IWMSE 2011 - FOURTH WORKSHOP ON MULTICORE SOFTWARE ENGINEERING
Topics/Call fo Papers
CALL for SUBMISSIONS
4th International Workshop on Multicore Software Engineering
http://www.multicore-systems.org/iwmse2011
May 21, 2011
in conjunction with ICSE'11
Honolulu, Hawaii
IMPORTANT DATES
- Submission deadline: January 21, 2011
- Camera-ready version: March 10, 2011
- Workshop: May 21, 2011
AIMS AND SCOPE
Multicore processors are ubiquitous, and every new computer is a truly parallel machine. This is a fundamental change in the history of computing: parallelism is not confined to scientific applications any more but becomes available for everyone at low cost. Everyday applications and industry applications will need to be parallel in order to exploit the full hardware potential. As a consequence, software engineers now face the challenge of parallelizing applications of all sorts. Compared to sequential applications, our repertoire of tools and methods for cost-effectively developing reliable and robust parallel applications is spotty. The purpose of this workshop is to bring together researchers and practitioners with diverse backgrounds in order to advance the state of the art in multicore software engineering.
This workshop aims to provide a forum for researchers and practitioners tackling the upcoming software engineering challenges, such as creating large-scale multicore applications or reengineering legacy applications. We also aim to stimulate discussions between academia and industry to get a better understanding of the software engineering problems we are currently facing and how they could be solved. We solicit original, previously unpublished papers of current or work-in-progress research. Specific topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Parallel patterns
- Frameworks and libraries for multicore software
- Parallel software architectures
- Modeling techniques for multicore software
- Software components and composition
- Programming models and their impact on multicore software engineering
- Testing and debugging parallel applications
- Software reengineering for parallelism
- Performance tuning and autotuning
- Development environments and tools for multicore software
- Process models for multicore software development
- Experience reports from research projects or industrial projects
- Position statements
KEYNOTE SPEAKER
Michael P. Perrone, Ph.D.
Manager Multicore Computing Computational Sciences Center
IBM TJ Watson Research Center, USA
SUBMISSION
See http://www.multicore-systems.org/iwmse2011
The best papers will be considered for a special issue of the Elsevier Science of Computer Programming Journal.
ORGANIZATION CHAIRS
Victor Pankratius, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany
Michael Philippsen, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Ali-Reza Adl-Tabatabai (Intel)
Koen De Bosschere (Ghent University)
John Cavazos (University of Delaware)
Brian Demsky (UC Irvine)
Rudi Eigenmann (Purdue University)
Eitan Farchi (IBM Research)
Michael Garland (nVidia)
Thomas Gross (ETH Zurich)
Tim Harris (Microsoft Research)
Mark Moir (Oracle Labs)
Victor Pankratius (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology)
Michael Philippsen (University of Erlangen-Nuremberg)
David Padua (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
Scott Stoller (Stony Brook University)
Richard Vuduc (Georgia Tech)
4th International Workshop on Multicore Software Engineering
http://www.multicore-systems.org/iwmse2011
May 21, 2011
in conjunction with ICSE'11
Honolulu, Hawaii
IMPORTANT DATES
- Submission deadline: January 21, 2011
- Camera-ready version: March 10, 2011
- Workshop: May 21, 2011
AIMS AND SCOPE
Multicore processors are ubiquitous, and every new computer is a truly parallel machine. This is a fundamental change in the history of computing: parallelism is not confined to scientific applications any more but becomes available for everyone at low cost. Everyday applications and industry applications will need to be parallel in order to exploit the full hardware potential. As a consequence, software engineers now face the challenge of parallelizing applications of all sorts. Compared to sequential applications, our repertoire of tools and methods for cost-effectively developing reliable and robust parallel applications is spotty. The purpose of this workshop is to bring together researchers and practitioners with diverse backgrounds in order to advance the state of the art in multicore software engineering.
This workshop aims to provide a forum for researchers and practitioners tackling the upcoming software engineering challenges, such as creating large-scale multicore applications or reengineering legacy applications. We also aim to stimulate discussions between academia and industry to get a better understanding of the software engineering problems we are currently facing and how they could be solved. We solicit original, previously unpublished papers of current or work-in-progress research. Specific topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Parallel patterns
- Frameworks and libraries for multicore software
- Parallel software architectures
- Modeling techniques for multicore software
- Software components and composition
- Programming models and their impact on multicore software engineering
- Testing and debugging parallel applications
- Software reengineering for parallelism
- Performance tuning and autotuning
- Development environments and tools for multicore software
- Process models for multicore software development
- Experience reports from research projects or industrial projects
- Position statements
KEYNOTE SPEAKER
Michael P. Perrone, Ph.D.
Manager Multicore Computing Computational Sciences Center
IBM TJ Watson Research Center, USA
SUBMISSION
See http://www.multicore-systems.org/iwmse2011
The best papers will be considered for a special issue of the Elsevier Science of Computer Programming Journal.
ORGANIZATION CHAIRS
Victor Pankratius, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany
Michael Philippsen, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Ali-Reza Adl-Tabatabai (Intel)
Koen De Bosschere (Ghent University)
John Cavazos (University of Delaware)
Brian Demsky (UC Irvine)
Rudi Eigenmann (Purdue University)
Eitan Farchi (IBM Research)
Michael Garland (nVidia)
Thomas Gross (ETH Zurich)
Tim Harris (Microsoft Research)
Mark Moir (Oracle Labs)
Victor Pankratius (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology)
Michael Philippsen (University of Erlangen-Nuremberg)
David Padua (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
Scott Stoller (Stony Brook University)
Richard Vuduc (Georgia Tech)
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Last modified: 2010-12-30 12:39:04