We apologize if you receive multiple copies of this notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
ScalA21: 12th Workshop on Latest Advances in
Scalable Algorithms for Large-Scale Systems
held in conjunction with the
SC21: The International Conference on High Performance
Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis
November 19, 2021, St. Louis, MO, USA
<http://www.csm.ornl.gov/srt/conferences/Scala/2021>
Novel scalable scientific algorithms are needed in order to enable key
science applications to exploit the computational power of large-scale
systems. This is especially true for the current tier of leading petascale
machines and the road to exascale computing as HPC systems continue to scale
up in compute node and processor core count. These extreme-scale systems
require novel scientific algorithms to hide network and memory latency, have
very high computation/communication overlap, have minimal communication, and
have no synchronization points. With the advent of Big Data and AI in the
past few years the need of such scalable mathematical methods and algorithms
able to handle data and compute intensive applications at scale becomes even
more important.
Scientific algorithms for multi-petaflop and exa-flop systems also need to be
fault tolerant and fault resilient, since the probability of faults increases
with scale. Resilience at the system software and at the algorithmic level is
needed as a crosscutting effort. Finally, with the advent of heterogeneous
compute nodes that employ standard processors as well as GPGPUs, scientific
algorithms need to match these architectures to extract the most performance.
This includes different system-specific levels of parallelism as well as
co-scheduling of computation. Key science applications require novel
mathematical models and system software that address the scalability and
resilience challenges of current- and future-generation extreme-scale HPC
systems.
Submission Guidelines
---------------------
Authors are invited to submit manuscripts in English structured as technical
papers at a length of at least 6 letter size (8.5in x 11in) pages and not
exceeding 8 pages, including figures, tables, and references using the IEEE
format for conference proceedings. Reference style files are available at
<http://www.ieee.org/conferences_events/conferences/publishing/templates.html>.
Submitted papers must represent original unpublished research that is not
currently under review for any other conference or journal. Papers not
following these guidelines will be rejected without review and further
action may be taken, including (but not limited to) notifications sent to
the heads of the institutions of the authors and sponsors of the conference.
Submissions received after the due date, exceeding length limit, or not
appropriately structured may also not be considered. Papers should be
submitted electronically at <https://submissions.supercomputing.org>.
All manuscripts will be peer-reviewed and judged on correctness, originality,
technical strength, and significance, quality of presentation, and interest
and relevance to the workshop attendees. At least one author of an accepted
paper must register for and present the paper at the workshop. Authors may
contact the workshop program chair, Christian Engelmann at
engelmannc(a)ornl.gov, for more information.
Important Web Sites
-------------------
- ScalA21 Website: <https://www.csm.ornl.gov/srt/conferences/Scala/2021>
- ScalA21 Submissions: <https://submissions.supercomputing.org>
- SC21 website: <http://sc21.supercomputing.org/>
Important Dates
---------------
- Full paper submission: August 27, 2021
- Notification of acceptance: September 27, 2021
- Final paper submission (firm): TBD
- Workshop/conference early registration: October 15, 2021
- Workshop: 8:30am - 12pm CST, November 19, 2021
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
---------------------------------------------------
- Novel scientific algorithms that improve performance, scalability,
resilience, and power efficiency
- Porting scientific algorithms and applications to many-core and
heterogeneous architectures
- Performance and resilience limitations of scientific algorithms and
applications at scale, including Data Science approaches in dealing
with Big Data
- Crosscutting approaches (system software and applications) in addressing
scalability challenges
- Scientific algorithms that can exploit extreme concurrency (e.g. 1 billion
for exascale by 2023)
- Naturally fault tolerant, self-healing, or fault oblivious scientific
algorithms
- Programming model and system software support for algorithm scalability
and resilience (including ones enabling Big Data processing)
Workshop Chairs
---------------
- Vassil Alexandrov, Hartree Centre, Science and Technology Facilities
Council, UK
- Al Geist, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA
- Jack Dongarra, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA
Workshop Program Chair
----------------------
- Christian Engelmann, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA
Contact at engelmannc(a)ornl.gov
Program Committee
-----------------
- Hartwig Anzt, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA
- Rick Archibald, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA
- Marco Berghoff, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany
- Hans-Joachim Bungartz, Technical University of Munich, Germany
- Florina M. Ciorba, University of Basel, Switzerland
- James Elliott, Sandia National Laboratories, USA
- Nahid Emad, University of Versailles SQ, France
- Wilfried Gansterer, University of Vienna, Austria
- Yasuhiro Idomura, Japan Atomic Energy Agency, Japan
- Kirk E. Jordan, IBM T.J. Watson Research, USA
- Dieter Kranzlmueller, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Germany
- Sriram Krishnamoorthy, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, USA
- Paul Lin, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, USA
- Kengo Nakajima, RIKEN, Japan
- Yves Robert, ENS Lyon, France
- Stuart Slattery, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA
- Keita Teranishi, Sandia National Laboratories, USA
--
Christian Engelmann, Ph.D.
