___________________________________________________________________
Call for Papers - SLE 2008
1st International Conference on Software Language Engineering
http://planet-sl.org/sle2008/
Toulouse, France, September 29-30, 2008
___________________________________________________________________
Co-located with 11th IEEE/ACM International Conference on Model-Driven
Engineering Languages and Systems (MODELS 2008)
Conference …
[View More]proceedings will be published in Springer's LNCS series.
The 1st International Conference on Software Language Engineering
(SLE) is devoted to topics related to artificial languages in software
engineering. SLE is an international research forum that aims to bring
together researchers and practitioners from both industry and academia
to expand the frontiers of software language engineering.
Historically, SLE emerged from two established workshop series: LDTA,
Language Descriptions, Tools, and Applications, which has been a
satellite event at ETAPS for the last 8 years, and ATEM which has been
co-located with MODELS and WCRE for the last 5 years. These, as well
as several other conferences and workshops, have investigated various
aspects of language design, implementation, and evolution but from
different perspectives. SLE's foremost mission is to encourage and
organize communication between communities that have traditionally
looked at software languages from different, more specialized, and yet
complementary perspectives. SLE emphasizes the fundamental notion of
languages as opposed to any realization in specific "technical
spaces".
Scope
-----
The term "software language" comprises all sorts of artificial
languages used in software development including general purpose
programming languages, domain-specific languages, modeling and
metamodeling languages, data models, and ontologies. We use this term
in its broadest sense. Thus, for example, modeling languages include
UML and UML-based languages, synchronous languages used in safety
critical applications, business process modeling languages, and web
application modeling languages, to name a few. Perhaps less obviously,
the term "software language" also comprises APIs and collections of
design patterns that are indeed implicitly defined languages.
Software language engineering is the application of a systematic,
disciplined, quantifiable approach to the development, use, and
maintenance of these languages. Thus, the SLE conference is concerned
with all phases of the lifecycle of software languages; these include
the design, implementation, documentation, testing, deployment,
evolution, recovery, and retirement of languages. Of special interest
are tools, techniques, methods and formalisms that support these
activities. In particular, tools are often based on or even
automatically generated from a formal description of the
language. Hence, of special interest is the treatment of language
descriptions as software artifacts, akin to programs - while paying
attention to the special status of language descriptions, subject to
tailored engineering principles and methods for modularization,
refactoring, refinement, composition, versioning, co-evolution, and
analysis.
Topics of interest
------------------
We solicit high-quality contributions in the area of SLE ranging from
theoretical and conceptual contributions to tools, techniques and
frameworks that support the aforementioned lifecycle activities. Some
examples of tools, techniques, applications, and problems are listed
below in order to clarify the types of contributions sought by SLE.
* Formalisms used in designing and specifying languages and tools
that analyze such language descriptions: For example, of interest
are formalisms such as grammars, schemas, ontologies, and
metamodels; innovative tools that detect inconsistencies in a
metamodel or analyze grammars in building a parser; and formal
logics and proof assistants that verify properties of language
specifications.
* Language implementation techniques: This includes advances in
traditional compiler generator tools such as parser/scanner
generators, attribute grammar systems, term-rewriting systems,
functional-programming-based combinator libraries, among many
others; also of interest are metamodel-based and ontology tools
such as constraint, rule, view, transformation, and query
formalisms and engines.
* Program and model transformation tools: Examples include tools that
support program refinement and refactoring, model-based
development, aspect and model weaving, model extraction,
metamodeling, model transformations, round-trip engineering, and
runtime system transformation.
* Composition, integration, and mapping tools for managing different
aspects of software languages or different manifestations of a
given language: For example, SLE is interested in tools for mapping
between the concrete and abstract syntax of a language, for
managing textual and graphical concrete syntax for the same or
closely related languages; also, mapping descriptions and tools for
XML/object/relational mappings.
