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CBSE 2012 : ACM SIGSOFT Symposium on Component Based Software EngineeringConference Series : Component-Based Software Engineering | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://cbse-conferences.org/2012 | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
The 15th International ACM SIGSOFT Symposium on Component Based Software Engineering (CBSE-2012)
Bertinoro, Italy, June 26-28, 2012. http://cbse-conferences.org/2012/ CBSE is an ACM SIGSOFT event, part of the CompArch federated conference series -- see at http://www.comparch-events.org/index/ for more information. Important Dates Papers submission deadline: February 24, 2012 Notification to authors: April 9, 2012 Camera-ready version: May 1, 2012 Conference: June 26-28, 2012 Goals Component-based Software Engineering (CBSE) continues to attract interest and evolve as a discipline for the rapid assembly of flexible software systems. CBSE combines elements of software requirements engineering, architecture, design, verification, testing, configuration and deployment. The CBSE symposium has an established track record of bringing together researchers and practitioners from a variety of disciplines to promote a better understanding of CBSE from diverse perspectives, and to engage in active discussion and debate. CBSE 2012 is open to all participants from universities and industry interested in CBSE and related areas Scope The CBSE symposium has emerged as the flagship research event for the component community. CBSE 2012 encompasses research (both theoretical and applied) that extends the state-of-the-art in component specification, composition, analysis, testing, and verification. Experience reports, empirical studies and presentation of component-based benchmarks and case studies are also within scope. Participants from industry and academia have the opportunity to exchange ideas and experiences in a variety of sessions involving invited and technical presentations, panels, and so on. New trends in global services, distributed systems architectures, dynamically adaptable systems, and large-scale software systems often cross organizational boundaries and push the limits of established component-based methods, tools and platforms. Innovative solutions from diverse paradigms (e.g., service-, aspect-, and agent-oriented) are needed to address these emerging trends. Topics of interest for CBSE 2012 therefore include, but are not limited to, the following: - Specification, architecture, and design of component models and component-based systems - Software quality assurance for component-based engineering - Verification, testing and certification of component-based systems - Component composition, binding, and dynamic adaptation - Component-based engineering with agents, aspects, or services - Component-based product line engineering - Non-functional properties (quality of service attributes) in component-based engineering - Patterns and frameworks for component-based engineering - Tools and methods for component-based engineering - Industrial experience using component-based software development - Empirical studies in component-based software engineering - Teaching component-based software engineering Special Theme: Components for Achieving Long-Lived Systems Many industrial systems have very strict requirements for uninterrupted operation. There are examples of systems that have aimed to provide continuous operation for more than 15 years. Such requirements place significant demands on the underlying architecture, mandating that the architecture be very well understood and carefully designed. In turn, the architecture—if implemented correctly—forms a foundation for achieving critical quality attributes such as dependability, robustness, usability, and flexibility. The principles of component-based software engineering offer a promise for achieving effective architectures for long-lived systems. This is especially so since this approach natively provides the ability to add, remove, replace, and/or modify components during operation. A related class of approaches deals with self-management in component-based systems in order to ensure continuous operation. We especially solicit research and experience that highlights the applicability and value of CBSE for achieving long-lived systems. Program Co-Chairs Nenad Medvidovic, University of Southern California, USA Magnus Larsson, Mälardalen University & ABB, Sweden Vincenzo Grassi, Università di Roma Tor Vergata, Italy Raffaela Mirandola, Politecnico di Milano, Italy Steering Committee Ivica Crnkovic, Mälardalen University, Sweden Ian Gorton, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, USA George Heineman, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA Grace A. Lewis, Software Engineering Institute, USA Heinz Schmidt, RMIT University, Australia Judith Stafford, Tufts University, USA Clemens Szyperski, Microsoft, USA Matthew Dwyer, University of Nebraska, USA Program Committee Franck Barbier University of Pau, France Steffen Becker, University of Paderborn, Germany Jan Carlson, Mälardalen University, Sweden Laurence Duchien, University of Lille & Inria, France Dimitra Giannakopoulou, NASA Ames Research Center, USA Ian Gorton, Pacific Northwest National Lab, USA Lars Grunske, University of Kaiserslautern, Germany George Heineman, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA Mikael Åkerholm, CrossControl, Sweden Eduardo Almeida, Federal University of Bahia, Brazil Jakob Axelsson, Swedish Institute of Computer Science and Mälardalen University, Sweden Anders Caspar, Ericsson Research, Sweden Ivica Crnkovic, Mälardalen University, Sweden Aldo Dagnino, ABB Corporate Research, USA Eric Dashofy, Aerospace Corporation, USA Jörgen Hansson, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden Oliver Hummel, University of Mannheim, Germany Kung-Kiu Lau, University of Manchester, UK Grace A. Lewis, Software Engineering Institute, USA Sam Malek, George Mason University, USA Marija Mikic-Rakic, Google, USA Noel Plouzeau, IRISA - University of Rennes, France T V Prabhakar, IIT Kanpur, India Ralf Reussner, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany David S. Rosenblum, National University of Singapore, Singapore Cecília M. F. Rubira, University of Campinas, Brazil Antonino Sabetta, SAP Research Sophia-Antipolis, France Kristian Sandstom, ABB Corporate Research, Sweden Jean-Guy Schneider, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Clemens Szyperski, Microsoft Corporation, USA Massimo Tivoli, University of L'Aquila, Italy Webmaster Joshua Garcia, University of Southern California, USA |
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