A thorough understanding of attendees and their specific needs is crucial for designing conferences that are both relevant and effective. Thus, in summer 2024, we conducted a survey on researchers’ perceptions of and expectations towards scientific conferences. The survey was also distributed to the IAGA community, and you might have participated in it. Thank you very much for your contribution!
Survey participants considered scientific conferences useful and important. In particular, participants expected to explore research objectives and network at their next planned conference. Participants’ expectations of what to gain at their next planned conference largely did not differ between conference formats. The only exception were participants’ networking expectations, as virtual participants had lower expectations to network than in-person participants (Figure 1). Based on this, it can be argued that differences between in-person conferences and alternative formats become marginal once virtual and hybrid conferences can enable effective networking.
Participants’ conference expectations differed based on individual characteristics, such as career stage, geographical context, and personal circumstances, revealing that not all researchers need the same of conferences. Networking was the only factor that all participants expected to benefit from, highlighting that this is universally valued across all researchers and career stages.
Early-career researchers had higher expectations regarding acquiring general information, career development and securing scientific follow-up opportunities compared to senior researchers. Simultaneously, researchers from the Global South had higher expectations to acquire general information, explore research objectives and secure scientific follow-up opportunities compared to their researchers from the Global North. Furthermore, disadvantaged researchers (defined as those facing challenges with visa restrictions, childcare responsibilities, funding, and disabilities) had higher expectations for acquiring general information, career development and securing scientific follow-up opportunities compared to more privileged researchers. This highlights that researchers who are typically underrepresented and disadvantaged in traditional in-person conferences often stand to benefit the most from attending, as they pursue outcomes that go beyond networking.
Overall, the results highlight the potential of virtual and hybrid conference formats to meet the diverse expectations of researchers while significantly reducing travel-related greenhouse gas emissions and enhancing inclusivity by removing barriers like funding and visa restrictions. Virtual and hybrid formats can currently effectively address many conference objectives, except for networking, which requires innovative tools to support informal exchanges. To transition toward sustainable practices, conference organizers should define clear goals, adopt purpose-driven formats, and invest in advanced technologies that cater to diverse researcher needs. These changes can align conferences with environmental and social sustainability goals while addressing the evolving needs of the global research community.
Annex
The results of the survey will be published in a research article that is currently under review. Supplementary Table 1 provides a description of the survey sample, while Supplementary Table 2 presents regression results analysing differences in researchers’ expectations based on individual characteristics.
Supplementary Table 1. Sample description of the 820 participants working in academia and researchVariable |
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Career stage
Scientific field
Employment continent
Nationality (by continents) | Undergraduate / master’s student Doctoral / PhD student Postdoc / early-career researcher Professor / scientific group leader > 10 years Retired researcher Natural sciences Engineering and technology Medical and health sciences Humanities and arts Social sciences Asia Africa Europe North America South America Oceania Asia Africa Europe North America South America Oceania | 1.34% 26.46% 26.34% 36.34% 1.83% 35.37% 7.32% 5.00% 6.83% 44.02% 5.24% 3.78% 66.22% 17.20% 1.46% 4.76% 7.80% 4.15% 60.61% 17.32% 4.15% 3.78% |
Independent variables | Networking | Acquiring general information | Exploring research objectives |
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| β | SE | t | p | β | SE | t | p | β | SE | t | p | ||||||||||
Intercept | 5.764 | .151 | 38.245 | < .001 | 4.701 | .198 | 23.746 | < .001 | 5.807 | .134 | 43.331 | < .001 | ||||||||||
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Career stage (0: ECR, 1: Seniors) | .068 | .067 | 1.007 | .314 | -.659 | .088 | -7.447 | < .001 | .037 | .060 | .614 | .539 | ||||||||||
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Scientific field (0: Non-STEM, 1: STEM) | -.072 | .068 | -1.061 | .289 | .276 | .089 | 3.109 | .002 | .129 | .060 | 2.141 | .033 | ||||||||||
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Employment continent (0: Global South, 1: North) | -.052 | .111 | -.468 | .640 | -.631 | .145 | -4.348 | < .001 | -2.37 | .098 | -2.424 | .016 | ||||||||||
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Gender (0: Female, 1: Male) | -.076 | .067 | -1.133 | .258 | -.118 | .088 | -1.334 | .183 | -.099 | .060 | -1.656 | .098 | ||||||||||
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Fieldwork involvement (0: No, 1: Yes) | .142 | .068 | 2.084 | .038 | .244 | .089 | 2.729 | .007 | .075 | .060 | 1.232 | .218 | ||||||||||
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Disadvantaged status (0: No, 1: Yes) | .006 | .079 | .075 | .940 | .420 | .103 | 4.071 | < .001 | .122 | .070 | 1.743 | .082 | ||||||||||
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Conference scale (0: Continental, 1: Intercontinental) | .117 | .067 | .075 | .940 | .055 | .088 | .619 | .536 | .306 | .060 | 5.122 | < .001 | ||||||||||
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Regression Model | F(7,641) = 2.00, p = .053, R2 adjusted = .02 | F(7,641) = 17.16, p < 0.001, R2 adjusted = .15 | F(7,641) = 6.82, p < 0.001, R2 adjusted = .06 |
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Independent variables | Career development | Securing scientific follow-up opportunities |
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| β | SE | t | p | β | SE | t | p |
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Intercept | 5.631 | .187 | 30.171 | < .001 | 4.068 | .185 | 21.936 | < .001 |
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Career stage (0: ECR, 1: Seniors) | -.477 | .083 | -5.720 | < .001 | -.195 | .083 | -2.357 | .019 |
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Scientific field (0: Non-STEM, 1: STEM) | -.013 | .084 | -.158 | .874 | .331 | .083 | 3.977 | < .001 |
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Employment continent (0: Global South, 1: Global North) | -.267 | .137 | -2.948 | .052 | -.703 | .136 | -5.172 | < .001 |
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Gender (0: Female, 1: Male) | -.173 | .083 | -2.081 | .038 | .049 | .083 | .592 | .554 |
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Fieldwork involvement (0: No, 1: Yes) | -.103 | .084 | -1.222 | .222 | .244 | .084 | 2.919 | .004 |
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Disadvantaged status (0: No, 1: Yes) | .355 | .097 | 3.652 | < .001 | .318 | .097 | 3.288 | .001 |
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Conference scale (0: Continental, 1: Intercontinental) | .107 | .083 | 1.292 | .197 | .223 | .083 | 2.695 | .007 |
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Regression Model | F(7,641) = 8.58, p < 0.001, R2 adjusted = .08 | F(7,641) = 11.88, p < 0.001, R2 adjusted = .11 |
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The survey is conducted by Ariane Wenger, a doctoral student at the Transdisciplinarity Lab (TdLab), Department of Environmental Systems Sciences (D-USYS), ETH Zurich, Switzerland. In case of questions or comments, feel free to contact her via e-mail: ariane.wenger@usys.ethz.ch.
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