* Language evolution: Included are extensible languages and type
systems and their supporting tools, as well as language conversion
tools. APIs, when considered as languages, are subject to evolution;
thus tools and techniques that assist developers in using a new
version of an API or a competing implementation in a program are
also of interest.
* Approaches to the elicitation, specification, and verification of
requirements for software languages: Examples include the use of
requirements engineering techniques in the development of
domain-specific languages and the application of logic-based
formalisms for verifying language requirements.
* Language development frameworks, methodologies, techniques, best
practices, and tools for the broader language lifecycle covering
phases such as analysis, testing, and documentation. For example,
frameworks for advanced type or error checking systems, constraint
mechanisms, tools for metrics measurement and language usage
analysis, documentation generators, visualization backends,
knowledge and process management approaches, as well as IDE support
for many of these activities are of interest.
* Design challenges in SLE: Example challenges include finding a
balance between specificity and generality in designing
domain-specific languages, between strong static typing and weaker
yet more flexible type systems, or between deep and shallow
embedding approaches, as, for example, in the context of adding
type-safe XML and database programming support to general-purpose
programming languages.
* Applications of languages including innovative domain-specific
languages or "little" languages: Examples include policy languages
for security or service oriented architectures, web-engineering
with schema-based generators or ontology-based annotations. Of
specific interest are the engineering aspects of domain-specific
language support in all of these cases.
Do note that this list is not exclusive and many examples of tools,
techniques, approaches have not been listed. The program committee
chairs encourage potential contributors to contact them with questions
about the scope and topics of interest of SLE.
Paper Submission
----------------
We solicit the following types of papers:
* Research papers. These should report a substantial research
contribution to SLE and/or successful application of SLE
techniques. Full paper submissions must not exceed 20 pages.
* Short papers. These may describe interesting or thought-provoking
concepts that are not yet fully developed or evaluated, make an
initial contribution to challenging research issues in SLE, or
discuss and analyze controversial issues in the field. These papers
must not exceed 10 pages.
* Tool demonstration papers. Because of SLE's ample interest in
tools, we seek papers that present software tools related to the
field of SLE. These papers will accompany a tool demonstration to
be given at the conference. These papers must not exceed 10
pages. The selection criteria include the originality of the tool,
its innovative aspects, the relevance of the tool to SLE, and the
maturity of the tool. Submissions may also include an appendix
(that will not be published) containing additional screen-shots and
discussion of the proposed demonstration.
* Panel proposals. Panels that discuss controversial and challenging
issues in the area of SLE, perhaps based on looking at SLE related
problems from the different perspectives of different communities
are also sought. The panels should have at least three panelists
and a moderator, and the proposal must not exceed three pages. One
panel is planned for the end of each of the two days of the
conference program. The panel moderators will be invited to
contribute a summary of the panel discussion compiling different
positions presented on the panel to the final proceedings.
Submitted articles must not have been previously published or
currently be submitted for publication elsewhere. All submitted papers
will be closely reviewed by at least three members of the program
committee. All accepted papers will be made available at the
conference in the pre-proceedings and published in the
post-proceedings of the conference, which will appear in Springer's
Lecture Notes in Computer Science series. Authors will have the
opportunity to revise their accepted paper for the pre and
post-proceedings. All papers must be formatted by following Springer's
LNCS style and will be submitted using EasyChair:
http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=sle2008.
Further details regarding submission can be found on the SLE web page:
http://planet-sl.org/sle2008/.
Special Issue
-------------
Negotiations are underway to compile a special issue in an appropriate
journal based on extended versions of selected SLE 2008 papers.
