The Federation of Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopy Societies (FACSS, Santa Fe, New Mexico) has changed the name of its 38-year-old annual conference from the eponymous FACSS to SCIX, with the tagline "The Great Scientific Exchange."
The Federation of Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopy Societies (FACSS, Santa Fe, New Mexico) has changed the name of its 38-year-old annual conference from the eponymous FACSS to SCIX, with the tagline “The Great Scientific Exchange.”
The drivers for changing the name, meeting organizers said, was to reflect the strength of its core areas in addition to the conference’s recent expansion to cover a broader range of topics. “Over the past five to 10 years, we have really solidified our programming in traditional topics in addition to developing new areas, such as separation science, process analysis and control, micro and nano fluidics, electrophoresis, forensic field work, and biomedical analysis,” said Mark Hayes, conference marketing chair. “So we wanted a name that conveys that the breadth of our programming, particularly for new scientists who may practice analytical chemistry or spectroscopy but come out of another discipline, such as medicine, physics, or engineering.”
In an open letter to attendees, Hayes and three other members of the society’s governing board also emphasized that the new name conveys that the meeting facilitates scientific exchange, both within and across disciplines, through a variety of networking events and because the meeting is still small enough to have an intimate feel. “If you see a great talk you can be assured that you can speak with the author — quite a benefit compared to much larger multi-topic conferences,” they said.
The change was announced with great fanfare at the opening reception of this year’s conference, held in Reno, Nevada, October 2-7. After the meeting organizers announced the change and showed a video (http://scixconference.org/scix-video.html) and asked all attendees to pick up a new conference name badge and a free t-shirt, both bearing the new conference name and logo.
The newly named SCIX conference is the annual national meeting of the Society for Applied Spectroscopy (SAS) and starting in 2012 SCIX will also be coprogrammed with the North American Symposium on Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (NASLIBS).
FACSS is a federation of seven nonprofit scientific organizations, including the American Chemical Society’s Division of Analytical Chemistry, the American Society of Mass Spectrometry, SAS, the Coblentz Society, the International Society of Automation’s Analysis Division, the Royal Society of Chemistry, and the Association of Analytical Chemists.
New Fluorescence Model Enhances Aflatoxin Detection in Vegetable Oils
March 12th 2025A research team from Nanjing University of Finance and Economics has developed a new analytical model using fluorescence spectroscopy and neural networks to improve the detection of aflatoxin B1 (AFB1) in vegetable oils. The model effectively restores AFB1’s intrinsic fluorescence by accounting for absorption and scattering interferences from oil matrices, enhancing the accuracy and efficiency for food safety testing.
New Study Shows FT-MIR Spectroscopy Can Authenticate Parmigiano Reggiano Farming Practices
March 11th 2025A new study published in the Journal of Dairy Science demonstrates that FT-MIR spectroscopy can effectively authenticate farming practices and dairy systems in Parmigiano Reggiano production but has limited ability to verify animal welfare parameters.
Advancing NIR and Imaging Spectroscopy in Food and Bioanalysis
March 11th 2025Our full-length interview with Huck covers more than just NIR spectroscopy in food and bio analysis. Spectroscopy sat down with Huck to also discuss current trends going on in spectroscopy, delving into what challenges spectroscopists face today and how they can solve these concerns.
The State of Forensic Science: Previewing an Upcoming AAFS Video Series
March 10th 2025Here, we provide a preview of our upcoming multi-day video series that will focus on recapping the American Academy of Forensic Sciences Conference, as well as documenting the current state of the forensic science industry.