Accepted contributions
- Oswin Aichholzer, Hugo A. Akitaya, Anna Brötzner, Peter Kramer, Christian Rieck, and Frederick Stock
Visualizing the CG Community
- Sándor Fekete, Malte Hoffmann, Chek-Manh Loi, and Michael Perk
Tracking a Set of Moving Objects with Minimal Peak Power
- Sándor Fekete, Phillip Keldenich, Michael Perk, and Tobias Wallner
Scalable Algorithmic Methods for Simulating Heavy-Rain Events
- Auguste Gezalyan, Hridhaan Banerjee, Megan Hunleth, June Cagan, Veena Kailad, Chaewoon Kyoung, Yasmine Tajeddin, Kelin Zhu, Soren Brown, Rowan Shigeno, Andrew Wagger, and David Mount
Visualizing Higher Order Structures, Overlap Regions, and Clustering in the Hilbert geometry
- Hugo A. Akitaya, Joseph Dorfer, Peter Kramer, Christian Rieck, Soham Samanta, Gabriel Shahrouzi, and Frederick Stock
Sliding Cubes in Parallel
- Carlos Alegría, Ioannis Mantas, Marko Savić, and Martin Suderland
Interactive uniform floodlight illumination and rotating rays Voronoi diagrams
- Batsambuu Batbold and Lori Ziegelmeier
From Chaos to Continents: Voronoi-Based Procedural Terrain Generation with Hydrology and 3D Visualization
- Soham Samanta, Hugo Akitaya, Erik Demaine, and Martin Demaine
Interactive Visualization and Verification Tools for Tesseract Path Unfoldings
- Auguste Gezalyan, June Cagan, David Mount, Gitan Balogh, Bea Fatima, Danesh Sivakumar, Arushi Srinivasan, Yixuan Sun, and Vahe Zaprosyan
Proximity Alert: Ipelets for Neighborhood Graphs and Clustering
Media, Visualizations, and Geometric Art are sought for the 35th International Computational Geometry Media Exposition (CG:ME), which will take place as part of Computational Geometry Week 2026 at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, USA, June 2-5, 2026. Submissions showcase creative approaches to illustrate research and/or support education in computational geometry.
CG:ME 2026 conference web page: https://cgweek26.computational-geometry.org/
CG:ME 2026 EasyChair submission page: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=cgme2026
Submission
Submissions will be handled through EasyChair. Submit a paper in PDF which details your multimedia contribution and, where applicable, the techniques used in your work.
The paper should include the following elements:
- An explanation of the connection your submission has to computational geometry, broadly interpreted.
- An image of your work should appear in the paper. For instance, if the work is an app, ipelet, or video, include a screenshot to give an impression of the multimedia submission. If it is a work of art, include a picture in the paper.
- A link to a portfolio of your work, such as images, video, link to interactive apps, etc. For example, if your contribution is a video, we recommend posting it to YouTube (you can leave it unlisted so only those with the link can view it). You may also use an online file service such as Dropbox or Google Drive to share the portfolio files. In the final proceedings, your initial link will be replaced with an archival link at computational-geometry.org.
Acceptance is based on both the portfolio and the accompanying paper. Accepted contributions will be published as Media Exposition papers in the LIPIcs proceedings of the Symposium on Computational Geometry.
Authors are encouraged to contact the PC chairs Lori Ziegelmeier (lziegel1@macalester.edu) and Joseph O’Rourke (jorourke@smith.edu) early in the process to get feedback on their planned submissions.
Dates
- February 13-24, 2026: Submission window open
- March 6, 2026: Notification of acceptance
- March 27, 2026: Final version of paper
- April 10, 2026: Final version of media portfolio
- June 2-5, 2026: CG Week 2026
Note that this year, we are using a rolling submission window. The PC will try to notify authors of acceptance or rejection within 10 days of submission. The purpose is to ensure that those needing early acceptance (say for visas) can be notified early. All deadlines are at 11:59pm (23:59), AoE (Anywhere on Earth).
Technical details
Portfolio submissions are limited to 100 MB. Authors are free to post higher quality versions on their own web sites or other platforms, and we will include links in the electronic proceedings to their version, in addition to the official version (<100 MB) archived on the Computational Geometry pages.
Videos should be 720p or better, using H.264, where the embedded audio stream should be AAC of at least 128kBit/s. Authors are encouraged to post the videos (public or unlisted) on a video sharing service.
Submissions must be formatted according to the same style file as regular SoCG submissions and not exceed 100 lines, excluding front matter and references. Unlike SoCG, CG:ME is not employing double-blind submissions this year. To ensure an accurate line counting, authors must use the LaTeX class file socg-lipics-v2021, which is a wrapper around the standard LIPIcs class, see these guidelines.
Program committee
- Hugo Akitaya (University of Massachusetts Lowell)
- Maarten Löffler (Utrecht University)
- Greg Malen (Skidmore College)
- Joseph O'Rourke (co-chair) (Smith College)
- Ryuhei Uehara (JAIST)
- Elena Wang (University of Fribourg)
- Alexandra Wesolek (University Potsdam)
- Lori Ziegelmeier (chair) (Macalester College)