SIMPLEX 2014 - The Sixth Annual Workshop on Simplifying Complex Networks for Practitioners
Date2014-04-07 - 2014-04-11
Deadline2014-01-07
VenueSeoul, South Korea
Keywords
Websitehttps://www.simplexconf.net
Topics/Call fo Papers
SIMPLEX 2014 -- CALL FOR PAPERS
The 6th Annual Workshop on Simplifying Complex Networks for Practitioners
(http://www.simplexconf.net/)
In conjunction with the 23rd International World Wide Web Conference (WWW)
April 7-11, 2014, Seoul, Korea.
* Statement and Topics of Interest
Network science, sometimes also called "complex networks science", has
recently attracted much attention from the scientific community,
mainly due to the almost ubiquitous presence of complex networks in
real-world systems. Examples of complex networks are found in living
organisms, in engineering systems, as well as in social networks. Most
of the real-world systems have the required degree of complexity to be
called "complex systems". Complexity may have to do with the intricate
dynamics of the interacting components, with the non-trivial
properties of the underlying network topology, or with the sheer size
of the system itself.
Despite the numerous workshops and conferences related to network
science, it is still a set of loosely interacting communities. Those
communities would benefit from better interactions. Following the
success of the previous edition of the workshop in
http://www.simplexconf.net/09 (2009), http://www.simplexconf.net/10
(2010), http://www.simplexconf.net/11 (2011),
http://www.simplexconf.net/12 (2012), and
http://www.simplexconf.net/13 (2013), SIMPLEX aims at triggering
different computer science communities (e.g. communication networks,
distributed systems) to propose research areas and topics that should
be tackled from the network science perspective. We also seek
contributions from network science that are relevant to solve
practical computer science problems. Two types of contributions are
foreseen from prospective authors. The first type would consist of
use-cases of theoretical tools and methods to solve practical
problems. Such contributions should be as usable as possible by
practitioners in the related field. The second type of contributions
would come from practitioners that have identified a problem that may
be solved by tools from network sciences. The point of such
contributions is to make the network sciences community aware of the
importance of a high-impact problem, and to suggest means by which the
problem may be solved by the network sciences community. Both
contributions should stimulate interaction between theoreticians and
practitioners, and also have high potential impact in either
field. Topics for the workshop include, but are not limited to:
- Application of complex network theory to the design of web applications;
- Data mining of large scale networks;
- Analysis of dynamic and time-varying networks;
- Network robustness to failures and attacks;
- Machine learning and network science;
- Complex network theory applied to forwarding/routing problems;
- Application of social network analysis to communication and computing system design;
- Mobility and connectivity modelling;
- Multiplier and multiplexing networks analysis;
- Heterogeneous networks analysis and applications;
- Network science and data and information retrieval;
- Complex network theory and security applications;
* Submission Guidelines
All submitted papers will be carefully evaluated based on originality,
significance, technical soundness, and clarity of expression. The
proceedings of the workshop will be published by the ACM International
Conference Proceeding Series (ICPS).
Paper submissions at the review stage should not exceed 8 pages in the
ACM Small Standard Format (LaTeX or Word). If using LaTeX, please use
documentclass{acmsmall}, i.e., no optional parameters (such as
prodmode, or journal abbreviation) should be used. Please note that
the final camera-ready manuscript will be restricted to 6 pages and
will need to be formatted using the ACM SIGS Proceedings Template). To
minimise later work, authors may choose to submit papers for review in
this format as well.
Best paper award: This year, SIMPLEX will feature a best paper
award. The technical program committee will rank submissions based on
the evaluation merit criteria, and one paper among the top three will
be selected for the best paper award while the other two will be named
runner-up.
Special issue: Also new to the workshop, this year's edition will
feature a special issue to an archival journal. A selected set of top
accepted submission to the workshop will be fast-tracked for
publication in a reputed journal upon their revision and extension
(subject to a pending approval).
* Important Dates
- Submission deadline: Jan 7, 2014 (23:59 HST)
- Authors notification: Feb 4, 2014
- Camera-ready: Feb 12, 2014
- Workshop date: April 7, 2014
* Organizers
General Chairs
- Pan Hui, HKUST/T-Labs, HK
- Nishanth Sastry, Kings College London, UK
Technical Program Committee Chairs
- Hyoungshick Kim, Sungkyunkwan University, Korea
- Yong Li, Tsinghua University, China
- Aziz Mohaisen, VeriSign Labs, USA
Technical Program Committee
- Yang Chen, Duke University, USA
- Yingying Chen, Microsoft, USA
- Kwang-Il Goh, Korea University, Korea
- Hamed Haddadi, Queen Mary Univ. of London, UK
- Amir Houmansadr, University of Texas at Austin, USA
- Hawoong Jeong, KAIST, Korea
- Yu Jin, AT&T Research, USA
- Huy Kang Kim, Korea University, Korea
- Nektarios Leontiadis, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
- Haewoon Kwak, Telefonica Research, Spain
- Yanhua Li, Huawei Noah's Ark Lab, Hong Kong
- Zhenhua Li, Tsinghua University, China
- Mirco Musolesi, University of Birmingham, UK
- Bruno Ribeiro, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
- Mohamed Sarwat, University of Minnesota, USA
- Gianluca Stringhini, UCSB, USA
- Qiyan Wang, Symantec Research Labs, USA
- Andrew G. West, VeriSign Labs, USA
The 6th Annual Workshop on Simplifying Complex Networks for Practitioners
(http://www.simplexconf.net/)
In conjunction with the 23rd International World Wide Web Conference (WWW)
April 7-11, 2014, Seoul, Korea.
