[Fwd: SIGOPS-ANNOUNCE supplemental posting (SASO 2007 Call for Papers)]
-------- Original-Nachricht -------- Betreff: SIGOPS-ANNOUNCE supplemental posting (SASO 2007 Call for Papers) Datum: Fri, 26 Jan 2007 08:33:59 -0800 Von: Geoff Voelker voelker@CS.UCSD.EDU Antwort an: Geoff Voelker voelker@CS.UCSD.EDU An: SIGOPS-ANNOUNCE@LISTSERV.ACM.ORG
(This CfP is sent by Hermann de Meer, University of Passau, Germany. Apologies for multiple copies.)
*****************************************************************
Call for Papers SASO 2007 International Conference on Self-Adaptive and Self-Organizing Systems
Boston, Mass., USA, July 9-11, 2007 http://projects.csail.mit.edu/saso2007/
Sponsored by IEEE Computer Society, Task Force on Autonomous and Autonomic Systems (approval pending)
in cooperation with ACM SIGOPS (approval pending) and ISCE Research
The complexity of current computer systems has led the software engineering, distributed systems and management communities to look for inspiration in diverse fields (e.g., robotics, artificial intelligence or biology) to find new ways of designing and managing networks, systems and services. In this endeavor, self-organization and self-adaptation have emerged as two promising facets of a paradigm shift.
Self-adaptive systems work in a top-down manner. They evaluate their own global behavior and change it when the evaluation indicates that they are not accomplishing what they were intended to do, or when better functionality or performance is possible. Self-organizing systems work bottom-up. They are composed of a large number of components that interact locally according to simple rules. The global behavior of the system emerges from these local interactions, and it is difficult to deduce properties of the global system by studying only the local properties of its parts.
This edition of SASO will focus on engineering, as opposed to speculative and conjectural visions. Contributions should present novel theoretical results, or practical experience with building systems, tools, frameworks, etc. Contributions contrasting different approaches for engineering a given family of systems, or demonstrating the applicability of a certain approach for different systems are particularly encouraged.
Topics
o Self-* properties: - self-organization - self-adaptiveness - self-management - self-monitoring - self-tuning - self-repair - self-configuration - etc. o Theories, frameworks and methods for self-* systems o Management and control of self-* systems o Robustness and dependability of self-* systems o Engineering and control of emergent properties in self-* systems o Biologically and socially inspired self-* systems
Systems & Technologies
o P2P applications o Mobile robots o Sensor networks o Mobile ad hoc networks o Grids o Embedded systems, ubiquitous computing o Autonomic computing, autonomic communications o Computer networks, telecommunication networks o Multi-agent systems o E-business systems and services o Complex adaptive systems
Research Communities
o Distributed artificial intelligence o Networking o Software engineering o Distributed systems o Integrated management o Robotics o Knowledge-based systems o Machine learning o Control theory o Mathematical optimization
Organization
General Co-Chairs: Ozalp Babaoglu, University of Bologna, Italy Howard E. Shrobe, MIT, USA
Program Committee Chairs: Giovanna Di Marzo Serugendo, Birkbeck, University of London, UK Jean-Philippe Martin-Flatin, NetExpert, Switzerland Mark Jelasity, University of Szeged, Hungary
Finance Chair: Paul Robertson, MIT, USA
Applications Track Chair: Franco Zambonelli, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy
Industry Chair: Fabrice Saffre, BT, UK
Tutorial Chair: David Hales, University of Bologna, Italy
Panel Chair: Robert Laddaga, BBN Technologies, USA
Publicity Chair: Hermann De Meer, University of Passau, Germany
Sponsor Chair: Jean-Philippe Martin-Flatin, NetExpert, Switzerland
Local Arrangements Chair: Thomas J. Green, MIT, USA
Submission Instructions
See conference website. All submissions should be 10 pages and formatted according to the IEEE Computer Society Press style guide.
Important Dates
Submission: January 31, 2007 Notification: March 19, 2007 Final paper: April 6, 2007
*****************************************************************
Best regards, Hermann de Meer
____________________________________________________________
About SIGOPS-ANNOUNCE
The SIGOPS-ANNOUNCE mailing list is intended to provide a low-volume channel that provides operating systems researchers and practitioners with information about upcoming events or other important announcements. In general, a message containing a group of such announcements will be sent about once per month with the subject line "SIGOPS-ANNOUNCE monthly posting". On rare occasions, announcements of particular interest or urgency will be sent out with a different subject line, starting with "SIGOPS-ANNOUNCE supplemental posting" (for readers who wish to use mail filtering programs). Finally, this mailing list is made available for use by publicity chairs of SIGOPS-sponsored conferences and the SIGOPS officers.
To subscribe, send mail to LISTSERV@ACM.ORG with the following command (paste it!) in the body of the message:
SUBSCRIBE SIGOPS-ANNOUNCE
To unsubscribe, send mail to LISTSERV@ACM.ORG with the following command in the body of the message:
UNSUBSCRIBE SIGOPS-ANNOUNCE
To get more information about manipulating your subscription to this list, go to http://www.acm.org/infodir/services/listserv/doc.html
To contact the owner of the list or to report a problem with the list, email SIGOPS-ANNOUNCE-request@ACM.ORG
To request that an announcement be included in monthly mailings, go to http://sysnet.ucsd.edu/sigops/acm.html ____________________________________________________________
Geoff Voelker, SIGOPS Information Director
participants (1)
-
Lars Wolf