- Meetings
- Neuroscience 2018
- Abstracts
- Sessioning Process
Sessioning Process
How Sessions are Created
Abstracts submitted for presentation in poster or nanosymposium sessions are reviewed by the Program Committee in May. First authors will receive email notifications with their abstract's session assignment in late-June. Abstracts are assigned, divided, and sessioned as follows:
- Assigned: Abstracts in a given group of topics are assigned to a committee member.
- Divided: Within each topic, abstracts are divided according to the author's presentation preference and any linking group requests. The committee assigns abstracts to sessions so the scientific program is as strong as possible. The primary goal is session coherence; author presentation preference (nanosymposium or poster) is secondary. In many cases, a nanosymposium preference is honored. When this is not possible, the abstracts are shifted to a poster format.
- Sessioned: Committee members group abstracts into sessions. Sessioning assignments are final, and changes are not possible. The final criterion is always an abstract's relevance to a session.
Linking Groups
To improve program coherence, the abstract submission system allows submitters to create and join linking groups. To link your abstract with another abstract or a group of abstracts, use the "Linking Groups" function in the abstract submission system to create or join a group. Note the following:
- Use the Abstract Topic Matching Forum. The Abstract Topic Matching Forum on Neuronline is a great resource for connecting with other neuroscientists in your field and forming diverse linking groups.
- Use the Special Linking Group Report. This report is available only within the abstract submission site and lists all linking groups that have been created by abstract submitters. Review this report to see if there are any groups related to your research that you may be interested in joining. The report is available within the Linking Group step of abstract submission.
- Propose your own nanosymposium. Use linking groups to suggest your group of abstracts for a nanosymposium. Creating a nanosymposium linking group will increase the chances that your request to present in a nanosymposium is honored. No more than two abstracts from any one lab should be in a given nanosymposium linking group. No more than 14 abstracts should be included in a nanosymposium linking group.
- Propose your own poster session. Use linking groups to indicate to the Program Committee that you wish to be sessioned with your colleagues in the same poster session. No more than 20 abstracts should be included in a poster session linking group.
- Grouping requests are not guaranteed. The Program Committee will consider your abstract grouping request during the session building process. However, this request is not guaranteed. The committee reserves the right to move abstracts in proposed groups to different sessions, re-order the abstracts within each session, and add other appropriate abstracts to any session.
- Keep groups consistent. All abstracts in a group must select the same theme and topic and presentation preference for group consideration. If these fields are marked differently, the abstract will likely be sessioned apart from the group.