Senior Scientist & Group Leader
Intelligent Systems and Facilities Group
Advanced Computing Systems Research Section
Computer Science and Mathematics Division
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Mail: P.O. Box 2008, Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6173, USA
Phone: +1 (865) 574-3132 / Fax: +1 (865) 576-5491
e-Mail: engelmannc(a)ornl.gov / Home: www.christian-engelmann.info
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FINAL Call for Participation
*** UPDATED Program Summary ***
25th Ada-Europe International Conference on
Reliable Software Technologies (AEiC 2021)
7-10 June 2021, Virtual Event
www.ada-europe.org/conference2021
*** Check out tutorials! ***
www.ada-europe.org/conference2021/tutorials.html
*** Don't miss the thematic social events on Tuesday and Wednesday ***
*** Full Program available on the conference web site ***
*** Register now! ***
#AEiC2021 #AdaEurope #AdaProgramming
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Press release:
25th Ada-Europe Int'l Conference on Reliable Software Technologies
International experts meet in virtual conference hosted by Underline
Santander, Spain (31 May 2021) - Ada-Europe together with the University
of Cantabria, Spain organize from 7 to 10 June 2021 the 25th Ada-Europe
International Conference on Reliable Software Technologies (AEiC 2021).
The conference was initially scheduled to take place in Santander,
Spain. According to the safety and sanitary measures under the COVID-19
pandemic, this year the conference will be a virtual event, hosted by
Underline (https://underline.io). The event is in cooperation with
the Ada Resource Association (ARA), and with ACM's Special Interest
Groups on Ada (SIGAda), on Embedded Systems (SIGBED) and on Programming
Languages (SIGPLAN).
The Ada-Europe series of conferences has over the years become a leading
international forum for providers, practitioners and researchers in
reliable software technologies. These events highlight the increased
relevance of Ada in general and in safety- and security-critical systems
in particular, and provide a unique opportunity for interaction and
collaboration between academics and industrial practitioners.
This year's conference offers 5 tutorials, 3 keynotes, a technical
program of 7 sessions with refereed papers, invited and industrial
presentations, a work-in-progress session, an industrial exhibition
and vendor presentations, and a social program.
Five parallel tutorials are scheduled on Monday, targeting different
audiences:
- "Programming mobile robots with ROS2 and the RCLAda Ada client
library", by Alejandro R. Mosteo;
- "Introduction to the development of safety critical software",
by Jean-Pierre Rosen;
- "Parallel programming with Ada and OpenMP", by Sara Royuela,
S. Tucker Taft, Luis Miguel Pinho;
- "Timing verification from UML & MARTE design models: techniques
& tools", by Laurent Rioux, Julio Medina and Shuai Li;
- "Programming shared memory computers", by Jan Verschelde.
Tutorial registration is complementary for conference participants.
The industrial exhibition opens Tuesday under the Expo area in the
virtual platform and also in the Lounge, which is the networking area.
It runs until the end of Thursday afternoon. Exhibitors include
AdaCore, PTC Developer Tools, and Ada-Europe. All conference
participants are invited to the exhibition as well as to the virtual
social events.
Three eminent speakers have been invited to deliver a keynote at each
of the core conference days:
- Ángel Conde, Data Analytics and Artificial Intelligence team leader at
IKERLAN (Spain), who will present his work on "Software reliability in
the Big Data era with an industry-minded focus";
- Alfons Crespo, who is with the Institute of Automation and Industrial
Informatics of the Universitat Politècnica de València (Spain), will
give an answer to the question "Why hypervisor-based approach is the
best alternative for mixed-criticality systems";
- Tucker Taft, who is Director of Language Research at AdaCore (USA),
will talk on "A sampling of Ada 2022".
The technical program from Tuesday to Thursday presents 13 refereed
technical papers and 5 invited, 6 industrial and 4 vendor presentations
in sessions on:
- Scheduling and mixed-criticality systems,
- Software modeling,
- Autonomous systems,
- Ada issues and Ravenscar,
- Validation and verification tools,
- Emerging applications with reliability requirements,
- Safety challenges.
In addition, there is a work-in-progress session including 8
presentations and associated posters.
Peer-reviewed papers have been submitted to a special issue
of the Journal of Systems Architecture and are heading towards
final acceptance as open-access publications. Industrial and
work-in-progress presentations, together with tutorial abstracts,
will be offered publication in the Ada User Journal, the quarterly
magazine of Ada-Europe.
The social program is hosted in a space under the gather.town
environment that allows informal and lively gathering of the
participants. This space has different areas, such as rooms,
tables, and corners where a participant can approach to talk
though videoconferencing with participants in the same virtual area.
This facility will be used for the breaks, poster session, exhibition
and social events. Don't miss the thematic social events at the end
of each core conference day.
The Best Presentation Award will be offered during the Closing session.
The full program is available on the conference web site.
Online registration is still possible.