Important Dates
---------------
* Paper submission: July 14, 2008
* Author notification: August 25, 2008
* Paper submission for pre-proceedings: September 8, 2008
* Conference: September 29 - 30, 2008
* Camera-ready paper submission for post-proceedings: November 1, 2008
* LNCS post-proceedings mailed to authors (approx.): February 1, 2009
Organization
------------
Steering Committee
* Mark van den Brand, TU Eindhoven, The Netherlands
* James Cordy, Queen's University, Canada
* Jean-Marie Favre, University of Grenoble, France
* Dragan Gasevic, Athabasca University, Canada
* Gorel Hedin, Lund University, Sweden
* Ralf Laemmel, Universitat Koblenz-Landau, Germany
* Eric Van Wyk, University of Minnesota, USA
* Andreas Winter, Johannes Gutenberg-Universitat Mainz, Germany
General Chair
* Ralf Laemmel, Universitat Koblenz-Landau, Germany
Program Committee Co-Chairs
* Dragan Gasevic, Athabasca University, Canada
* Eric Van Wyk, University of Minnesota, USA
Organization Committee
* Jean-Marie Favre, University of Grenoble, France
* Jean-Sebastien Sottet, Web Chair, University of Grenoble, France
* Andreas Winter, Johannes Gutenberg-Universitat Mainz, Germany
* Steffen Zschaler, Publicity Chair, TU Dresden, Germany
Program Committee
* TBD.
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======================================================================
CALL FOR PAPERS
18th International Symposium on
International Symposium on Logic-Based Program Synthesis and Transformation
LOPSTR 2008
http://www.informatik.uni-kiel.de/~mh/lopstr08/
July 17-18, 2008, Valencia, Spain
(co-located with SAS 2008, PPDP 2008, and PLID 2008)
==============================…
[View More]========================================
Objectives:
The aim of the LOPSTR series is to stimulate and promote international
research and collaboration on logic-based program development. LOPSTR
is open to contributions in logic-based program development in any
language paradigm. LOPSTR has a reputation for being a lively,
friendly forum for presenting and discussing work in progress. Formal
proceedings are produced only after the symposium, so authors can
incorporate this feedback in the published papers.
Topics:
Topics of interest cover all aspects of logic-based program
development, all stages of the software life cycle, and issues of both
programming-in-the-small and programming-in-the-large. Papers
describing applications in these areas are especially welcome.
Contributions are welcome on all aspects of logic-based program
development, including, but not limited to:
specification synthesis
verification transformation
analysis optimisation
composition security
reuse applications and tools
component-based software development software architectures
agent-based software development program refinement
Survey papers, that present some aspect of the above topics from a new
perspective, and application papers, that describe experience with
industrial applications, are also welcome.
Papers must describe original work, be written and presented in
English, and must not substantially overlap with papers that have been
published or that are simultaneously submitted to a journal,
conference, or workshop with refereed proceedings. Work that already
appeared in unpublished or informally published workshop proceedings
may be submitted (please contact the PC chair in case of questions).
IMPORTANT DATES AND SUBMISSION GUIDELINES:
Paper/extended abstract submission: May 7, 2008
Notification (for pre-proceedings): June 8, 2008
Camera-ready (for pre-proceedings): June 29, 2008
Symposium: July 17-18, 2008
Submissions can either be (short) extended abstracts or (full) papers
whose length should not exceed 9 and 15 pages (including references),
respectively. Submissions must be formatted in the Springer LNCS
style (excluding well-marked appendices not intended for publication).
Referees are not required to read the appendices, and thus papers
should be intelligible without them. Short papers may describe
work-in-progress or tool demonstrations.
Both accepted short and full papers will appear in the
pre-proceedings. The full papers will automatically appear in the
formal proceedings that will be published by Springer-Verlag
in the LNCS series. In addition, after the symposium, the programme
committee will select those short papers to be considered for formal
publication. These authors will be invited to revise and extend their
submissions in the light of the comments of the reviewers and the
feedback solicited at the meeting. Then after another round of
reviewing, the revised papers which are accepted will be also
published in the formal proceedings.
Papers should be submitted either in PDF or PostScript via the
web page of LOPSTR 2008.
