchange ideas with other students working on similar problems
  • Funding is likely to be available to help cover your cost of attending VL/HCC and PPIG (details below).

Who Can Participate

The consortium is open to both Master’s and PhD students worldwide, at any stage of the research process. Participation is particularly encouraged from PhD students who are close to proposing a thesis (following an American-style process) or within the first few years of your doctoral research (for the European-style PhD), as well as from members of groups underrepresented in the sciences and engineering in their parts of the world.

We invite both students who have participated once before to either a VL/HCC or PPIG graduate consortium (who will serve as senior-peer mentors), as well as students for whom this would be their first event. We expect to balance selected students following an approximate ratio of one third returning / two thirds new students; each returning student will be linked with a couple of new students in a mentoring arrangement.

To encourage a variety of ideas and approaches, if multiple applicants from a particular university apply, then no more than two per university will be selected. To be eligible, each applicant may have participated no more than once in the VL/HCC graduate consortia of past years.

Application Process

To apply, please submit the following documents via EasyChair, in the GC track:

  • A 2-page research abstract, formatted as a PDF in the standard IEEE two-column letter Conference Proceedings format.
    • Accepted participants’ abstracts will be included in the conference proceedings. To make it easier for you to write a successful abstract, we provide examples from past years below.
  • Your curriculum vitae (CV), as a second PDF file.
    • This CV should mention whether you have previously participated in any graduate consortia, and list them if so (e.g., “Participated in the VLHCC’23 GC and the CHI’22 GC”).
    • Both submissions’ EasyChair titles must begin with your full name, for example: “Alex Smith: Jogging with Psychology while Programming” and “Alex Smith: CV”.
    • Please use “VL/HCC GC submission” as the keywords.

In addition, please also ask your thesis advisor to submit the following, also via EasyChair, in the GC track:

  • A letter summarizing your accomplishments and describing how far along you are in your Master’s or PhD program, and why attending the GC this year would be important for you. Please ask them to mention if you have already attended VL/HCC GC in any past year. If you are a member of a group designated by the US National Science Foundation as underrepresented, then the letter may mention this fact, which helps us obtain funding.
    • The advisor’s submission must also begin with your (the student’s) full name, for example: “Alex Smith: recommendation letter from Petunia Matwani”. Please ask them to use “VL/HCC GC recommendation” as the keywords.
    • For US applicants who are applying for travel funds: the advisor’s letter should include a statement on the availability of funds (or lack thereof) for student travel, as well as a commitment to covering any costs that a travel grant is unable to cover.

Financial Support

We anticipate being able to offer at least partial funding for travel and/or attendance expenses, including for US participants. We will contact participating students when funding information is available.

Schedule

The consortium event will be a full day in-person event on Monday, the 2nd of September 2024. Participants are expected to attend at least one of the main conferences, as well as the graduate consortium. Other conference attendees are welcome to attend the consortium, to listen to the presentations, to interact with participants, and to give feedback to presenters. More details will be provided closer to the event, including times, location, and agenda.

Posters and Publication

Selected students will also be asked to present a poster on their work at the Showpieces Reception during the main conference. This is a good opportunity to discuss your research with the broader group of conference attendees, and get additional feedback and guidance on your work. Details will be provided to accepted applicants.

As mentioned above, accepted participants’ abstracts will be included in the published conference proceedings. Details of the publication process will be provided to accepted applicants; in the meantime please ensure your submission is formatted as a PDF in the standard IEEE Conference Proceedings format.

Examples of Successful Applications

To be successful, a submission to the Graduate Consortium generally has to have the following parts:

  1. The paper starts with a sentence or two that describes a real-world setting.
  2. It then identifies a problem in that setting.
  3. The remainder of the paper’s introduction outlines an approach for solving that problem.
  4. In a subsequent section, the paper describes a prototype or preliminary study showing the feasibility of that approach.
  5. The paper explains why more work is still required in addition to this prior work.
  6. The paper concludes by describing future work that will build on this prior work in order to finish completing the approach.
  7. Somewhere along the way, the paper explains how the approach builds on, or differs from, other related work.

We have annotated three excellent submissions that exemplify the pattern described above. We hope that you will find these examples thought-provoking and helpful as you design your own submission this year.

Organizers

  • Margaret Burnett, Oregon State University
  • Luke Church, University of Cambridge & Lund University
  • Michael Coblenz, University of California, San Diego
  • Mariana Mărășoiu, University of Cambridge

Important Dates

  • Submission (EasyChair): May 17 May 30, 2024
  • Notification of final decision: June 14 July 1, 2024
  • Camera-ready deadline: July 7 July 16, 2024
  • Consortium date: September 2, 2024

This year we had a great set of submissions, and larger in number than we anticipated - thank you to all who submitted! While we couldn’t financially support all students’ attendance to the Graduate Consortium day in Liverpool, and one of the key benefits of such a meeting is the small-group constructive atmosphere, we are organising an online mini-GC for students who unfortunately we can’t invite to join in person, but whose excellent work would still benefit from a GC’s mentoring, peer feedback, idea exchange, and community building.

Below are the papers accepted for this year’s mini-GC session, participation details will be shared separately with the students.

Title
Ashley Zhang: Making Code Understandable at Scale for Introductory Programming Education
Graduate Consortium
John Allen: Software Stories for Code Repurposing
Graduate Consortium
Mehmet Arif Demirtas: Supporting Computing Education Outside Formal Environments Through Case-Based Exploration of Programming Plans
Graduate Consortium
Swanand Vaishampayan: Procedural Justice for Computer Science Hiring: Towards Fair and Equitable AI
Graduate Consortium
Xiaotian Su: Instructor-AI Complementary in Programming Classes: Reducing Cognitive Load in Live Coding
Graduate Consortium