-------
Latest updates:
The "Final Program" is available at
www.ada-europe.org/conference2021/final-program.pdf.
Check out the tutorials in the PDF program, or in the schedule at
www.ada-europe.org/conference2021/tutorials.html.
Registration fees are lower than ever and the registration
process is done on-line. Don't delay! For all details, select
"Registration" at www.ada-europe.org/conference2021 or go directly
to https://registration.ada-europe.org.
The technical sessions are designed with the flipped-conference concept,
where the audience can access pre-recorded presentation materials
in advance. The live sessions are devoted to short presentations of
the highlights of each contribution, allowing ample time for questions
and answers with the presenter. The recorded materials will also be
available for some time after their sessions.
The program runs between 12:30 and 18:30 CEST, to allow participation
from different time zones. For more info and latest updates see the
conference web site at www.ada-europe.org/conference2021.
AEiC 2021 is sponsored by AdaCore (www.adacore.com), Ellidiss
(www.ellidiss.com), PTC Developer Tools (www.ptc.com/developer-tools),
Universidad de Cantabria (web.unican.es/en), and Vector
(www.vector.com/at/en).
Help promote the conference by advertising it.
Recommended Twitter hashtags: #AdaEurope and/or #AEiC2021.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Our apologies if you receive multiple copies of this announcement.
Please circulate widely.
Dirk Craeynest, AEiC 2021 Publicity Chair (aka Ada-Europe 2021),
Dirk.Craeynest(a)cs.kuleuven.be
* 25th Ada-Europe Int. Conf. Reliable Software Technologies (AEiC 2021)
* June 7-10, 2021 * online event * www.ada-europe.org/conference2021 **
Dear Colleagues.
The version 0.12 of the SARL Agent Programming Language is release (
http://www.sarl.io)
This language enables you to create an application with agent-oriented
concepts, inspired by the ASPECS methodology and the CRIO metamodel.
Changes are listed in: http://www.sarl.io/download/changes_0.12.html
Have fun.
Prof. Dr Stéphane GALLAND
=========================================================================
CALL FOR SHORT PAPERS
The 37th International Conference on Logic Programming (ICLP 2021)
=========================================================================
We are pleased to announce our distinguished invited speakers.
** William W. Cohen, Google AI
** John Hooker, CMU
** Phokion Kolaitis, UC Santa Cruz and IBM Almaden
** Stuart Russell, UC Berkeley
** Jeffrey Ullman, Stanford University
=========================================================================
Contributions are sought in all areas of logic programming, including
but not restricted to:
** Foundations: Semantics, Formalisms, Nonmonotonic reasoning,
Knowledge representation.
** Languages issues: Concurrency, Objects, Coordination, Mobility,
Higher order, Types, Modes, Assertions, Modules, Meta-programming,
Logic-based domain-specific languages, Programming techniques.
** Programming support: Program analysis, Transformation, Validation,
Verification, Debugging, Profiling, Testing, Execution
visualization.
** Implementation: Compilation, Virtual machines, Memory management,
Parallel/distributed execution, Constraint handling rules, Tabling,
Foreign interfaces, User interfaces.
** Related Paradigms and Synergies: Inductive and coinductive logic
programming, Constraint logic programming, Answer set programming,
Interaction with SAT, SMT and CSP solvers, Theorem proving,
Argumentation, Probabilistic programming, Machine learning.
** Applications: Databases, Big data, Data integration and federation,
Software engineering, Natural language processing, Web and semantic
web, Agents, Artificial intelligence, Computational life sciences,
Cybersecurity, Robotics, Education.
Important Dates
***************
** Short Paper Submission: July 4, 2021
** Notification: July 30, 2021
** Camera-ready copy due: August 10, 2021
** Conference: September 20--27, 2021
Submission Details
******************
Expected submissions must follow the instructions:
** Short papers (7 pages in EPTCS format (http://info.eptcs.org/),
including references) can describe published research.
The accepted short papers that describe original and previously
unpublished work will be published as technical communications,
along with the selected ICLP technical communications papers.
The accepted short papers that describe published research will be
made available at the conference webpage, with the permission of
the authors.
All submissions must be written in English. Accepted technical
communications will be presented during the conference. Authors of
accepted technical communications will, by default, be automatically
included in the list of ALP members, who will receive quarterly
updates from the Logic Programming Newsletter at no cost.
Submissions will be done via EasyChair. The submission Web page for
ICLP2021 is https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=iclp2021
More details
************
https://iclp2021.dcc.fc.up.pt
Any additional question can be directed towards ICLP Chairs:
iclp2021(a)easychair.org
=========================================================================
CFP: 2021 SIGKDD Workshop on Mining and Learning from Time Series
[apologies for cross-posting]
CFP Webpage: https://kdd-milets.github.io/milets2021/#call* (Deadline: June
1, 2021)*
--------------------------------------------------------------
7th SIGKDD Workshop on Mining and Learning from Time Series (MiLeTS) 2021
Aug 14th, 2021 - KDD Virtual Conference
https://kdd-milets.github.io/milets2021/
--------------------------------------------------------------
----------------
KEY DATES
----------------
*Paper Submission Deadline: June 1, 2021, 11:59PM Alofi Time*Author
Notification: June 28, 2021
Camera Ready Version: July 5, 2021
Workshop: August 14th, 2021
-------------------------------------------------
MiLeTS is the premier KDD workshop on Mining and Learning from Time Series.
