From first-time competitor to confident modeler.

A six-month roadmap built around the COMAP HiMCM contest: learn the methods, study every past problem, drill on original mock prompts, and ship a paper the judges actually want to read.

Start the 6-month plan → What is HiMCM?
Nov 4–172026 contest window
14 daysto choose, model, write
25 pagesPDF, 12-pt font
~1%earn Outstanding

What this site covers

Everything Barry needs in one place. Each module is a stand-alone page, but they're also stitched together as weeks in the six-month plan. Pick where to start based on what you need today.

Suggested reading order

  1. Get oriented. Read About the contest end-to-end and skim two recent problems on the Past problems page so you have a sense of what 25 pages of analysis actually look like.
  2. Learn the paper. The structure of a HiMCM solution is fixed. Go through Anatomy of a winning paper next so every later technique has a place to land.
  3. Build the toolkit. Work through the modeling catalogue on Techniques and the matching code in the Python toolkit. Do small drills as you go.
  4. Practice on real problems. Pick a past problem and write a 5-page partial solution in a weekend. Compare against the judges' commentary linked from each problem page.
  5. Run a full mock. Once a month between July and October, do one mock problem under contest-like conditions (no outside help, 4 days, write the full paper).
  6. Final push. The six-month plan ramps to a dress-rehearsal in late October and the live contest Nov 4–17.

A few things judges actually reward

From COMAP's published judges' commentaries on Finalist and Outstanding papers:

Each of these is unpacked in detail on the paper page.

Big-picture reminders

Contest dates. The 2026 HiMCM runs from Wednesday, November 4, 2026 (window opens 3:01 pm EST) through Tuesday, November 17, 2026 (submissions close 9:00 pm EST). Teams choose either Problem A or Problem B and have up to 14 days to work on it.
Communication rule. Once the window opens you may not discuss the problem with anyone outside your team — not your advisor, not other students, no chat rooms, no Discord, no Weibo, no social media. You can use any "inanimate" source (books, websites, datasets, papers, code libraries), and you must cite them.
AI tools. Permitted, but every use must be declared in a separate "Report on Use of AI" appendix that doesn't count toward the 25-page limit. The contents (model used, prompts, outputs) must be reproduced.