Call for Papers: The 34th International Symposium on Graph
Drawing and Network Visualization (GD 2026)
August 17-21, 2026, St. Catharines, Canada
Graph Drawing is
concerned with the geometric representation of graphs and
constitutes the algorithmic core of Network Visualization.
Graph Drawing and Network Visualization are motivated by
applications for which it is crucial to visually analyze and
interact with relational datasets. Application areas include data
science, social sciences, web computing, information systems, life
sciences, geography, business intelligence, information security,
and software engineering.
The International
Symposium on Graph Drawing and Network Visualization has been the
main annual conference in this area for more than 30 years. Its
focus is on combinatorial and algorithmic aspects of graph
drawing, their experimental evaluation, as well as the design of
network visualization systems and interfaces. Researchers and
practitioners working on any aspects of graph drawing and network
visualization are invited to contribute papers and posters and to
participate in the symposium as well as the graph drawing contest.
GD 2026 will be held at
Brock University in St. Catharines, Canada, from August 17-21,
2026. A PhD school will take place August 17-18, 2026, followed by
a reception on the evening of August 18. GD 2026 is designed to be
held on-site. It is expected that regular papers are presented on
site by one of the authors. To address global challenges and as an
offer for authors who are unable to attend, we allow for a limited
number of remote presentations, as further explained below.
Important dates
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Abstract Deadline:
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Wed May 6, 2026 (AoE)
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Paper (long and short) Deadline:
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Wed May 13, 2026 (AoE)
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Paper (long and short)
Notification:
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Wed June 24, 2026 (AoE)
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Poster Deadline:
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Wed July 8, 2026 (AoE)
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Poster Notification:
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Wed July 22, 2026 (AoE)
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Camera-ready Version (papers and
posters):
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Wed July 29, 2026 (AoE)
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Contest Deadline:
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Wed August 5, 2026 (AoE)
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PhD School:
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Mon August 17 – Tue August 18,
2026
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Symposium:
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Wed August 19 – Fri August 21,
2026
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Conferences Nearby in Time and
Location
The 38th
Canadian Conference on Computational Geometry (CCCG 2026) will be held at Lakehead University’s
Orillia Campus in Orillia, Ontario, from August 12 to 14, 2026.
Tracks
We invite authors to
submit work describing original research of theoretical or
practical significance to graph drawing and network visualization.
To promote a balanced coverage of the field, GD has two distinct
tracks, and contributions submitted to one track will not compete
with contributions submitted to the other track.
Track 1: Combinatorial and algorithmic
aspects
This track is mainly devoted to fundamental
theoretical graph drawing advances, such as combinatorial
and algorithmic aspects. We aim at covering a diverse set of
topics, which for this track includes (but is not limited to):
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Design and
analysis of graph drawing algorithms
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Geometric and
topological graph theory
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Computational
topology of graphs on surfaces
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Graph
representations
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Geometric advances
and computing in graph drawing
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Combinatorics and
optimization in graph drawing
Track 2: Experimental, applied, and
network visualization aspects
This track is mainly
devoted to conceptual and applied aspects of network
visualization in the scope of graph drawing, such as
experimental evaluations of graph drawing and network
visualization related algorithms, the development and/or
evaluation of related libraries and tools, or systems and
interfaces in different application areas. We aim at covering a
diverse set of topics, which for this track includes (but is not
limited to):
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Engineering of
graph drawing algorithms and network visualization approaches
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Interfaces,
methods, and high-quality tools for interacting with graphs
and networks
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Benchmarks and
experimental studies in the context of graph drawing and
network visualization
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Cognitive studies
on network visualization aesthetics and user interaction
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Visualization of
networks in real-world applications
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Machine learning
methods in graph drawing and network visualization
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Graph drawing
& network visualization for AI explainability and
trustworthiness
Contribution Types
Perpendicular to the
tracks, GD supports three contribution types, as well as a
contest.
Long Papers
The standard contribution
type is a long paper that describes relevant and original
research in full detail. Accepted papers in this category will be
assigned a standard time slot for presentation during the
conference.
Short Papers
In addition to
long papers, there will be a separate category for short papers.
Here, we welcome smaller and less extensive contributions on
relevant topics. Accepted papers in this category will be assigned
a shorter time for presentation during the conference.
Short papers undergo the
same competitive selection process as long papers.
Posters
Finally, we also solicit poster submissions.
Accepted posters will be presented in the poster session, and will
provide a forum for the communication of late-breaking research
results (which may also appear elsewhere) to the GD community.
Contest
The traditional Graph Drawing Contest is
held before and during the conference. Details are provided at
the website. Winning submissions will be invited by
the contest committee to submit a contest contribution,
which will appear in the proceedings.
Submission Format
The proceedings will be published in the
open-access LIPIcs series. To facilitate the process,
submissions have to be prepared in accordance with the LIPIcs author instructions. The page provides links to the LIPIcs
class file along with an example and detailed author
instructions. For the submission, the use of the LaTeX class
file gd-lipics-v3.cls is requested. The class file is a wrapper
around the standard LIPIcs class and implements line counting,
see CG-linecount.pdf for details, as well as additional
macros. Please use the \category macro to specify the track and
contribution type, and use the macros \GAIDecl and \USEDecl to
include your generative AI declaration and/or user study ethics
declaration (see "policies" below). These will be formatted as
part of the front matter, and not count towards your line limit.