Time series data are ubiquitous. In domains as diverse as finance,
entertainment, transportation, and health care, we observe a fundamental
shift away from parsimonious, infrequent measurement to nearly continuous
monitoring and recording. Rapid advances in diverse sensing technologies,
ranging from remote sensors to wearables and social sensing, are generating
rapid growth in the size and complexity of time series archives. Thus,
although time series analysis has been studied extensively, its importance
only continues to grow. What is more, modern time series data pose
significant challenges to existing techniques (e.g., irregular sampling in
hospital records and spatiotemporal structure in climate data). Finally,
time series mining research is challenging and rewarding because it bridges
a variety of disciplines and demands interdisciplinary solutions. Now is
the time to discuss the next generation of temporal mining algorithms. The
focus of MiLeTS workshop is to synergize the research in this area and
discuss both new and open problems in time series analysis and mining. The
solutions to these problems may be algorithmic, theoretical, statistical,
or systems-based in nature. Further, MiLeTS emphasizes applications to high
impact or relatively new domains, including but not limited to biology,
health and medicine, climate and weather, road traffic, astronomy, and
energy.
The MiLeTS workshop will discuss a broad variety of topics related to time
series, including:
· Time series pattern mining and detection, representation, searching
and indexing, classification, clustering, prediction, forecasting, and rule
mining.
· BIG time series data.
· Hardware acceleration techniques using GPUs, FPGAs and special
processors.
· Online, high-speed learning and mining from streaming time series.
· Uncertain time series mining.
· Privacy preserving time series mining and learning.
· Time series that are multivariate, high-dimensional, heterogeneous,
etc., or that possess other atypical properties.
· Time series with special structure: spatiotemporal (e.g., wind
patterns at different locations), relational (e.g., patients with similar
diseases), hierarchical, etc.
· Time series with sparse or irregular sampling, non-random missing
values, and special types of measurement noise or bias.
· Time series analysis using less traditional approaches, such as
deep learning and subspace clustering.
· Applications to high impact or relatively new time series domains,
such as health and medicine, road traffic, and air quality.
· New, open, or unsolved problems in time series analysis and mining.
------------------------------
Submission Guidelines
------------------------------
Submissions should follow the SIGKDD formatting requirements and will be
evaluated using the SIGKDD Research Track evaluation criteria. Preference
will be given to papers that are reproducible, and authors are encouraged
to share their data and code publicly whenever possible. Submissions are
strongly recommended to be no more than 4 pages, excluding references or
supplementary materials (all in a single pdf). The appropriateness of using
additional pages over the recommended length will be judged by reviewers.
All submissions must be in pdf format using the workshop template (latex,
word). Submissions will be managed via the MiLeTS 2021 EasyChair website:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=milets2021.
*Note on open problem submissions:* To promote new and innovative research
on time series, we plan to accept a small number of high-quality
manuscripts describing open problems in time series analysis and mining.
Such papers should provide a clear, detailed description and analysis of a
new or open problem that poses a significant challenge to existing
techniques, as well as a thorough empirical investigation demonstrating
that current methods are insufficient.
*COVID-19 Time Series Analysis Special Track:* The COVID-19 pandemic is
impacting almost everyone worldwide and is expected to have life-altering
short and long-term effects. There are many potential applications of time
series analysis and mining that can contribute to the understanding of this
pandemic. We encourage the submission of high-quality manuscripts
describing original problems, time-series datasets, and novel solutions for
time series analysis and forecasting of COVID-19.
The review process is single-round and double-blind (submission files have
to be anonymized). Concurrent submissions to other journals and conferences
are acceptable. Accepted papers will be presented as posters during the
workshop and listed on the website. Besides, a small number of accepted
papers will be selected to be presented as contributed talks.
Any questions may be directed to the workshop e-mail address:
kdd.milets(a)gmail.com.
-----------------
KEY DATES
-----------------
*Paper Submission Deadline: June 1, 2021, 11:59PM Alofi Time*Author
Notification: June 28, 2021
Camera Ready Version: July 5, 2021
Workshop: August 14th, 2021
-------------------------------
Organizing Committee
-------------------------------
Sanjay Purushotham
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Yaguang Li
Google
Zhengping Che
Didi Chuxing
--------------------------
Steering Committee
--------------------------
Eamonn Keogh
University of California Riverside
Yan Liu
University of Southern California
Abdullah Mueen
University of New Mexico
-------------
Contact:
--------------
Any questions may be directed to the workshop e-mail address:
kdd.milets(a)gmail.com.
