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PPoPP 2013 : ACM SIGPLAN Annual Symposium Principles and Practice of Parallel Programming | |||||||||||||
Link: http://ppopp2013.ics.uci.edu/ | |||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||
18th ACM SIGPLAN Symposium on Principles and Practice of Parallel Programming (PPoPP 2013) 23-27 February 2013, Shenzhen, China Call for Papers PPoPP is a forum for leading work on all aspects of parallel programming, including foundational and theoretical aspects, techniques, languages, compilers, runtime systems, tools, and practical experiences. In the context of the symposium, "parallel programming" encompasses work on concurrent and parallel systems (multicore, multithreaded, heterogeneous, clustered systems, distributed systems, grids, clouds, and large scale machines). Given the rise of parallel architectures into the consumer market (desktops, laptops, and mobile devices), PPoPP is particularly interested in work that addresses new parallel workloads, techniques, and tools that attempt to improve the productivity of parallel programming, and work towards improved synergy with such emerging architectures. Specific topics of interest include (but are not limited to): Parallel programming theory and models Formal analysis and verification Parallel programming languages Compilers and runtime systems Task-parallel libraries Parallel application frameworks Software productivity for parallel programming Middleware for parallel systems Performance analysis, debugging and optimization Development, analysis, or management tools Parallel algorithms Parallel applications Concurrent data structures Synchronization and concurrency control Software engineering for parallel programs Fault tolerance for parallel systems Software for heterogeneous architectures Programming tools for parallel and heterogeneous systems Parallelism in non-scientific workloads: web servers, search, analytics Papers should report on original research relevant to parallel programming, and should contain enough background materials to make them accessible to the entire parallel programming research community. Papers describing experiences should indicate how they illustrate general principles; papers about parallel programming foundations should indicate how they relate to practice. Poster submissions should meet similar criteria for originality and relevance, but may present emerging ideas or results that are not yet sufficiently developed for a full paper. All submissions must be made electronically through the conference web site. Abstracts must include contact information, the full list of authors and their affiliations, and a description (100-400 words) of the anticipated content of the paper. Full paper submissions must be in PDF formatted for US lettersize paper. They must not exceed 10 pages (all inclusive) in standard ACM two-column conference format (preprint mode, with page number). Templates for ACM format are available for Microsoft Word, and LaTeX at http://www.sigplan.org/authorInformation.htm (use the 9 pt template). Over-length submissions will be summarily discarded by the Program Chair. Submissions will be judged on correctness, relevance, originality, significance, and clarity. Paper submission is double-blind to reduce reviewer bias against or for authors or institutions. Thus, the submissions cannot include author names, institutions or hints based on references to prior work. If authors are extending their own work, they need to reference and discuss the past work in third person, as if they were extending someone else's research. We realize that for some papers it will still reveal authorship, but as long as an effort was made to follow these guidelines, the submission will not be penalized. Authors must identify any conflicts-of-interest with PC members and external review committee members, as defined here: http://www.sigplan.org/review_policies.htm (ACM SIGPLAN policy). Poster submissions must conform to the same format restrictions, but may not exceed 2 pages in length. Paper submissions that are not accepted for regular presentations will automatically be considered for posters; authors who do not want their paper considered for the poster session should indicate this in their abstract submission. Two-page summaries of posters will be included in the conference proceedings. The proceedings will be published by ACM Press. Authors of accepted papers and posters will be required to sign the ACM copyright form. Instructions for preparing papers for the proceedings will be emailed to authors of accepted papers. Instructions for preparing papers for the proceedings will be emailed to authors of accepted papers. Important Dates (Tentative): Abstract Submission Deadline: Aug. 10, 2012 (11:59pm Eastern Daylight Time) Paper Submission Deadline: Aug. 17, 2012 (11:59pm EDT, no extensions) Author Rebuttal Period: Oct. 22-24, 2012 Author Notification: November 12, 2012 Program Committee Kunal Agrawal, Washington University in St. Louis Chris Batten, Cornell University Martin Burtscher, Texas State University Calin Cascaval, Qualcomm Wenguang Chen, Tsinghua University Yifeng Chen, Peking University Brian Demsky, UC Irvine Dave Dice, Oracle Isaac Gelado, Barcelona Supercomputing Center Phil Gibbons, Intel Ganesh Gopalakrishnan, University of Utah Naga Govindaraju, Microsoft Govindjaran, IISc Bangalore Ziang Hu, Huawei Laxmikant Kale, UIUC Duane Merrill, NVIDIA Mayur Naik, Georgia Tech Ryan Newton, Indiana University Dimitrios Nikolopoulos, Queen's University of Belfast Jens Palsberg, UCLA Yoonho Park, IBM Vijay Reddi, UT Austin Michael Scott, University of Rochester Nathan Tallent, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Philippas Tsigas, Chalmers University Peng Wu, IBM Binyu Zhang, Fudan University Binyu Zhang, Fudan University Rajeev Barua, University of Maryland Paul H.J. Kelly, Imperial College London |
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