IMC 2014 - Internet Measurement Conference
Topics/Call fo Papers
The Internet Measurement Conference is a highly selective venue for the presentation of measurement-based research in data communications. The focus of IMC 2014 will be on papers that either (1) improve the practice of measurement or (2) illuminate some facet of an operational network.
IMC takes a broad view of what constitutes an operational network. This view includes (but is not limited to):
the Internet backbone and edge networks (e.g., home networks, cellular networks, WLANs)
data centers and cloud computing infrastructure
peer-to-peer and content distribution networks
infrastructure for online social networks
applications that use these networks (e.g., Web, gaming, multimedia streaming, VoIP, MapReduce)
experimental networks affiliated with the Internet (e.g. overlay networks, future internets or other prototype networks)
Types of contributions that the program committee would enjoy receiving submissions regarding include (but are not limited to):
collection and analysis of data that yield new insights about network structure and behavior (e.g., traffic, topology, routing, privacy, security, energy use, economics)
methods and tools to monitor and visualize network-based phenomena
systems and algorithmic techniques that leverage measurement-based findings in novel ways
advances in data collection and handling (e.g., anonymization, querying, storage, facilitating sharing)
modeling of network structure and behavior (e.g., workload)
reappraisal of previous empirical findings
IMC takes a broad view of what constitutes an operational network. This view includes (but is not limited to):
the Internet backbone and edge networks (e.g., home networks, cellular networks, WLANs)
data centers and cloud computing infrastructure
peer-to-peer and content distribution networks
infrastructure for online social networks
applications that use these networks (e.g., Web, gaming, multimedia streaming, VoIP, MapReduce)
experimental networks affiliated with the Internet (e.g. overlay networks, future internets or other prototype networks)
Types of contributions that the program committee would enjoy receiving submissions regarding include (but are not limited to):
collection and analysis of data that yield new insights about network structure and behavior (e.g., traffic, topology, routing, privacy, security, energy use, economics)
methods and tools to monitor and visualize network-based phenomena
systems and algorithmic techniques that leverage measurement-based findings in novel ways
advances in data collection and handling (e.g., anonymization, querying, storage, facilitating sharing)
modeling of network structure and behavior (e.g., workload)
reappraisal of previous empirical findings
Other CFPs
Last modified: 2013-12-07 22:26:50