**********************************************************************
We apologize if you received multiple copies of this email.
Please feel free to distribute it to those who might be interested
**********************************************************************
IEEE International Conference on High Performance Computing, Data,
Analytics, and Data Science, HiPC 2021: Deadlines Approaching
Abstract Submission Deadline: 4 June, 2021
Paper Submission Deadline: 11 June, 2021
For more details, please visit: https://hipc.org/call-for-papers/
=========================================================================
CALL FOR PAPERS
ICLP DC 2021 - 17th Doctoral Consortium (DC) on Logic Programming
=========================================================================
The 17th Doctoral Consortium (DC) on Logic Programming provides
students with the opportunity to present and discuss their research
directions, and to obtain feedback from both peers and experts in the
field. The preliminary website of the DC can be found at:
https://sites.google.com/view/iclp-dc-2021/iclp-2021-doctoral-consortium
The DC will take place during the 37th International Conference on
Logic Programming (ICLP) https://iclp2021.dcc.fc.up.pt (September
20-27, 2021), as a fully virtual event. The best paper from the DC
will be given the opportunity to make a presentation in a session of
the main ICLP conference.
Important Dates
***************
Paper submission: July 15, 2021
Notification: August 01, 2021
Camera-ready copy: August 10, 2021
DC presentations: TBA (fully virtual event)
DC students are highly recommended to attend the Autumn School on
Logic Programming and Constraint Programming
(https://sites.google.com/view/iclp-dc-2021/autumn-school-on-logic-programmi…).
Audience
********
The DC is designed for students currently enrolled in a Ph.D. program,
though we are also open to exceptions (e.g., students currently in a
Master's program and interested in doctoral studies). Students at any
stage in their doctoral studies are encouraged to apply for
participation in the DC.
Applicants are expected to conduct research in areas related to logic
and constraint programming; topics of interest include (but are not
limited to):
** Foundations: Semantics, Formalisms, Nonmonotonic reasoning,
Knowledge representation.
** Languages: Concurrency, Objects, Coordination, Mobility, Higher
Order, Types, Modes, Assertions, Modules, Meta-programming,
Logic-based domain-specific languages, Programming Techniques.
** Declarative programming: Declarative program development, Analysis,
Type and mode inference, Partial evaluation, Abstract
interpretation, Transformation, Validation, Verification,
Debugging, Profiling, Testing, Execution visualization.
** Implementation: Virtual machines, Compilation, Memory management,
Parallel/distributed execution, Constraint handling rules, Tabling,
Foreign interfaces, User interfaces.
** Related Paradigms and Synergies: Inductive and Co-inductive Logic
Programming, Constraint Logic Programming, Answer Set Programming,
Interaction with SAT, SMT and CSP solvers, Logic programming
techniques for type inference and theorem proving, Argumentation,
Probabilistic Logic Programming, Relations to object-oriented and
Functional programming.
** Applications: Databases, Big Data, Data integration and federation,
Software engineering, Natural language processing, Web and Semantic
Web, Agents, Artificial intelligence, Computational life sciences,
Education, Cybersecurity, and Robotics.
Submissions by students who have presented their work at previous ICLP
DC editions are allowed, but should occur only if there are
substantial changes or improvements to the student's work. The DC
offers participants a convenient, more informal way to interact with
established researchers and fellow students, through presentations,
question-answer sessions, panel discussions, and invited
presentations.
The Doctoral Consortium will also provide the possibility to reflect -
through short activities, information sessions, and discussions - on
the process and lessons of research and life in academia. Each
participant will give a short, critiqued, research presentation.
Discussants
***********
Renowned experts and researchers in the fields of logic and constraint
programming will join in evaluating submissions and will participate
in the DC, providing valuable feedback to DC participants.
Goals
*****
** To provide doctoral students working in the fields of logic and
constraint programming with a friendly and open forum to present
their research ideas, listen to ongoing work from peer students,
and receive constructive feedback.
** To provide students with relevant information about important
issues for doctoral candidates and future academics.
** To develop a supportive community of scholars and a spirit of
collaborative research.
** To support a new generation of researchers with information and
advice on academic, research, industrial, and non-traditional
career paths.
Submission Details
******************
Submissions of the research summary must be made in EPTCS format
(http://info.eptcs.org/) and submitted via EasyChair. All papers must
be written in English and should be between 5 and 10 pages. For all
accepted DC papers, the student is required to attend the DC program
and give a presentation during the DC.
