====================== Call for Papers ======================
SAC'18 - ACM 2018 Symposium on Applied Computing
Technical Track
PAPP - Practical Aspects of High-Level Parallel Programming
Pau, France
April 9-13, 2018
http://frederic.loulergue.eu/PAPP2018
=============================================================
AIMS & SCOPE
Nowadays parallel architectures are everywhere. However parallel
programming is still reserved to experienced programmers. The trend is
towards the increase of cores in processors and the number of
processors in multiprocessor machines: The need for scalable computing
is everywhere. But parallel and distributed programming is still
dominated by low-level techniques such as send/receive message passing
and POSIX threads. Thus high-level approaches should play a key role
in the shift to scalable computing in every computer.
Algorithmic skeletons (Google's MapReduce being the most well-known
skeletal parallelism approach), parallel extensions of functional
languages such as Haskell and ML, parallel logic and constraint
programming, parallel execution of declarative programs such as SQL
queries, genericity and meta-programming in object-oriented languages,
etc. have produced methods and tools that improve the
price/performance ratio of parallel software, and broaden the range of
target applications. Also, high level languages offer a high degree of
abstraction which ease the development of complex systems. Moreover,
being based on formal semantics, it is possible to certify the
correctness of critical parts of the applications. The aim of all
these languages and tools is to improve and ease the development of
applications (safety, expressivity, efficiency, etc.).
The PAPP track is aimed both at researchers involved in the
development of high level approaches for parallel computing and
engineers and researchers who are potential users of these languages
and tools.
PAPP is no longer a workshop but is a track of ACM Symposium on
Applied Computing, the flagship conference of ACM Special Interest
Group on Applied Computing (SIGAPP). ACM SAC is ranked A1 in the
Qualis ranking. The acceptance rate of recent SAC is around 25%.
TOPICS
We welcome submission of original, unpublished papers in English on
topics including:
- design, implementation and optimisation of high-level programming
languages,
- algorithms and high-level models (CGM, BSP, LogP, MapReduce,...),
- artificial intelligence, software engineering and formal methods
applied to high-level parallel programming,
- middleware and tools: performance predictors, visualisations of
abstract behaviour, automatic hot-spot detectors, high-level
resource managers, compilers, automatic generators, etc.,
- applications of high-level approaches, benchmarks and experiments.
The PAPP track focuses on practical aspects of high-level parallel
programming but it welcomes topics of mostly theoretical nature,
provided there is clear practical potential in applying the results of
such work.
PAPER SUBMISSION AND PUBLICATION
Paper submissions must be original, unpublished work. Submissions
should be in electronic format, via the link provided at SAC web page
(http://www.acm.org/conferences/sac/sac2017).
Author(s) name(s) and address(es) must not appear in the body of the
paper, and self-reference should be avoided and made in the third
person. Submitted papers will undergo a blind review process.
Paper registration is required, allowing the inclusion of the
paper/poster in the conference proceedings. An author or a proxy
attending SAC MUST present the paper: This is a requirement for the
paper/poster to be included in the ACM/IEEE digital library. No-show
of scheduled papers and posters will result in excluding them from the
ACM/IEEE digital library.
SAC 2018 will also hold a Student Research Competition (SRC). To enter
this in the area of PAPP, please submit via the link at SAC web page.
IMPORTANT DATES
Paper Submission: Sep 15, 2017
SRC Abstract Submission: Sep 15, 2017
Paper/SRC Notifications: Nov 10, 2017
Camera-Ready Copies: Nov 25, 2017
TRACK PROGRAMME COMMITTEE
Marco Aldinucci (University of Torino, Italy)
Mohamad Al Hajj Hassan (Huawei, Germany)
Mathias Bourgoin (LIFO, Université d'Orléans, France)
Inês de Castro Dutra (Universidade do Porto, Portugal)
Kento Emoto (Kyushu Institute of Technology, Japan)
Alexandros Gerbessiotis (NJIT, USA)
Khaled Hamidouche (AMD Research, USA)
Geoff Hamilton (Dublin City University, Ireland)
Hideya Iwasaki (The University of Electro-Communications, Japan)
Herbert Kuchen (Westfälische Wilhems-Universität Münster, Germany)
Arnaud Lallouet (Huawei Technologies France)
Frédéric Loulergue, Track Chair (Northern Arizona University, USA)
Virginia Niculescu (Babes Bolya University, Romania)
Susanna Pelagatti (University of Pisa, Italy)
Md. Wasi-ur Rahman (Intel, USA)
Jean Charles Régin (Université de Nice Sophia Antipolis, France)
Christian Schute (KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden)
Julien Tesson (Université Paris-Est Créteil, France)
--
Dr. Frederic Loulergue
Professor
School of Informatics, Computing, and Cyber Systems
Northern Arizona University
Home: http://nau.edu/SICCS/Faculty/Frederic-Loulergue
Phone: +1 928-523-5044
--
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