ResearchBib Share Your Research, Maximize Your Social Impacts
Sign for Notice Everyday Sign up >> Login

HIPS 2020 - 2020 25TH INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON HIGH-LEVEL PARALLEL PROGRAMMING MODELS AND SUPPORTIVE ENVIRONMENTS

Date2020-05-18

Deadline2020-01-27

VenueNew Orleans, Louisiana, USA - United States USA - United States

Keywords

Websitehttps://www.ipdps.org/ipdps2020

Topics/Call fo Papers

The 25th HIPS workshop, to be held as a full-day meeting on May ???th at the IEEE IPDPS 2020 conference in New Orleans, Louisiana, focuses on high-level programming of multiprocessors, compute clusters, and massively parallel machines. Like previous workshops in the series, which was established in 1996, this event serves as a forum for research in the areas of parallel applications, language design, compilers, runtime systems, and programming tools. It provides a timely forum for scientists and engineers to present the latest ideas and findings in these rapidly changing fields. In our call for papers, we especially encouraged innovative approaches in the areas of emerging programming models for large-scale parallel systems and many-core architectures.
Topics of Interest
Topics of interest to the HIPS workshop include but are not limited to:
High-level and domain-specific programming systems
Languages and Compilers for post-Moore's-Law (or Post Von Neumann)
Language/compiler support for AI/ML and Cybersecurity/Privacy (e.g., ML-based auto-tuning)
Task Based Programming Systems
(Scalable) programming tools and tools for power and performance analysis, modeling, monitoring, and debugging and core correctness
OS and architectural support for parallel programming and debugging
Software and system support for extreme scalability including fault tolerance and power-aware HPC
Programming environments for heterogeneous multicore systems and accelerators such as GPUs and FPGAs
Exploring dynamism in applications and system resources
Performance portability
Languages and runtime support for multi-science/coupled codes, including but not limited to ensemble computing and UQ
New programming languages and constructs for exploiting parallelism and locality

Last modified: 2019-10-23 01:36:02