A program committee consisting of experts in various areas related to
logic and constraint programming reviews the submissions. Papers are
reviewed by at least two, and usually three, referees. The submission
package should consist of the research summary in the format mentioned
above, a short vita or cover letter of the applicant, a letter of
recommendation from applicant's faculty advisor, and one paragraph
statement outlining how the school will benefit the applicant. All
material is to be submitted electronically, in PDF format on the
Easychair system. Easychair link:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=iclp2021 (Doctoral Consortium
track)
Research summary (make sure to include your complete name, address,
and affiliation): The body of your research summary (no more than 10
pages, but 5 is fine as well!) should provide a clear overview of your
research, its potential impact, and its current status. You are
encouraged to include the following sections:
** Introduction and problem description
** Background and overview of the existing literature
** Goal of the research
** Current status of the research
** Preliminary results accomplished (if any)
** Open issues and expected achievements
** Bibliographical references
Review Criteria
***************
The DC program committee will select participants based on their
anticipated contribution to the DC objectives. Participants typically
have settled on their thesis directions and have their research
proposal accepted by their thesis committee.
Students will be selected based on clarity and completeness of their
submission package, relevance of their research area w.r.t. the focus
of ICLP, stage of research, recommendation letter, and evidence of
promise towards a successful career in research and academia, such as
published papers or technical reports.
Registration
************
Registration is part of the ICLP 2021 registration. Registration costs
for ICLP will be lower than usual since it is virtual this year. We
aim to find sponsoring to cover the registration cost of students
participating in the DC, but this still has to be confirmed.
Program co-chairs
*****************
Bart Bogaerts, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Carmine Dodaro, University of Calabria
Program Committee
*****************
Daniela Inclezan, Miami University OH
Johannes Fichte, TU Dresden
Fabio Fioravanti, University of Chieti-Pescara
Gregory Gelfond, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Zeynep G. Saribatur, Vienna University of Technology
Frank Valencia, LIX, Ecole Polytechnique
Matthias Van der Hallen, KU Leuven
Yi Wang, Arizona State University
Jessica Zangari, University of Calabria
14th Workshop on Resiliency in High Performance Computing (Resilience)
in Clusters, Clouds, and Grids
<https://www.csm.ornl.gov/srt/conferences/Resilience/2021>
in conjunction with
the 27th International European Conference on Parallel and Distributed
Computing (Euro-Par), Lisbon, Portugal
August 30 - September 3, 2021
<http://2021.euro-par.org>
Overview:
Resilience is a critical challenge as high performance computing (HPC) systems continue to increase component counts, individual component reliability decreases (such as due to shrinking process technology and near-threshold voltage (NTV) operation), hardware complexity increases (such as due to heterogeneous computing) and software complexity increases (such as due to complex data- and workflows, real-time requirements and integration of artificial intelligence (AI) technologies with traditional applications).
Correctness and execution efficiency, in spite of faults, errors, and failures, is essential to ensure the success of the HPC systems, cluster computing environments, Grid computing infrastructures, and Cloud computing services. The impact of faults, errors, and failures in such HPC systems can range from financial losses due to system downtime (sometimes several tens-of-thousands of Dollars per lost system-hour), to financial losses due to unnecessary overprovision (acquisition and operating costs), to financial losses and legal liabilities due to erroneous or delayed output.
The emergence of AI technology opens up new possibilities, but also new problems. Using AI technology for operational intelligence that enables resilience in HPC systems and centers is a complex control problem, while designing resilient AI technology for HPC applications is a difficult algorithmic problem. Resilience for HPC systems encompasses a wide spectrum of fundamental and applied research and development, including theoretical foundations, error/failure and anomaly detection, monitoring and control, end-to-end data integrity, enabling infrastructure, and resilient algorithms.
This workshop brings together experts in the community to further research and development in HPC resilience and to facilitate exchanges across the computational paradigms of extreme-scale HPC, cluster computing, Grid computing, and Cloud computing.
Submission Guidelines:
Authors are invited to submit papers electronically in English in PDF format. Submitted manuscripts should be structured as technical papers and BETWEEN 10 AND 12 PAGES, including figures, tables and references, using Springer's Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) format at <http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-6-793341-0>. Papers with less than 10 or more than 12 pages will not be accepted due to publisher guidelines. Submissions should include abstract, key words and the e-mail address of the corresponding author. Papers not conforming to these guidelines may be returned without review. All manuscripts will be reviewed and will be judged on correctness, originality, technical strength, significance, quality of presentation, and interest and relevance to the conference attendees. Submitted papers must represent original unpublished research that is not currently under review for any other conference or journal. Papers not following these guidelines will be rejected
without review and further action may be taken, including (but not limited to) notifications sent to the heads of the institutions of the authors and sponsors of the conference. Submissions received after the due date or not appropriately structured may also not be considered. The proceedings will be published in Springer's LNCS as post-conference proceedings. At least one author of an accepted paper must register for and attend the workshop for inclusion in the proceedings. Authors may contact the workshop program chairs for more information.
