************************************************************** MODULARITY'15 CALL FOR WORKSHOP PAPERS
14th International Conference on Modularity (Modularity'15) Fort Collins, Colorado, USA March 20-24, 2015 http://aosd.net/2015/ ************************************************************** Modularity'15 workshops address a rich variety of well-known and newly emerging research areas and provide a creative and collaborative environment to discuss and solve challenge problems with attendees from industry and research organizations from all over the world. Submission deadlines are due no later than 18 January 2015. The workshops will be published in the ACM Digital Library. The current Modularity'15 workshops are listed below and the abstracts at the end. ************************************************************** CURRENT WORKSHOPS FOAL- 14th Foundations of Aspect-Oriented Languagens workshop http://www.eecs.ucf.edu/~leavens/FOAL/index-2015.shtml Submission: January 18, 2015 (full or short papers) Notification: February 2, 2015 Camera-ready: February 15, 2015 LASSY- Workshop on Live Adaptation of Software Systems https://www.scss.tcd.ie/~cardozon/lassy/ Submission: January 18, 2015 Notification: February 2, 2015 Camera-ready: February 15, 2015 Sustainability- 1st Workshop on Next Generation of Modularity Approaches for Multiple Dimensions of Sustainability http://sustainability15.inria.fr/dates/ Abstract submission: January 12, 2015 Submission: January 18, 2015 Notification: February 2, 2015 Camera-ready: February 15, 2015 FOR MORE INFORMATION For additional information, clarification, early feedback, or answers to questions, please contact the Workshop Organizers of your favorite workshops, or the Workshops Chair: Walter Cazzola, at worksh...@aosd.net ************************************************************** WORKSHOP ABSTRACTS AND DATES ************************************************************** 14th Foudations of Aspect-Oriented Languages (FOAL 2015) http://www.eecs.ucf.edu/~leavens/FOAL/index-2015.shtml - Abstract The workshop aims to foster work in foundations, including formal studies, promote the exchange of ideas, and encourage workers in the semantics and formal methods communities to consider advanced separation of concern mechanisms. All theoretical and foundational studies of this topic are welcome. Even though the workshop title contains the term "aspect-oriented", the workshop is not limited to aspect-oriented programming languages, but welcomes topics on other advanced separation of concern mechanisms such as feature-oriented or context-oriented programming. Areas of interest include but are not limited to: * Semantics of advanced separation of concern mechanisms, * Specification and verification for languages with such mechanisms * Type systems, * Static analysis, * Theory of testing, * Theory of composition, * Theory of translation (compilation) and rewriting, * Comparison of different advanced modularization and separation of concern mechanisms. Submission: January 18, 2015 (full or short papers) Notification: February 2, 2015 Camera-ready: February 15, 2015 Workshop date: March 16, 2015 - Organizers: Gary T. Leavens — University of Central Florida Hidehiko Masuhara — Tokyo Institute of Technology Hridesh Rajan — Iowa State University Henrique Rebêlo — Federal University of Pernambuco - Program Committee: David H. Lorenz (Program Committee Chair) — The Open University of Israel Robert Dyer — Bowling Green State University Gary T. Leavens — University of Central Florida Somayeh Malakuti — Technical University of Dresden Hidehiko Masuhara — Tokyo Institute of Technology Klaus Ostermann — University of Marburg Hridesh Rajan — Iowa State University Henrique Rebêlo — Federal University of Pernambuco ************************************************************** Workshop on Live Adaptation of Software Systems (LASSY 2015) https://www.scss.tcd.ie/~cardozon/lassy/ - Abstract The objective of the workshop on Live Adaptation of Software SYstems (LASSY) is to provide a space for discussion and collaboration of researchers working on the problem of live software adaptation from different research perspectives. The scope of the LASSY workshop covers all topics relevant to dynamic adaptation of software systems, ranging from a computer science perspective covering the domains of programming languages, software and service composition, context-aware databases, flexible query languages, multimodal interfaces, and UI adaptation, to a human perspective, covering sociological, epistemological or even legal implications of dynamic software adaptations. The workshop invites submissions of new or visionary work in any of these perspectives individually, or in a combination of several of these topics. Submission: January 18, 2015 Notification: February 2, 2015 Camera-ready: February 15, 2015 Workshop date: (TBA - 16 or 17 of March) - Organizers: Prof. Kim Mens - Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium (chair) Dr. Nicolás Cardozo - Trinity College Dublin, Ireland Prof. Bruno Dumas - Université de Namur, Belgium Prof. Anthony Clève - Université de Namur, Belgium - Program Committee: Kim Mens - Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium Engineer Bainomugisha - Makerere University, Uganda Nicolás Cardozo - Trinity College Dublin, Ireland Anthony Clève - Université de Namur, Belgium Bruno Dumas - Université de Namur, Belgium Hidehiko Masuhara - Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan Tetsuo Kamina - Ritsumeikan University, Japan Guido Salvaneschi - TU Darmstadt, Germany Danny Weyns - Linnaeus University, Sweden Yijun Yu - Open University, UK ************************************************************** 1st Workshop on Next Generation of Modularity Approaches for Multiple Dimensions of Sustainability, 2015 http://sustainability15.inria.fr/ - Abstract Over the last several decades, sustainability has becoming an urgent issue. As the Internet becomes increasingly pervasive in our daily lives, we witness the rise of global systems that handle large, complex, networked and heterogeneous systems that involve software, a wide range of hardware devices, people, and their environment. In this setting, the cyberspace and the physical world blend into a single and complex cyber-physical system. Such software-intensive global systems are present in many relevant socio-economic domains such as smart cities (including urban planning, energy, transport, emergency systems) and Earth observations, thus strongly affecting human life on our planet. Consequently, we believe that the next generation of modelling approaches should support multiple dimensions of sustainability, ranging from long lasting dependable and dynamically adaptive software, to green software requiring less computing and energy resources, to software that encourages sustainable human behaviour (e.g., smart plugs and appliances, and market design and regulations that transition consumers towards more energy-saving practices; the so-called power of the negawatt). Approaches supporting various dimensions of sustainability are likely to have a substantial positive impact on people and the environment for the short term and the long term. This workshop intends to identify new modularisation approaches to meet the challenges posed by the sea change in the nature of sustainable, global software systems, which is considerably different from the traditional modularisation approaches perspective. Submission: January 18, 2015 Notification: February 2, 2015 Camera-ready: February 15, 2015 Workshop date: March 17, 2015 - Organizers: Ana Moreira, Associate Professor, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal Benoit Combemale, Associate Professor, Inria and University Rennes 1, France Betty Cheng, Professor, Michigan State University, USA Jean Michel Bruel, Professor, University of Toulouse, France Jeff Gray, Professor, University of Alabama, USA Robert France, Professor, Colorado State University, USA - Program Committee: Birgit Penzenstadler, University of California, Irvine, USA Geri Georg, Colorado State University, USA Grace Lewis, Carnegie Mellon Software Engineering Institute, USA Gunter Mussbacher, McGill University, Canada Joost Noppen, University of East Anglia, UK Patricia Lago, VU University Amsterdam, The Netherlands Philippe Collet, Université Nice Sophia Antipolis - CNRS/I3S, France Somayeh Malakuti, University of Twente, The Netherlands -- ............................................................................................................................... Henrique Rebelo http://www.cin.ufpe.br/~hemr Informatics Center, UFPE, Brazil
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