SCAM 2011 - 11th IEEE International Working Conference on Source Code Analysis and Manipulation (SCAM’11)
Topics/Call fo Papers
The aim of this working conference is to bring together researchers and practitioners working on theory, techniques and applications which concern analysis and/or manipulation of the source code of computer systems. While much attention in the wider software engineering community is properly directed towards other aspects of systems development and evolution, such as specification, design and requirements engineering, it is the source code that contains the only precise description of the behaviour of the system. The analysis and manipulation of source code thus remains a pressing concern.
We welcome submission of papers that describe original and significant work in the field of source code analysis and manipulation. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
program transformation
abstract interpretation
program slicing
source level software metrics
decompilation
source level testing and verification
source level optimization
program comprehension
SCAM explicitly solicits results from any theoretical or technological domain that can be applied to these and similar topics.
SCAM also welcomes papers that report on the design, implementation, and experience using tools for source code analysis and manipulation. These ”tool papers” should aptly and accurately describe the tool, motivate its existence, and describe its architecture and inner workings. Papers should demonstrate convincing scenarios of use; ideally, the scenarios should be reproducible. SCAM tools papers should make a contribution that can benefit other persons engaged in design and implementation of tools for source code analysis and manipulation. A webpage about the tool with download instructions, documentation, and/or video demonstrations (created using screen capture techniques) is encouraged and should be referenced in the paper.
Submitted papers should not be longer than 10 pages. All papers submitted should follow IEEE Computer Society Press Proceedings Author Guidelines. The papers should be submitted electronically via the conference web site. Submitted papers should not have been previously published, and should not have been concurrently submitted elsewhere. Papers must be clearly marked as theoretical or tool paper.
All accepted papers will appear in the proceedings which will be published by the IEEE Computer Society Press. We are planning a special issue in an international journal, featuring revised and extended best papers accepted at SCAM 2011.
We welcome submission of papers that describe original and significant work in the field of source code analysis and manipulation. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
program transformation
abstract interpretation
program slicing
source level software metrics
decompilation
source level testing and verification
source level optimization
program comprehension
SCAM explicitly solicits results from any theoretical or technological domain that can be applied to these and similar topics.
SCAM also welcomes papers that report on the design, implementation, and experience using tools for source code analysis and manipulation. These ”tool papers” should aptly and accurately describe the tool, motivate its existence, and describe its architecture and inner workings. Papers should demonstrate convincing scenarios of use; ideally, the scenarios should be reproducible. SCAM tools papers should make a contribution that can benefit other persons engaged in design and implementation of tools for source code analysis and manipulation. A webpage about the tool with download instructions, documentation, and/or video demonstrations (created using screen capture techniques) is encouraged and should be referenced in the paper.
Submitted papers should not be longer than 10 pages. All papers submitted should follow IEEE Computer Society Press Proceedings Author Guidelines. The papers should be submitted electronically via the conference web site. Submitted papers should not have been previously published, and should not have been concurrently submitted elsewhere. Papers must be clearly marked as theoretical or tool paper.
All accepted papers will appear in the proceedings which will be published by the IEEE Computer Society Press. We are planning a special issue in an international journal, featuring revised and extended best papers accepted at SCAM 2011.
Other CFPs
- 2011 IEEE 27th International Conference on Software Maintenance (ICSM)
- 2011 IEEE International Conference on Waste Recycling, Ecology and Environment (ICWREE)
- 2011 3rd International Asia Conference on Informatics in Control, Automation and Robotics (CAR 2011)
- 2011 IEEE 18th International Conference on Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management (IE&EM 2011)
- 2nd International Conference on Computational Systems - Biology and Bioinformatics (CSBio-2011)
Last modified: 2011-01-01 20:09:32