Important websites:
- Resilience 2021 Website: <https://www.csm.ornl.gov/srt/conferences/Resilience/2021>
- Resilience 2021 Submissions: <https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=europar2021> (Select "WS06" Track)
- Euro-Par 2021 website: <http://2021.euro-par.org>
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Theoretical foundations for resilience:
- Metrics and measurement
- Statistics and optimization
- Simulation and emulation
- Formal methods
- Efficiency modeling and uncertainty quantification
- Experience reports
- Error/failure/anomaly detection and reliability/dependability modeling:
- Statistical analyses
- Machine learning and artificial intelligence
- Digital twins
- Data collection and aggregation
- Information visualization
- Monitoring and control for resilience:
- Center, system and application monitoring and control
- Reliability, availability, serviceability and performability
- Tunable fidelity and quality of service
- Automated response and recovery
- Operational intelligence to enable resilience
- End-to-end integrity:
- Fault tolerant design of centers, systems and applications
- Forward migration and verification
- Degraded operation
- Error propagation, failure cascades, and error/failure containment
- Testing and evaluation, including fault/error/failure injection
- Enabling infrastructure for resilience:
- Reliability, availability, serviceability systems
- System software and middleware
- Resilience extensions for programming models
- Tools and frameworks
- Support for resilience in heterogeneous architectures
- Resilient algorithms:
- Algorithmic detection and correction
- Resilient solvers and algorithm-based fault tolerance
- Fault tolerant numerical methods
- Robust iterative algorithms
- Resilient artificial intelligence
Important Dates:
- Workshop papers due: June 14, 2021 (23:59 AoE) [2nd Extension]
- Workshop author notification: June 30, 2021
- Workshop author registration: TBD
- Workshop paper (for informal workshop proceedings, due in EasyChair): July 14, 2021
- Workshop date: August 30 or 31, 2021
- Workshop camera-ready papers: September 10, 2021
General Co-Chairs:
- Stephen L. Scott
Tennessee Tech University, USA
scottsl(a)ornl.gov
- Christian Engelmann
Oak Ridge National Laboratory , USA
engelmannc(a)ornl.gov
Program Co-Chairs:
- Ferrol Aderholdt
Middle Tennessee State University, USA
ferrol.aderholdt(a)mtsu.edu
- Thomas Naughton
Oak Ridge National Laboratory , USA
naughtont(a)ornl.gov
Workshop Chair Emeritus:
- Chokchai (Box) Leangsuksun
Louisiana Tech University, USA
box(a)latech.edu
Program Committee:
- Wesley Bland, Intel Corporation, USA
- Hans-Joachim Bungartz, Technical University of Munich, Germany
- Marc Casas, Barcelona Supercomputer Center, Spain
- Zizhong Chen, University of California at Riverside, USA
- James Elliott, Sandia National Laboratories, USA
- Kurt Ferreira, Sandia National Laboratories, USA
- Saurabh Hukerikar, NVIDIA, USA
- Ignacio Laguna, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, USA
- Scott Levy, Sandia National Laboratories, USA
- Rolf Riesen, Intel Corporation, USA
- Yves Robert, ENS Lyon, France
- Thomas Ropars, Universite Grenoble Alpes, France
- Martin Schulz, Technical University of Munich, Germany
- Keita Teranishi, Sandia National Laboratories, USA
_________________________________________________________________________
Thomas Naughton naughtont(a)ornl.gov
Research Associate (865) 576-4184
Dear AI scientist/engineer/student/enthusiast,
Prof. John Shawe-Taylor (University College London, UK), a prominent AI researcher internationally, will deliver the e-lecture:
‘An Introduction to PAC-Bayesian Analysis’, on Tuesday 18th May 2021 17:00-18:00 CET (8:00-9:00 am PST), (12:00 am-1:00am CST),
see details in: <http://www.i-aida.org/ai-lectures/> http://www.i-aida.org/ai-lectures/
You can join for free using the zoom link: <https://authgr.zoom.us/j/98708421450> https://authgr.zoom.us/j/98708421450 & Passcode: 148148
The <http://www.i-aida.org/> International AI Doctoral Academy (AIDA), a joint initiative of the European R&D projects <https://ai4media.eu/> AI4Media, <https://www.elise-ai.eu/> ELISE, <https://www.humane-ai.eu/> Humane AI Net, <https://tailor-network.eu/> TAILOR, <https://www.vision4ai.eu/> VISION, currently in the process of formation,
is very pleased to offer you top quality scientific lectures on several current hot AI topics.
Lectures will be offered alternatingly by:
Top highly-cited senior AI scientists internationally or
Young AI scientists with promise of excellence (AI sprint lectures)
Lectures are typically held once per week, Tuesdays 17:00-18:00 CET (8:00-9:00 am PST), (12:00 am-1:00am CST). Attendance is free.
These lectures are disseminated through multiple channels and email lists (we apologize if you received it through various channels).
If you want to stay informed on future lectures, you can register in the email lists <https://lists.auth.gr/sympa/info/aida> AIDA email list and <https://lists.auth.gr/sympa/info/cvml> CVML email list.
