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Main Authors: Curtin, Alice P., Anna-Thomas, Reshma, Cook, Amanda M., Cruz-Vinaccia, Carolina, Hessels, Jason, Main, Robert, Marazuela, Inés Pastor, Rhodes, Lauren, Shah, Vishwangi
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.14357
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author Curtin, Alice P.
Anna-Thomas, Reshma
Cook, Amanda M.
Cruz-Vinaccia, Carolina
Hessels, Jason
Main, Robert
Marazuela, Inés Pastor
Rhodes, Lauren
Shah, Vishwangi
author_facet Curtin, Alice P.
Anna-Thomas, Reshma
Cook, Amanda M.
Cruz-Vinaccia, Carolina
Hessels, Jason
Main, Robert
Marazuela, Inés Pastor
Rhodes, Lauren
Shah, Vishwangi
contents The rapid expansion of the Fast Radio Burst (FRB) field has been accompanied by a simultaneous growth of FRB conferences. While these meetings are essential for interacting with other researchers and establishing collaborations, many remain only accessible to those with substantial travel funding, flexible schedules, or geographical proximity. This introduces barriers that predominantly affect early career researchers (ECRs) and people from under-resourced regions, limiting the growth, diversity, and sustainability of the community. To address these issues, the FRB 2025 conference, held in Montréal in July 2025 with over 200 participants, was designed to prioritize inclusivity and accessibility alongside scientific excellence. In this work, we describe how we implemented these goals, including: organizing committees spearheaded by ECRs, a fully hybrid format including YouTube livestreams, low registration fees, a pedagogical day at the beginning of the conference, local vegetarian catering, and the implementation of flash-talks instead of posters. From a post-conference survey of participants, we were able to assess the effectiveness of our initiatives. Notably, we received very positive feedback from the online participants, which amounted to roughly half of the attendees, especially regarding the livestreams and talk recordings. The pedagogical day was also greatly appreciated. The low registration fees naturally led to challenges, in particular with the audio-visual management, and although areas for improvement were noted, such as poster sessions and support for attendees requiring visas, the conference was generally viewed as a success. Our experience demonstrates that highly accessible, hybrid conferences are possible within modest budgets ($\$20$k CAD), and we outline recommendations for future conferences, both in the FRB field and in other domains.
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id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2601_14357
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle One Attempt at Building an Inclusive & Accessible Hybrid Astronomy Conference: FRB 2025
Curtin, Alice P.
Anna-Thomas, Reshma
Cook, Amanda M.
Cruz-Vinaccia, Carolina
Hessels, Jason
Main, Robert
Marazuela, Inés Pastor
Rhodes, Lauren
Shah, Vishwangi
Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
The rapid expansion of the Fast Radio Burst (FRB) field has been accompanied by a simultaneous growth of FRB conferences. While these meetings are essential for interacting with other researchers and establishing collaborations, many remain only accessible to those with substantial travel funding, flexible schedules, or geographical proximity. This introduces barriers that predominantly affect early career researchers (ECRs) and people from under-resourced regions, limiting the growth, diversity, and sustainability of the community. To address these issues, the FRB 2025 conference, held in Montréal in July 2025 with over 200 participants, was designed to prioritize inclusivity and accessibility alongside scientific excellence. In this work, we describe how we implemented these goals, including: organizing committees spearheaded by ECRs, a fully hybrid format including YouTube livestreams, low registration fees, a pedagogical day at the beginning of the conference, local vegetarian catering, and the implementation of flash-talks instead of posters. From a post-conference survey of participants, we were able to assess the effectiveness of our initiatives. Notably, we received very positive feedback from the online participants, which amounted to roughly half of the attendees, especially regarding the livestreams and talk recordings. The pedagogical day was also greatly appreciated. The low registration fees naturally led to challenges, in particular with the audio-visual management, and although areas for improvement were noted, such as poster sessions and support for attendees requiring visas, the conference was generally viewed as a success. Our experience demonstrates that highly accessible, hybrid conferences are possible within modest budgets ($\$20$k CAD), and we outline recommendations for future conferences, both in the FRB field and in other domains.
title One Attempt at Building an Inclusive & Accessible Hybrid Astronomy Conference: FRB 2025
topic Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.14357