President's Message

Early birds get rapid responses on meeting abstracts

Gerald Hart
Aug. 1, 2019

Three days before the start of the 2019 American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Annual Meeting in Orlando, the society headquarters received an urgent request.

“I am writing to you to beg for your help. My visa is still under administrative processing as of today,” wrote a graduate student in the Philippines who’d won one of our travel awards. “Your intervention just might be the needed thing to take this arduous process to its end.”

This is a common story. Visa processing times vary wildly around the globe. Many prospective international attendees spend months worrying that they won’t make it through all the hoops in time to present their work in the U.S. Some don’t make it at all.

It is my hope that a new ASBMB program will help alleviate some of the stress associated with securing visas for our annual meeting and will make our meeting more accessible.

Here’s how it works: The Experimental Biology abstract-submission system opens in September. If you submit an abstract in an ASBMB category by Oct. 15, we’ll let you know within two weeks of your submission date whether it has been accepted. That should give you about six months to make travel arrangements.

The regular abstract deadline won’t be until November, as it is every year. Those who submit abstracts after the Oct. 15 priority-decision cutoff will have to wait until early 2020 to find out if they’ve been chosen to present their work.

If your abstract is accepted early through the priority-decision program, you still will need to wait until early 2020 to find out what type of presentation you’ll be giving (either a talk or a poster). But at least you’ll be able to start making travel plans.

You don’t have to be a researcher from outside the U.S. to benefit from the priority-decision program. Indeed, all early-bird scientists are welcome to participate.

As for the graduate student I mentioned above, I am glad to report that he did make it to Orlando to present his research, and he says he plans to be at the 2020 meeting.

The priority-decision program won’t solve everyone’s visa-related problems, but I’m hopeful that it will open the door for more scientists from around the world who want to present their important biochemistry and molecular biology research at our meeting.

Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition monthly.

Learn more
Gerald Hart

Gerald Hart is a professor and Georgia Research Alliance eminent scholar at the University of Georgia. He is a former president of the ASBMB.

Featured jobs

from the ASBMB career center

Get the latest from ASBMB Today

Enter your email address, and we’ll send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in Careers

Careers highlights or most popular articles

Close out ASBMB 2026 with a bang
Annual Meeting

Close out ASBMB 2026 with a bang

Feb. 9, 2026

The closing reception of the 2026 ASBMB Annual Meeting will be held at the Torpedo Factory Art Center in Alexandra, Virginia.

Redefining lipid biology from droplets to ferroptosis
Award

Redefining lipid biology from droplets to ferroptosis

Feb. 5, 2026

James Olzmann will receive the ASBMB Avanti Award in Lipids at the ASBMB Annual Meeting, March 7–10, just outside of Washington, D.C.

Creating change in biochemistry education
Award

Creating change in biochemistry education

Feb. 3, 2026

Pamela Mertz will receive the ASBMB William C. Rose Award for Exemplary Contributions to Education at the ASBMB Annual Meeting, March 7-10 in Washington, D.C.

Trainee mentorship as immortality
Award

Trainee mentorship as immortality

Jan. 29, 2026

Suzanne Barbour will receive the ASBMB Sustained Leadership Award at the ASBMB Annual Meeting, March 7-10 in Washington, D.C.

Upcoming opportunities
Announcement

Upcoming opportunities

Jan. 28, 2026

Join us Feb. 5! The monthly ASBMB Transcription Webinars aim to facilitate knowledge exchange and collaboration among researchers in the fields of transcription, chromatin and epigenetics.

Life in four dimensions: When biology outpaces the brain
Profile

Life in four dimensions: When biology outpaces the brain

Jan. 27, 2026

Nobel laureate Eric Betzig will discuss his research on information transfer in biology from proteins to organisms at the 2026 ASBMB Annual Meeting.