Best regards
Profs. M. Chetouani, P. Flach, B. O’Sullivan, I. Pitas, N. Sebe
--
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Dear colleagues and researchers,
CFP Webpage: https://kdd-milets.github.io/milets2021/#call
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*7th SIGKDD Workshop on Mining and Learning from Time Series (MiLeTS)
2021Aug 14th, 2021 - KDD Virtual Conference*
https://kdd-milets.github.io/milets2021/
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KEY DATES
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*Paper Submission Deadline: May 20th, 2021, 11:59PM Alofi Time*
Author Notification: June 10th, 2021
Camera Ready Version: June 24th, 2021
Workshop: August 14th, 2021
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MiLeTS is the premier KDD workshop on Mining and Learning from Time Series.
Time series data are ubiquitous. In domains as diverse as finance,
entertainment, transportation, and health care, we observe a fundamental
shift away from parsimonious, infrequent measurement to nearly continuous
monitoring and recording. Rapid advances in diverse sensing technologies,
ranging from remote sensors to wearables and social sensing, are generating
rapid growth in the size and complexity of time series archives. Thus,
although time series analysis has been studied extensively, its importance
only continues to grow. What is more, modern time series data pose
significant challenges to existing techniques (e.g., irregular sampling in
hospital records and spatiotemporal structure in climate data). Finally,
time series mining research is challenging and rewarding because it bridges
a variety of disciplines and demands interdisciplinary solutions. Now is
the time to discuss the next generation of temporal mining algorithms. The
focus of MiLeTS workshop is to synergize the research in this area and
discuss both new and open problems in time series analysis and mining. The
solutions to these problems may be algorithmic, theoretical, statistical,
or systems-based in nature. Further, MiLeTS emphasizes applications to high
impact or relatively new domains, including but not limited to biology,
health and medicine, climate and weather, road traffic, astronomy, and
energy.
The MiLeTS workshop will discuss a broad variety of topics related to time
series, including:
· Time series pattern mining and detection, representation, searching
and indexing, classification, clustering, prediction, forecasting, and rule
mining.
· BIG time series data.
· Hardware acceleration techniques using GPUs, FPGAs and special
processors.
· Online, high-speed learning and mining from streaming time series.
· Uncertain time series mining.
· Privacy preserving time series mining and learning.
· Time series that are multivariate, high-dimensional, heterogeneous,
etc., or that possess other atypical properties.
· Time series with special structure: spatiotemporal (e.g., wind
patterns at different locations), relational (e.g., patients with similar
diseases), hierarchical, etc.
· Time series with sparse or irregular sampling, non-random missing
values, and special types of measurement noise or bias.
· Time series analysis using less traditional approaches, such as
deep learning and subspace clustering.
· Applications to high impact or relatively new time series domains,
such as health and medicine, road traffic, and air quality.
· New, open, or unsolved problems in time series analysis and mining.
------------------------------
Submission Guidelines
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Submissions should follow the SIGKDD formatting requirements and will be
evaluated using the SIGKDD Research Track evaluation criteria. Preference
will be given to papers that are reproducible, and authors are encouraged
to share their data and code publicly whenever possible. Submissions are
strongly recommended to be no more than 4 pages, excluding references or
supplementary materials (all in a single pdf). The appropriateness of using
additional pages over the recommended length will be judged by reviewers.
All submissions must be in pdf format using the workshop template (latex,
word). Submissions will be managed via the MiLeTS 2021 EasyChair website:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=milets2021.
*Note on open problem submissions:* To promote new and innovative research
on time series, we plan to accept a small number of high-quality
manuscripts describing open problems in time series analysis and mining.
Such papers should provide a clear, detailed description and analysis of a
new or open problem that poses a significant challenge to existing
techniques, as well as a thorough empirical investigation demonstrating
that current methods are insufficient.
*COVID-19 Time Series Analysis Special Track:* The COVID-19 pandemic is
impacting almost everyone worldwide and is expected to have life-altering
short and long-term effects. There are many potential applications of time
series analysis and mining that can contribute to the understanding of this
pandemic. We encourage the submission of high-quality manuscripts
describing original problems, time-series datasets, and novel solutions for
time series analysis and forecasting of COVID-19.
The review process is single-round and double-blind (submission files have
to be anonymized). Concurrent submissions to other journals and conferences
are acceptable. Accepted papers will be presented as posters during the
workshop and listed on the website. Besides, a small number of accepted
papers will be selected to be presented as contributed talks.
Any questions may be directed to the workshop e-mail address:
kdd.milets(a)gmail.com.
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KEY DATES
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*Paper Submission Deadline: May 20th, 2021, 11:59PM Alofi Time*
Author Notification: June 10th, 2021
Camera Ready Version: June 24th, 2021
Workshop: August 14th, 2021
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Organizing Committee
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Sanjay Purushotham
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Yaguang Li
Google
Zhengping Che
Didi Chuxing
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Steering Committee
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Eamonn Keogh
University of California Riverside
Yan Liu
University of Southern California
Abdullah Mueen
University of New Mexico
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Contact:
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Any questions may be directed to the workshop e-mail address:
kdd.milets(a)gmail.com.