Program Committee:
Slim Abdennadher German University Cairo
Danny De Schreye K.U.Leuven, Belgium
Wlodek Drabent Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland / Linkoeping Univ., Sweden
Gopal Gupta University of Texas at Dallas, USA
Michael Hanus University of Kiel, Germany (Chair)
Patricia Hill University of Leeds, UK
Andy King University of Kent, UK
Michael Leuschel University of Duesseldorf, Germany
Torben Mogensen DIKU, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Mario Ornaghi Universita degli Studi di Milano, Italy
Etienne Payet Universite de La Reunion, France
Alberto Pettorossi University of Rome Tor Vergata, Italy
German Puebla Technical University of Madrid, Spain
C.R. Ramakrishnan SUNY at Stony Brook, USA
Sabina Rossi Universita Ca' Foscari di Venezia, Italy
Chiaki Sakama Wakayama University, Japan
Josep Silva Technical University of Valencia, Spain
Wim Vanhoof University of Namur, Belgium
Eelco Visser Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands
----------------------------------------------------------------------
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======================================================================
CALL FOR PAPERS
18th International Symposium on
International Symposium on Logic-Based Program Synthesis and Transformation
LOPSTR 2008
http://www.informatik.uni-kiel.de/~mh/lopstr08/
July 17-18, 2008, Valencia, Spain
(co-located with SAS 2008)
============================================…
[View More]==========================
Objectives:
The aim of the LOPSTR series is to stimulate and promote international
research and collaboration on logic-based program development. LOPSTR
is open to contributions in logic-based program development in any
language paradigm. LOPSTR has a reputation for being a lively,
friendly forum for presenting and discussing work in progress. Formal
proceedings are produced only after the symposium, so authors can
incorporate this feedback in the published papers.
Topics:
Topics of interest cover all aspects of logic-based program
development, all stages of the software life cycle, and issues of both
programming-in-the-small and programming-in-the-large. Papers
describing applications in these areas are especially welcome.
Contributions are welcome on all aspects of logic-based program
development, including, but not limited to:
specification synthesis
verification transformation
analysis optimisation
composition security
reuse applications and tools
component-based software development software architectures
agent-based software development program refinement
Survey papers, that present some aspect of the above topics from a new
perspective, and application papers, that describe experience with
industrial applications, are also welcome.
Papers must describe original work, be written and presented in
English, and must not substantially overlap with papers that have been
published or that are simultaneously submitted to a journal,
conference, or workshop with refereed proceedings. Work that already
appeared in unpublished or informally published workshop proceedings
may be submitted (please contact the PC chair in case of questions).
IMPORTANT DATES AND SUBMISSION GUIDELINES:
Paper/extended abstract submission: May 7, 2008
Notification (for pre-proceedings): June 8, 2008
Camera-ready (for pre-proceedings): June 29, 2008
Symposium: July 17-18, 2008
Submissions can either be (short) extended abstracts or (full) papers
whose length should not exceed 9 and 15 pages (including references),
respectively. Submissions must be formatted in the Springer LNCS
style (excluding well-marked appendices not intended for publication).
Referees are not required to read the appendices, and thus papers
should be intelligible without them. Short papers may describe
work-in-progress or tool demonstrations.
Both accepted short and full papers will appear in the
pre-proceedings. The full papers will automatically appear in the
formal proceedings that is expected to be published by Springer-Verlag
in the LNCS series. In addition, after the symposium, the programme
committee will select those short papers to be considered for formal
publication. These authors will be invited to revise and extend their
submissions in the light of the comments of the reviewers and the
feedback solicited at the meeting. Then after another round of
reviewing, the revised papers which are accepted will be also
published in the formal proceedings.
Papers should be submitted either in PDF or PostScript via the
web page of LOPSTR 2008.
