The Call for Lightning Talks is now open for the 2012 conference on Informatics 
for Phylogenetics, Evolution, and Biodiversity (iEvoBio), at 
http://ievobio.org/ocs2/index.php/ievobio/2012. See below for instructions.

Lightning talks are short presentations of 5 minutes. They are ideal for 
drawing the attention of the audience to new developments, tools, and 
resources, or to subsequent events where more in-depth information can be 
obtained. Please also see our FAQ for more information 
(http://ievobio.org/faq.html#lightning). Lightning talks will be part of the 
more interactive program elements on both conference days.

Submitted talks should be in the area of informatics aimed at advancing 
research in phylogenetics, evolution, and biodiversity, including new tools, 
cyberinfrastructure development, large-scale data analysis, and visualization.

Submissions should be 1 page long at most and include a title, a list of 
contributors, and an abstract. The abstract should provide an overview of the 
talk's subject.  Reviewers will judge whether a submission is within scope of 
the conference (see above). If applicable, the abstract must also state the 
license and give the URL where the source code is available so reviewers can 
verify that the open-source requirement(*) is met.

Review and acceptance of lightning talks will be on a rolling basis.  The 
deadline for submission is the morning of the first day of the conference (July 
10), but see below. Further instructions for submission are at the following 
URL:
http://ievobio.org/ocs2/index.php/ievobio/2012/schedConf/cfp

Please make sure to choose the Lightning Talks track for your submission. Note 
that the number of lightning talk slots is finite and that therefore the track 
may fill up early. We cannot accept lightning talks until the open-source 
requirements are met, and so waiting with that until the deadline risks that 
the track is full by that time. 

We ask all submitters of lightning talks to be willing to also serve as 
reviewers of such, as described above.

Lightning talks are only 1 of 5 kinds of contributed content that iEvoBio will 
feature. The other 4 are: 1) Full talks (open until April 2), 2) Challenge 
entries, 3) Software bazaar demonstrations, and 4) Birds-of- a-Feather 
gatherings. The Call for Challenge entries remains open (see 
http://ievobio.org/challenge.html). The calls for contribution to the other two 
sessions will open later, and will remain open until shortly before the 
conference or until the respective track fills up. In addition, 2012 iEvoBio 
sponsor Biomatters Ltd will be running the Geneious Challenge alongside this 
year’s iEvoBio Challenge, see http://ievobio.org/geneious_challenge.html for 
more information.

More details about the conference and program are available at 
http://ievobio.org. You can also find continuous updates on the conference's 
Twitter feed at http://twitter.com/iEvoBio and Google+ page, or subscribe to 
the low-traffic iEvoBio announcements mailing list at 
http://groups.google.com/group/ievobio-announce.

iEvoBio 2012 is sponsored by the US National Evolutionary Synthesis Center 
(NESCent) and by Biomatters Ltd., in partnership with the Society for the Study 
of Evolution (SSE) and the Systematic Biologists (SSB).

The iEvoBio 2012 Organizing Committee:
Hilmar Lapp, US National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (chair)
Robert Beiko, Dalhousie University
Nico Cellinese, University of Florida and Florida Museum of Natural History
Robert Guralnick, University of Colorado at Boulder
Rebecca Kao, Denver Botanic Gardens
Ellinor Michel, Natural History Museum, London
Nadia Talent, Royal Ontario Museum
Andrea Thomer, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

(*) iEvoBio and its sponsors are dedicated to promoting the practice and 
philosophy of Open Source software development (see 
http://www.opensource.org/docs/definition.php) and reuse within the research 
community. For this reason, if a submitted talk concerns a specific software 
system for use by the research community, that software must be licensed with a 
recognized Open Source License (see http://www.opensource.org/licenses/), and 
be available for download, including source code, by a tar/zip file accessed 
through ftp/http or through a widely used version control system like cvs, 
Subversion, git, Bazaar, or Mercurial.
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