LaME 2012 - International Workshop on Languages for the Multi-core Era
Topics/Call fo Papers
Website: http://lame.dei.uc.pt/index.php?title=Main_Page
Concurrent programming has become a fundamental approach for leveraging the processing power of modern multi-core architectures. And, although research in concurrent programming models and languages is decades old, writing concurrent software today continues to be challenging and error-prone as always. The advent of multi-core architecture refueled the quest for efficient concurrency models and productive programming languages. Consequently, the last decade has been witness to a growing effort of research in this area. The purpose of this workshop is to provide a forum for the proposal and discussion of new ideas in concurrent programming languages and models, and to provide feedback to authors in an informal atmosphere. Submissions can fall in two categories: full papers reporting on refined technical work and 2-page proposals for talks on provisional or ongoing work. Authors are invited to submit work on innovative concurrency models, programming languages, tools and frameworks for concurrent software development and execution. Participants are invited to address a challenge problem that provides a focus and unifying theme for diverse approaches discussed in the workshop.
Main Theme and Goals
The focus of the workshop is Programming Languages support for concurrency, with a special emphasis on innovative concurrency models. The main objective of this workshop is to become a forum for the proposal and discussion of creative ideas for new concurrency models, or the validation of novel concurrency models that have already been proposed. Nonetheless, run-time system and library support for concurrency are also within the range of topics of interest at the workshop.
Submissions to the workshop should present either mature or ongoing work in foundational and theoretical aspects of concurrent programming, languages, tools, frameworks, case studies, and practical experience. The main criteria for selecting workshop contributions will be the novelty and value of the ideas presented, and their intrinsic interest and timeliness.
One essential part of the workshop is the organization of the Open Concurrency Challenge. The objective of this challenge is to give authors and participants an opportunity to present their research in the shared context of a relevant concurrent programming problem. The challenge starts with the dissemination by the organizers of the problem to be solved. Solutions will be submitted and then presented in a session for discussion by their authors and broader audience.
This challenge provides an effective mean of comparing different approaches, models, and tools in the resolution of a common problem, and assessing their effciency in a particular scenario. It is intended to provide focus to a workshop in which there will be many diverse approaches presented, as well as an effective
catalyst for discussion and comparison of those approaches.
Concurrent programming has become a fundamental approach for leveraging the processing power of modern multi-core architectures. And, although research in concurrent programming models and languages is decades old, writing concurrent software today continues to be challenging and error-prone as always. The advent of multi-core architecture refueled the quest for efficient concurrency models and productive programming languages. Consequently, the last decade has been witness to a growing effort of research in this area. The purpose of this workshop is to provide a forum for the proposal and discussion of new ideas in concurrent programming languages and models, and to provide feedback to authors in an informal atmosphere. Submissions can fall in two categories: full papers reporting on refined technical work and 2-page proposals for talks on provisional or ongoing work. Authors are invited to submit work on innovative concurrency models, programming languages, tools and frameworks for concurrent software development and execution. Participants are invited to address a challenge problem that provides a focus and unifying theme for diverse approaches discussed in the workshop.
Main Theme and Goals
The focus of the workshop is Programming Languages support for concurrency, with a special emphasis on innovative concurrency models. The main objective of this workshop is to become a forum for the proposal and discussion of creative ideas for new concurrency models, or the validation of novel concurrency models that have already been proposed. Nonetheless, run-time system and library support for concurrency are also within the range of topics of interest at the workshop.
Submissions to the workshop should present either mature or ongoing work in foundational and theoretical aspects of concurrent programming, languages, tools, frameworks, case studies, and practical experience. The main criteria for selecting workshop contributions will be the novelty and value of the ideas presented, and their intrinsic interest and timeliness.
One essential part of the workshop is the organization of the Open Concurrency Challenge. The objective of this challenge is to give authors and participants an opportunity to present their research in the shared context of a relevant concurrent programming problem. The challenge starts with the dissemination by the organizers of the problem to be solved. Solutions will be submitted and then presented in a session for discussion by their authors and broader audience.
This challenge provides an effective mean of comparing different approaches, models, and tools in the resolution of a common problem, and assessing their effciency in a particular scenario. It is intended to provide focus to a workshop in which there will be many diverse approaches presented, as well as an effective
catalyst for discussion and comparison of those approaches.
Other CFPs
- The Eleventh International Workshop on Tree Adjoining Grammars and Related Formalisms
- Fourth Workshop on Energy-Efficient Design
- Third JILP Workshop on Architecture Competitions: Memory Scheduling Championship
- The Second Workshop on the Intersections of Computer Architecture and Reconfigurable Logic (CARL 2012)
- 1st Dark Silicon Workshop 2012
Last modified: 2012-03-12 14:50:15