To Haskellers,

Bidirectional Transformations (Bx) are also known as lenses! Please consider 
submitting your Haskell-related papers which are very welcome.

Best regards,
Meng

Meng Wang, PhD (Oxon)
University of Bristol
Senior Lecturer of Programming Languages
Head of PL research group
International Director of SCEEM (CS, EEE, EMath) School

**********************************************************************************

9th International Workshop on Bidirectional Transformations (Bx 2021)
as part of the STAF conference (June 21, 2021) running virtually,
Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Bergen, Norway
http://bx-community.wikidot.com/bx2021:home

**********************************************************************************
* Important dates:
* Abstract submission: April 27, 2021
* Paper Submission: May 4, 2021
**********************************************************************************

OVERVIEW
=========================================

Bidirectional transformations (bx) are a mechanism for maintaining the 
consistency between two or more related (and heterogeneous) sources of 
information (i.e., relational databases, software models and code, or any other 
artefacts following standard or domain-specific formats). The strongest 
argument in favour of bx is its ability to provide a synchronization mechanism 
that is guaranteed to be correct by construction.

Bx has been attracting a wide range of research areas and communities, with 
prominent presence at top conferences in several different fields (namely 
databases, programming languages, software engineering, and graph 
transformation). Nowadays, the fast-growing complexity of software- or data- 
intensive systems has forced the industry and the academy to use and 
investigate different development techniques to manage the many different 
aspects of the systems. Researchers are actively investigating the use of 
bidirectional approaches to tackle a diverse set of challenges with various 
applications including model-driven software development, visualization with 
direct manipulation, big data, databases, domain-specific languages, 
serializers, and data transformation, integration and exchange. Bx 2021 is a 
dedicated venue for bx in all relevant fields and is part of a workshop series 
that was created in order to promote cross-disciplinary research and awareness 
in the area. As such, since its beginning in 2012, the workshop has rotated 
between venues in different fields.


TOPICS
=========================================

The aim of the workshop is to bring together researchers and practitioners, 
established and new, interested in bx from different perspectives, including 
but not limited to:

* bidirectional programming languages and frameworks
* software development with bx
* data and model synchronization
* view updating
* inter-model consistency analysis and repair
* data/schema (or model/metamodel) co-evolution
* coupled software/model transformations
* inversion of transformations and data exchange mappings
* domain-specific languages for bx
* analysis and classification of requirements for bx
* bridging the gap between formal concepts and application scenarios
* analysis of efficiency of transformation algorithms and benchmarks
* model-driven and model-based approaches
* survey and comparison of bx technologies
* case studies and tool support

CATEGORIES OF SUBMISSIONS
=========================================

Five categories of submissions are considered:

* Full Research Papers (13-15 pages)
     - in-depth presentations of novel concepts and results
     - applications of bx to new domains
     - survey papers providing novel comparisons between existing bx 
technologies and approaches, case studies

* Tool Papers (7-8 pages)
     - guideline papers presenting best practices for employing a specific bx 
approach (with a specific tool)
     - presentation of new tools or substantial improvements to existing ones
     - qualitative and/or quantitative comparisons of applying different bx 
approaches and tools

* Experience Report (7-8 pages)
     - sharing experiences and lessons learned with bx 
tools/frameworks/languages
     - how bx is used in (research/industrial/educational) projects

* Short Papers (5 pages)
     - work in progress
     - small focused contributions
     - position papers and research perspectives
     - critical questions and challenges for bx

* Talk Proposals (2 pages)
     - proposed lectures about topics of interest for bx
     - existing work representing relevant contributions for bx
     - promising contributions that are not mature enough to be proposed as 
papers of the other categories

If your submission is not a Full Research Paper, please include the intended 
submission category in the Title field of EasyChair’s submission form.  Tool 
papers, experience reports and short papers will be mapped to the short paper 
category in CEUR (5-9 standard pages, 1 standard page = 2500 characters), 
whereas full research papers will be mapped to the regular paper category in 
CEUR (min. 10 standard pages).

The bibliography is excluded from the page limits. All papers are expected to 
be self-contained and well-written. Tool papers are not expected to present 
novel scientific results, but to document artifacts of interest and share bx 
experience/best practices with the community. Experience papers are expected to 
report on lessons learnt from applying bx approaches, languages, tools, and 
theories to practical application case studies. Extended abstracts should 
primarily provoke interesting discussion at the workshop and will not be held 
to the same standard of maturity as regular papers; short papers contain 
focused results, positions or perspectives that can be presented in full in 
just a few pages, and that correspondingly contain fewer results and that 
therefore might not be competitive in the full paper category. Talk proposals 
are expected to present work that is of particular interest to the community 
and worth a talk slot at the workshop.

We strongly encourage authors to ensure that any (variants of) examples are 
present in the bx example repository at the time of submission, and, for tool 
papers, to allow for reproducibility with minimal effort, either via a virtual 
machine (e.g., via Share) or a dedicated website with relevant artifacts and 
tool access.

All submissions will be peer-reviewed by at least three members of the program 
committee.

If a submission is accepted, at least one author is expected to participate in 
the workshop to present it. Authors of accepted tool paper submissions are also 
expected to be available to demonstrate their tool at the event.

PROCEEDINGS
=========================================

The workshop proceedings (in a STAF 2021 joint volume for workshops), including 
all accepted papers (except talk proposals), shall be submitted after the 
conference to CEUR-WS.org for online publication. Pre-prints of all papers will 
be available via the workshop website at the beginning of the conference.

Papers must follow the CEUR one column style available at:

http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-XXX/CEURART.zip

or

https://www.overleaf.com/latex/templates/template-for-submissions-to-ceur-workshop-proceedings-ceur-ws-dot-org/hpvjjzhjxzjk

and must be submitted via EasyChair:

https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=bx2021

Please also ensure that your submission is legible when printed on a black and 
white printer. In particular, please check that colors remain distinct and font 
sizes are legible.

Submissions not complying with the above guidelines may be excluded from the 
reviewing process without further notice.

IMPORTANT DATES
=========================================

Abstract submission: April 27, 2021
Paper submission: May 4, 2021
Author notification: May 25, 2021
Early registration: May 27, 2021
Workshop: June 21, 2021

PROGRAM CO-CHAIRS
=========================================

The workshop is co-organized by Meng Wang (University of Bristol, UK) and Leen 
Lambers (Hasso Plattner Institute at the University of Potsdam, Germany). In 
case of questions, please contact the PC chairs at bx2...@easychair.org . 
Please find further information w.r.t. the Bx 2021 workshop at:

http://bx-community.wikidot.com/bx2021:home

and STAF 2021 conference at:

https://staf2021.hvl.no/

PROGRAM COMMITTEE
=========================================

Ravi Chugh, University of Chicago, USA
Anthony Cleve, University of Namur, Belgium
Alcino Cunha, University of Minho, Portugal
Romina Eramo, University of L'Aquila, Italy
Michael Johnson, Macquarie University, Australia
Hsiang Shang Ko, Academia Sinica, Taiwan
Ralf Lämmel, University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany
Kazutaka Matsuda, Tohoku University, Japan
Fernando Orejas, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Spain
Roly Perera, Alan Turing Institute, UK
Perdita Stevens, The University of Edinburgh, UK
Tarmo Uustalu, Reykjavik University, Iceland
Jens Weber, University of Victoria, Canada
Bernhard Westfechtel, University of Bayreuth, Germany

=========================================


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