Program Committee:
Slim Abdennadher German University Cairo
Danny De Schreye K.U.Leuven, Belgium
Wlodek Drabent Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland / Linköping Univ., Sweden
Gopal Gupta University of Texas at Dallas, USA
Michael Hanus University of Kiel, Germany (Chair)
Patricia Hill University of Leeds, UK
Andy King University of Kent, UK
Michael Leuschel University of Duesseldorf, Germany
Torben Mogensen DIKU, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Mario Ornaghi Universita degli Studi di Milano, Italy
Etienne Payet Universite de La Reunion, France
Alberto Pettorossi University of Rome Tor Vergata, Italy
German Puebla Technical University of Madrid, Spain
C.R. Ramakrishnan SUNY at Stony Brook, USA
Sabina Rossi Universita Ca' Foscari di Venezia, Italy
Chiaki Sakama Wakayama University, Japan
Josep Silva Technical University of Valencia, Spain
Wim Vanhoof University of Namur, Belgium
Eelco Visser Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands
----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Posted on behalf of Uwe Naumann <naumann(a)stce.rwth-aachen.de>:
*****************************************************
AD2008 - Third Call for Papers
*****************************************************
Fifth International Conference on Automatic Differentiation
August 11-15, 2008, Bonn, Germany
http://www.autodiff.org/ad08
Automatic differentiation (AD) is a methodology for computing
derivatives of functions given in the form of computer codes.
In addition to recent …
[View More]advances in AD research and software
development, conference topics include the use of AD in areas
such as optimization, ODEs/DAEs, and inverse problems.
Confirmed invited presentations:
Mike Giles (Oxford University)
Wolfgang Marquardt (RWTH Aachen University)
Arnold Neumaier (Vienna University)
Alex Pothen (Old Dominion University)
Eelco Visser (Delft University)
Publication:
Proceedings of all accepted papers will be published in
Springer's Lecture Notes in Computational Science and
Engineering series. The number of pages is limited to 10
in Springer's LaTeX2e style for contributed books.
Schedule:
The conference will start Monday afternoon and finish by noon
on Friday. A social event is planned for Wednesday afternoon.
Bonn is easily accessible within one hour from Frankfurt/Main
International Airport (by train or car). Its picturesque
location on the Rhine River makes it ideal for sightseeing
tours along the Rhine as well as for visits to the nearby
cities of Cologne, Duesseldorf, and Aachen. Details regarding
the location, procedures for registration and submission as
well as the preliminary program will be made available at
http://www.autodiff.org/ad08
Organized by RWTH Aachen University, AD2008 will take place at
Bonn-Aachen International Center for Information Technology
under the direction of an international program committee.
Important dates:
December 9, 2007 : Full papers submission
January 14, 2008 : Notification of acceptance
February 4, 2008 : Camera-ready papers
August 11-15, 2008: Conference
Previous conferences:
1991: Breckenridge, USA
1996: Santa Fe, USA
2000: Nice, France
2004: Chicago, USA
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[Apologies for multiple copies of this announcement that you may
receive.]
ENASE 2008 CALL FOR PAPERS
3rd International Conference on Evaluation of Novel Approaches to
Software Engineering
http://www.enase.org
Funchal, Madeira, 4 - 7 May, 2008
organized by the Institute for Systems and Technologies of
Information, Control and Communication (INSTICC)
IMPORTANT DATES:
Full Paper Submission: November 9, 2007
Authors Notification: January 4, 2008
Final Paper Submission and Registration: …
[View More]January 25, 2008
ENASE 2008 will be held in conjunction with WEBIST 2008
(http://www.webist.org)
Mission
The mission of the ENASE (Evaluation of Novel Approaches to Software
Engineering) series of working conferences is to be a prime
international forum to discuss and publish research findings and IT
industry experiences with relation to evaluation of novel approaches
to software engineering. By comparing novel approaches with
established traditional practices and by evaluating them against
software quality criteria, ENASE conferences advance knowledge and
research in software engineering, identify most hopeful trends and
propose new directions for consideration by researchers and
practitioners involved in large-scale software development and
integration.
Goals and Topics of Interest
ENASE provides a yearly forum for researchers and practitioners to
review and evaluate relatively new and original in conception SE
methods, practices, architectures, technologies and tools. An
important underpinning and assumption of ENASE is that in software
engineering "novel" turns out frequently to be just new hype. An
objective of ENASE is to reveal any such hype as soon as feasible.
