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创建全新虚拟学术会议的十条简单规则(即使是在疫情期间)。

Ten simple rules for creating a brand-new virtual academic meeting (even amid a pandemic).

作者信息

Rich Scott, Diaconescu Andreea O, Griffiths John D, Lankarany Milad

机构信息

Division of Clinical and Computational Neuroscience, Krembil Research Institute, University Health Network (UHN), Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Krembil Centre for Neuroinformatics, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, Canada.

出版信息

PLoS Comput Biol. 2020 Dec 18;16(12):e1008485. doi: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1008485. eCollection 2020 Dec.

Abstract

The increased democratization of the creation, implementation, and attendance of academic conferences has been a serendipitous benefit of the movement toward virtual meetings. The Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has accelerated the transition to online conferences and, in parallel, their democratization, by necessity. This manifests not just in the mitigation of barriers to attending traditional physical conferences but also in the presentation of new, and more importantly attainable, opportunities for young scientists to carve out a niche in the landscape of academic meetings. Here, we describe an early "proof of principle" of this democratizing power via our experience organizing the Canadian Computational Neuroscience Spotlight (CCNS; crowdcast.io/e/CCNS), a free 2-day virtual meeting that was built entirely amid the pandemic using only virtual tools. While our experience was unique considering the obstacles faced in creating a conference during a pandemic, this was not the only factor differentiating both our experience and the resulting meeting from other contemporary online conferences. Specifically, CCNS was crafted entirely by early career researchers (ECRs) without any sponsors or partners, advertised primarily using social media and "word of mouth," and designed specifically to highlight and engage trainees. From this experience, we have distilled "10 simple rules" as a blueprint for the design of new virtual academic meetings, especially in the absence of institutional support or partnerships, in this unprecedented environment. By highlighting the lessons learned in implementing our meeting under these arduous circumstances, we hope to encourage other young scientists to embrace this challenge, which would serve as a critical next step in further democratizing academic meetings.

摘要

学术会议在创建、举办和参与方面日益增加的民主化,是向虚拟会议转变带来的意外好处。2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行加速了向在线会议的转变,同时也使其民主化成为必然。这不仅体现在减少了参加传统线下会议的障碍,还体现在为年轻科学家提供了新的、更重要的是可实现的机会,使他们能够在学术会议领域中崭露头角。在此,我们通过组织加拿大计算神经科学聚焦会议(CCNS;crowdcast.io/e/CCNS)的经验,描述这种民主化力量的早期“原理证明”,这是一个为期两天的免费虚拟会议,完全在大流行期间仅使用虚拟工具搭建而成。虽然考虑到在大流行期间创建会议所面临的障碍,我们的经历是独特的,但这并不是使我们的经历以及由此产生的会议与其他当代在线会议有所区别的唯一因素。具体而言,CCNS完全由早期职业研究人员(ECR)打造,没有任何赞助商或合作伙伴,主要通过社交媒体和“口碑”进行宣传,并且专门设计用于突出和吸引受训人员。从这次经历中,我们提炼出“十条简单规则”,作为设计新的虚拟学术会议的蓝图,特别是在这种前所未有的环境中缺乏机构支持或合作伙伴的情况下。通过强调在这些艰难情况下举办会议所吸取的经验教训,我们希望鼓励其他年轻科学家接受这一挑战,这将是进一步推动学术会议民主化的关键下一步。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/995a/7748144/1b7a82d6ae85/pcbi.1008485.g001.jpg

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