• Virtual conferences are better for the e

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Thu Dec 9 21:30:44 2021
    Virtual conferences are better for the environment and more inclusive


    Date:
    December 9, 2021
    Source:
    University of Texas at Austin
    Summary:
    A research team led by engineers found that virtual conferences
    are more inclusive than in-person events, and also carry a smaller
    environmental footprint.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    The COVID-19 pandemic brought work travel and in-person conferences to
    a halt, but new research finds this shift has made it easier for more
    people who could not previously attend these events to participate and
    lowered their environmental footprint.


    ==========================================================================
    A research team led by engineers from The University of Texas at Austin analyzed several science conferences that first went virtual during
    the early months of the pandemic. In a new paper, published today
    in Nature Sustainability, the researchers examined the environmental,
    social and economic costs of virtual conferences compared with in-person
    events and analyzed how the shift online altered participation by women, early-career researchers and scientists from underrepresented institutions
    and countries.

    The study found that virtual events lower costs and reduce time and
    travel commitments that have previously held some conferences back from attracting diverse groups of attendees. Also, the environmental costs of hundreds or thousands of people flying from around the world to attend
    a conference are eliminated.

    "When we went virtual, it brought a lot more voices to the table that
    just weren't able to be there for in-person events because of cost,
    time and other reasons," said Kasey Faust, an assistant professor in the Cockrell School of Engineering's Department of Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering.

    The cost of in-person attendance for scientists from Africa to several
    recent conferences was on average between 80% and 250% of their country's annual per person gross domestic product, compared with approximately 3%
    of per capita gross domestic product for U.S. participants.

    In addition to cost, in-person events also require tremendous investments
    in time. These events require travel, often last multiple days and take
    up all of attendees' time while they are there.



    ==========================================================================
    This can be a major challenge, particularly for women. For many younger workers, this period of life tends to fall around the time many are having children. This makes getting away to conferences challenging for women,
    said Faust, who also has two young children.

    Women's participation in virtual conferences increased as much as 253%
    compared with previous, in-person conferences, according to the study. And
    when looking at academia, attendance by students and postdoctoral scholars increased as much as 344%.

    The scale of the climate impact is also staggering. The researchers
    estimate that just a single attendee of an in-person conference in 2019, averaged over the conferences analyzed, had the same environmental
    footprint as 7,000 virtual conference attendees.

    The researchers said virtual events open up opportunities for greater international participation, which is limited by cost and travel
    documentation.

    For instance, one woman in the study who is a mother of small children
    said that she did not have the needed travel documents to travel outside
    her country, keeping her from attending conferences around the world.

    "She could network more than she has ever networked in the last year,
    and that never would have happened with an in-person conference,"
    said Manish Kumar, an associate professor in the Department of Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering.

    The team includes researchers from UT Austin, University of Ottawa,
    Arizona State University, Cornell University, University of Notre
    Dame and University of Southern California. The study was initially
    launched to evaluate the unexpectedly successful North American Membrane Society (NAMS) annual meeting in May 2020, one of the first engineering conferences to go virtual. The authors expanded the study to compare
    in-person with virtual attendance at the NAMS meeting and several other engineering conferences.

    The study found many benefits to virtual conferences, but challenges
    remain.

    Among them are a lack of engagement and missing out on in-person
    networking.

    Approximately 75% of attendees at one scientific conference and 96%
    at another said they preferred in-person networking, and that virtual
    sessions felt inauthentic and contrived.

    In-person conferences are beginning to return, but the researchers expect
    many events to create hybrid offerings, potentially at lower prices.

    "Tech companies are already doing this with their events," Kumar
    said. "Smart people will hybridize their events at least to some extent." ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Texas_at_Austin. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Matthew Skiles, Euijin Yang, Orad Reshef, Diego Robalino Mun~oz,
    Diana
    Cintron, Mary Laura Lind, Alexander Rush, Patricia Perez
    Calleja, Robert Nerenberg, Andrea Armani, Kasey M. Faust,
    Manish Kumar. Conference demographics and footprint changed
    by virtual platforms. Nature Sustainability, 2021; DOI:
    10.1038/s41893-021-00823-2 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/12/211209201706.htm

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