This means that ENASE does not exclude more traditional approaches to
software development and integration. On the contrary, ENASE endeavors
to compare novel with traditional, also to discover if novel is not
just traditional in disguise. Consequently, ENASE accepts also papers
concentrating on a critique of more established and popular SE
approaches.
Against that background, ENASE undertakes to provide fast but careful
scientific and empirical evaluation of new as well as more established
approaches to software engineering. Of particular interest are
experience reports and evaluations (qualitative and quantitative) of
existing approaches as well as new ideas and proposals for
improvements. The conference solicits experiments, case studies,
surveys, meta-analyses, empirical studies, systematic reviews,
conceptual explorations, innovative ideas, critical appraisals, etc.
related to:
* agile software development,
* aspect-oriented software development,
* agent-oriented software engineering,
* multi-agent systems,
* model-driven engineering,
* component-based software engineering,
* evolutionary design,
* intentional software,
* example centric programming,
* meta programming systems,
* knowledge management and engineering,
* architectural design and meta architectures,
* business process management, engineering and reengineering,
* process-centric paradigms,
* service-oriented architectures,
* application integration technologies,
* enterprise integration strategies and patterns,
* e-business technologies,
* requirements engineering frameworks and models,
* collaborative requirements management systems,
* business and software modeling languages,
* software quality management,
* software change and configuration management,
* geographically distributed software development environments,
* cross-feeding between data engineering and software engineering,
* design thinking as a paradigm for software development,
* formal methods,
* software process improvement,
* metamodelling,
* software development methodologies
Conference Format
There will be full papers presented to the conference by the authors,
poster papers available for viewing and discussions, and demo papers
available for viewing and related to the demonstrations of software
tools and products.
Conference Publications
All accepted papers will be published in the conference proceedings,
under an ISBN reference, in paper and in CD-ROM support. A book
including a selection of the best full papers will be edited and
published by Springer-Verlag.
Conference Chairs
Joaquim Filipe (Polytechnic Institute of Setúbal / INSTICC, Portugal)
Leszek A. Maciaszek (Macquarie University ~ Sydney, Australia)
Program Chairs
Cesar Gonzalez-Perez (Neco, Spain)
Stefan Jablonski (University of Bayreuth, Germany)
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>>> LAST CALL <<<
>>> abstracts - Oct 12, full papers - Oct 17 <<<
PEPM 2008
ACM SIGPLAN Workshop on
Partial Evaluation and Program Manipulation
January 7-8, 2008, San Francisco
Keynotes by Ras Bodik (Berkeley) and Monica Lam (Stanford)
Co-located with POPL
http://www.program-transformation.org/PEPM08/WebHome
PEPM is a leading venue for the presentation of
cutting-edge …
[View More]research in program analysis, program
generation and program transformation. Its proceedings
are published by ACM Press; full details of the
scope, submission process, and program committee
can be found at the above URL.
The program committee would particularly welcome
submissions from
researchers on transformation systems
on any topic relating to
program transformation
Abstracts are due on October 12, and the deadline for
full paper submission is October 17.
Prospective authors are welcome to contact the program
chairs, Robert Glueck (glueck(a)acm.org) and Oege de Moor
(oege(a)comlab.ox.ac.uk) with any queries they might have.
[View Less]
PEPM 2008
ACM SIGPLAN Workshop on
Partial Evaluation and Program Manipulation
January 7-8, 2008, San Francisco
Keynotes by Ras Bodik (Berkeley) and Monica Lam (Stanford)
Co-located with POPL
http://www.program-transformation.org/PEPM08/WebHome
PEPM is a leading venue for the presentation of
cutting-edge research in program analysis, program
generation and program transformation. Its proceedings
are published by ACM Press; full details of the
scope, …
[View More]submission process, and program committee
can be found at the above URL.
The program committee would particularly welcome
submissions from
researchers on transformation systems
on any topic relating to
program transformation
Abstracts are due on October 12, and the deadline for
full paper submission is October 17.