* Statement and Topics of Interest
Network science, sometimes also called "complex networks science", has
recently attracted much attention from the scientific community,
mainly due to the almost ubiquitous presence of complex networks in
real-world systems. Examples of complex networks are found in living
organisms, in engineering systems, as well as in social networks. Most
of the real-world systems have the required degree of complexity to be
called "complex systems". Complexity may have to do with the intricate
dynamics of the interacting components, with the non-trivial
properties of the underlying network topology, or with the sheer size
of the system itself.
Despite the numerous workshops and conferences related to network
science, it is still a set of loosely interacting communities. Those
communities would benefit from better interactions. Following the
success of the previous edition of the workshop in
http://www.simplexconf.net/09 (2009), http://www.simplexconf.net/10
(2010), http://www.simplexconf.net/11 (2011),
http://www.simplexconf.net/12 (2012), and
http://www.simplexconf.net/13 (2013), SIMPLEX aims at triggering
different computer science communities (e.g. communication networks,
distributed systems) to propose research areas and topics that should
be tackled from the network science perspective. We also seek
contributions from network science that are relevant to solve
practical computer science problems. Two types of contributions are
foreseen from prospective authors. The first type would consist of
use-cases of theoretical tools and methods to solve practical
problems. Such contributions should be as usable as possible by
practitioners in the related field. The second type of contributions
would come from practitioners that have identified a problem that may
be solved by tools from network sciences. The point of such
contributions is to make the network sciences community aware of the
importance of a high-impact problem, and to suggest means by which the
problem may be solved by the network sciences community. Both
contributions should stimulate interaction between theoreticians and
practitioners, and also have high potential impact in either
field. Topics for the workshop include, but are not limited to:
- Application of complex network theory to the design of web applications;
- Data mining of large scale networks;
- Analysis of dynamic and time-varying networks;
- Network robustness to failures and attacks;
- Machine learning and network science;
- Complex network theory applied to forwarding/routing problems;
- Application of social network analysis to communication and computing system design;
- Mobility and connectivity modelling;
- Multiplier and multiplexing networks analysis;
- Heterogeneous networks analysis and applications;
- Network science and data and information retrieval;
- Complex network theory and security applications;
* Submission Guidelines
All submitted papers will be carefully evaluated based on originality,
significance, technical soundness, and clarity of expression. The
proceedings of the workshop will be published by the ACM International
Conference Proceeding Series (ICPS).
Paper submissions at the review stage should not exceed 8 pages in the
ACM Small Standard Format (LaTeX or Word). If using LaTeX, please use
documentclass{acmsmall}, i.e., no optional parameters (such as
prodmode, or journal abbreviation) should be used. Please note that
the final camera-ready manuscript will be restricted to 6 pages and
will need to be formatted using the ACM SIGS Proceedings Template). To
minimise later work, authors may choose to submit papers for review in
this format as well.
Best paper award: This year, SIMPLEX will feature a best paper
award. The technical program committee will rank submissions based on
the evaluation merit criteria, and one paper among the top three will
be selected for the best paper award while the other two will be named
runner-up.
Special issue: Also new to the workshop, this year's edition will
feature a special issue to an archival journal. A selected set of top
accepted submission to the workshop will be fast-tracked for
publication in a reputed journal upon their revision and extension
(subject to a pending approval).
* Important Dates
- Submission deadline: Jan 7, 2014 (23:59 HST)
- Authors notification: Feb 4, 2014
- Camera-ready: Feb 12, 2014
- Workshop date: April 7, 2014
* Organizers
General Chairs
- Pan Hui, HKUST/T-Labs, HK
- Nishanth Sastry, Kings College London, UK
Technical Program Committee Chairs
- Hyoungshick Kim, Sungkyunkwan University, Korea
- Yong Li, Tsinghua University, China
- Aziz Mohaisen, VeriSign Labs, USA
Technical Program Committee
- Yang Chen, Duke University, USA
- Yingying Chen, Microsoft, USA
- Kwang-Il Goh, Korea University, Korea
- Hamed Haddadi, Queen Mary Univ. of London, UK
- Amir Houmansadr, University of Texas at Austin, USA
- Hawoong Jeong, KAIST, Korea
- Yu Jin, AT&T Research, USA
- Huy Kang Kim, Korea University, Korea
- Nektarios Leontiadis, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
- Haewoon Kwak, Telefonica Research, Spain
- Yanhua Li, Huawei Noah's Ark Lab, Hong Kong
- Zhenhua Li, Tsinghua University, China
- Mirco Musolesi, University of Birmingham, UK
- Bruno Ribeiro, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
- Mohamed Sarwat, University of Minnesota, USA
- Gianluca Stringhini, UCSB, USA
- Qiyan Wang, Symantec Research Labs, USA
- Andrew G. West, VeriSign Labs, USA
Other CFPs
- 15th Symposium on Trends in Functional Programming
- 2nd International Conference on Innovations in Information Technology, Engineering and Management
- The 7th International Conference on Information Theoretic Security (ICITS 2013)
- 2nd International Conference on Advances in e-Education, e-Government, e-Technology and e-Learning
- The Euromicro Conference on Digital System Design (DSD)
Last modified: 2013-12-06 00:05:33