Submissions must not exceed the following limits:
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500
lines for long papers,
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250
lines for short papers,
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80
lines for poster abstracts,
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100
lines for contest contributions (by invitation only).
The above limits do not
include front matter (title, authors, affiliations,
classification, etc.), acknowledgements, references, or
appendices. The class files provide line counting which should be
accurate in most cases. Authors should avoid substantial amounts
of text in unnumbered lines.
Accepted papers will have additional space
to facilitate incorporating reviewer comments.
The claims of long and
short papers should be fully substantiated. If this information
does not fit within the line limit, the authors should include it
in a clearly marked appendix, whose length is not constrained and
which the reviewers may read at their own discretion. For poster
submissions, no appendix is expected.
We also encourage authors
to avoid "et al." in citations in favor of an equal mention of the
surnames of all authors. For references with few authors, it is
recommended to name all of them; if the number of authors is
large, consider writing "(It is shown that) X [#]" or "The authors
in [#] show that X" instead of "A et al. [#] show that X".
Submission Process
Papers should be submitted electronically
via Easychair.
Authors of posters should
prepare an abstract that must be submitted together with the
poster itself. Each submission will thus consist of two pdf files
(the abstract and the poster).
Selected papers from Track 1 and Track 2
will be invited for submission to a special issue of the Journal
of Graph Algorithms and Applications (JGAA). The authors
of two selected papers in Track 2 will be invited to submit a
substantially extended and enhanced version of their work to IEEE
Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics (TVCG).
A special TVCG papers session at the Graph Drawing conference
will also feature regular TVCG papers. Further details can be
found at https://www.computer.org/digital-library/journals/tvcg/tvcg-partners-with-conferences
Policies
GD implements a number of policies.
AI policy
Authors are not prohibited from using generative AI (GAI), but are
required to be transparent about its use and are
responsible for complying with all relevant policies.
PC members
are prohibited from using GAI during the review process, because
submitted manuscripts are confidential and may not be shared
with AI platforms.
The full AI policy can be found at http://graphdrawing.org/ai.html
User Study Ethics policy
If a paper makes use of data from human
subjects, the collection and use of such data should have been
conducted carefully and should adhere to ethical
standards for responsible research practice, as well as data
protection regulations.
Code of conduct
GD is
dedicated to providing an environment that is free from
harassment, bullying, discrimination, and retaliation for all
participants, regardless of gender, gender identity and
expression, age, sexual orientation, disability, physical
appearance, body size, race, ethnicity, religion (or lack
thereof), or technology choices.
The full code of conduct can be found at http://graphdrawing.org/safetoc.html
MISC TOPICS
Lightweight Double-Blind Review
Process
The review process of long
and short papers will be handled in a lightweight double-blind
mode. This means that authors are not allowed to reveal
their identity in the submitted paper, but are free to disseminate
draft versions of the paper prior to the conference and to give
talks on the topic as they normally would. In particular, the
submitted paper should not contain the authors’ names,
affiliations, and email addresses. References to their own related
work are allowed, as long as the supporting text maintains
anonymity (e.g., using sentences in the third person). Members of
the Program Committee will not have the identity of the authors of
any paper revealed to them during the entire review process. To
handle conflicts of interest effectively, authors will be required
to declare conflicts of interest with PC members when they submit
their paper.
Poster submissions will be
evaluated by the Program Committee in a single-blind mode.
In particular, the submitted abstract should contain the authors’
names, affiliations, and email addresses.
Awards
For each of the two
tracks, the Program Committee of GD 2026 will bestow a Best
Paper Award. In addition, to recognize the effort of
participants to present their work and to prepare their posters in
a clear and elegant way, there will be a Best Presentation
Award and a Best Poster Award voted on by the GD
2026 attendees. Finally, there will be awards for the best
submissions in the Graph Drawing Contest, decided
independently by the Contest Committee.
Remote Presentation
GD 2026 is an in-person
meeting. Authors of accepted papers are expected to present their
results at the conference. For people who for legitimate reasons
cannot participate in person we offer the possibility for remote
presentation. To this end, authors may indicate their
preference for a remote presentation at the time of submitting
their article. Such papers are evaluated and selected by the
program committee by applying the same high standards as for the
other papers. There is a limit of at most four remote
presentations. In case of more requests, decisions may depend on
the validity of the reasons mentioned. In all cases, an author of
each remote presentation has to register for the conference.
Rules for Submission
Results that have been
previously published (or are scheduled for publication) in another
conference proceedings or journal, as well as simultaneous
submissions of results to other conferences with published
proceedings or journals are not permitted, except for poster
submissions. With the exception of remote presentations, each
paper or poster must be presented at the conference by an author,
otherwise the paper can be excluded from publication in the
proceedings.