Prospective authors are welcome to contact the program
chairs, Robert Glueck (glueck(a)acm.org) and Oege de Moor
(oege(a)comlab.ox.ac.uk) with any queries they might have.
[View Less]
Postdoctoral position in Programming Technology at the University of
Bergen, Norway
We are looking for an excellent researcher to fill a postdoctoral
position.
The position is available for a period of 2 years at the Department of
Informatics, University of Bergen, Norway. It is financed by the
Research Council of Norway (NFR) through the project Scientific
Computing with Algebraic and Generative Abstractions for Geophysical
Problems (SAGA-GEO, http://www.ii.uib.no/saga/). The project …
[View More]conducts
basic research on the use of advanced programming technologies for e-
science. The position is in this area in general, but there is a
preference for an expert in programming of parallel computers.
University of Bergen is a city university. Parts of the campus are in
fact situated in the town centre. We have about 17.000 students and
nearly 3000 employees. UiB is renowned for its research which holds a
high European standard and we have three Centres of Excellence (CoE).
The University of Bergen has a strong international profile which
entails close co-operation with universities all over the world.
The working environment will be the Programming technology Group at the
Department of Informatics, University of Bergen. The group consists of 2
full-time professors, 3 adjunct professors, 1 postdoctoral fellows and 5
PhD positions. The group is very international and much of the working
language is English. The project also involves cooperation with the
Mathematics Department and CIPR.
Applicants must have achieved a Norwegian doctorate in informatics,
mathematics or an equivalent education abroad, or have presented the
dissertation for assessment by the closing date for application. It is
prerequisite the dissertation has been approved before appointment is
granted.
The chief objective of the postdoctoral position is to qualify the
successful applicant for top academic positions.
It is expected that the successful candidate will start late 2006 or
early 2007. Salary will be paid in accordance with level 54 on the
government salary scale (code 1352) currently equivalent to NOK 390 000
(1 EURO is about 8 NKR) per year before tax. There are no teaching
duties. Positions in Norway include health and other benefits.
Please contact Professor Magne Haveraaen http://www.ii.uib.no/~magne/
phone 47 55 58 4154 if you are interested in this position or if you
have any questions.
State employment shall reflect the multiplicity of the population at
large to the highest possible degree. We have therefore adopted a
personnel policy objective to ensure that we achieve a balanced age and
sex composition and the recruitment of persons of various ethnic
backgrounds. Persons of different ethnic backgrounds are therefore
encouraged to apply for the position.
The successful applicant must comply with the guidelines that apply to
the position at any time.The University of Bergen applies the principles
of public openness when recruiting staff to scientific positions.
The successful applicant must comply with the guidelines that apply the
position at any time.
The University of Bergen applies the principles of public openness when
recruiting staff to scientific positions.
The application, and CV should be sent via the link
http://jobb.jobbnorge.no/visstilling2.aspx?stillid=34220&lang=EN menu
item "Apply for this position". The application should contain a brief
statement of the applicants interest and motivation; and the names and
email addresses of three referees.
In addition, the above material and copies of exams (bachelor, master,
PhD) and certificates, and up to 10 scientific works and a list of all
publications should be sent by e-mail to saga-inquire(a)ii.uib.no with
subject "saga-geo post doc 06/1147".
Closing date for applications: 15th December 2006.
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[You will probably receive multiple copies of this message.
I apologize for the inconvenience.]
LDTA Call for papers
This is the Call For Papers for the Eighth Workshop on Language
Descriptions,
Tools and Applications (LDTA 2008)
LDTA is a satellite event of ETAPS which takes place between March 29 and
April 6, 2008 in Budapest, Hungary.
See http://ldta2008.inf.elte.hu/
Please forward this call to anybody who you think might be interested in
this
workshop.
== Scope ==
LDTA is an …
[View More]application and tool oriented forum on meta programming in a
broad
sense. A meta program is a program that takes other programs as input or
output. The focus of LDTA is on generated or otherwise efficiently
implemented
meta programs, possibly using high level descriptions of programming
languages.
Tools and techniques presented at LDTA are usually applicable in the
context of
"Language Workbenches" or "Meta Programming Systems" or simply as parts of
advanced programming environments or IDEs. The applications areas
include, but
are not limited to:
* Program analysis, transformation, generation and verification
* Implementation of Domain Specific Languages (both visual and textual)
* Reverse engineering and reengineering
* Refactoring and other source-to-source transformations
* Application modelling (MDE, MDA, Software Factories, Product lines)
* Grammar engineering / Grammarware
* Language definition and language prototyping
* Debugging, profiling and testing
* IDE construction
* Compiler construction
LDTA is traditionally a forum where computer science theories are put to the
test of real-world software engineering issues, for example by applying:
* context-free grammars to parser generation for real programming
languages,
* attribute grammars to static analyzer and compiler generation,
* term rewriting to source-to-source transformation,
* action semantics to programming language implementation,
* model checking to software verification.
Note that LDTA solicits submissions from any technological or theoretical
domain, as long as the paper is within the application scope.
== Submission Procedure and Publication ==
Submissions in the following categories are admissible:
* research papers,
* experience reports,
* tool demonstrations.
The final versions of accepted papers will be published in Electronic
Notes in
Theoretical Computer Science (ENTCS), Elsevier Science, and will be made
available during the workshop.
Each submission must:
* be original, i.e. not published or submitted elsewhere,
* contain a clear motivation,
* contain a thorough analysis of the claimed results
(not for tool demonstrations),
* be written in less than 15 pages (research papers and experience
reports),
or less than 5 pages (tool demonstrations),
* specify which category (research, experience, tool demonstration)
the paper is to be considered under,
* use the ENTCS style.
The authors of the research papers and experience reports are required
to give
a 25 minute presentation at LDTA 2008. The authors of the tool
demonstrations
are required to give a 15 minute introduction to the tool, and to
demonstrate
their tool in a more interactive (parallel) session during 90 minutes.
The authors of the best full-length papers will be invited to write a
journal
version of their paper which will be separately reviewed and, assuming
acceptance, be published in journal form. As in past years, this will be
done
in a special issue devoted to LDTA 2008 of the journal Science of Computer
Programming (Elsevier Science).
The authors of the best tool demonstrations will be invited to write a short
paper and submit the source of code of their tool, which will both be
separately reviewed and, assuming acceptance, be published in the
special issue
on Experimental Software and Toolkits (EST) of the journal Science of
Computer
Programming (Elsevier Science).
Please email your submission to both a.johnstone(a)rhul.ac.uk and
jurgen.vinju(a)cwi.nl
== Important Dates ==
* Abstract submission deadline:
Friday November 30th, 2007
* Paper and tool demo submission deadline:
Friday December 7th, 2007
* Notification of acceptance:
Friday February 1st, 2008
* Workshop date:
Saturday April 5th, 2008
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PEPM 2008
by Oege.de.Moor@comlab.ox.ac.uk
06 Aug '07
06 Aug '07
PEPM 2008
ACM SIGPLAN Workshop on
Partial Evaluation and Program Manipulation
January 7-8, 2008, San Francisco
Keynotes by Ras Bodik (Berkeley) and Monica Lam (Stanford)
Co-located with POPL
http://www.program-transformation.org/PEPM08/WebHome
PEPM is a leading venue for the presentation of
cutting-edge research in program analysis, program
generation and program transformation. Its proceedings
are published by ACM Press; full details of the
scope, …
[View More]submission process, and program committee
can be found at the above URL.
The program committee would particularly welcome
submissions from
researchers on transformation systems
on any topic relating to
program transformation
Abstracts are due on October 12, and the deadline for
full paper submission is October 17.
Prospective authors are welcome to contact the program
chairs, Robert Glueck (glueck(a)acm.org) and Oege de Moor
(oege(a)comlab.ox.ac.uk) with any queries they might have.
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