Workshop on Array Databases

co-located with EDBT/ICDT 2011, Uppsala / Sweden
submission deadline: December 31, 2011


Workshop Theme

 From the fundamental collection paradigms known in conceptual modeling - sets, 
bags, lists, and arrays - it is the array concept which has long been neglected 
by the database community. However, as sensors are becoming ubiquitous and 
inexpensive, and as further simulations become large, multi-dimensional arrays 
are attributed a large share of today's archive spaces. Geoscientific examples 
include 1-D sensor time series, 2-D satellite imagery, 3-D x/y/t image time 
series and x/y/z geology data, and 4-D x/y/z/t climate and ocean simulation 
data. A similar wealth of array data can be found in space, life, and other 
sciences. Sparse arrays appear in OLAP. In summary, arrays (by practitioners 
often referred to as raster data) comprise the natural representation of 
n-dimensional sensor, array, and statistics data. Typically these data come in 
massive volumes, with Petabyte - in future Exabyte - sizes for single arrays. 

Unleashing this huge data reservoir for online analytics by scientists, 
industry, government, and citizens represents a major information services 
challenge. As traditional databases do not support large arays, in today's 
practice ad-hoc implementations prevail, often done by service providers 
themselves and centered around some particular data formats. Databases are 
hardly involved for array management. Many researchers believe, however, that 
database technology can offer its traditional benefits, such as information 
integration, flexibility of query language, scalability, and dynamic 
optimization, on arrays as well. 

Currently no forum is existing which expressly concentrates on array databases. 
Filling this gap, this workshop will gather experts interested in theory, 
architecture, applications, standardization, and any other relevant aspect of 
array services. In the closing panel, foundation will be laid towards a 
research agenda for this emerging field.


Topics of Interest

Submissions of original research contributions and software demonstrations are 
invited for all array relevant topics, including - but not limited to - the 
ones below:
  array theory: algebras and calculi
  query languages for massive array data analytics
  logical and physical optimization
  storage methods
  storage hierarchies
  compression
  array database architectures, including both servers and clients 
  distribution and virtualization
  data quality
  uncertainty
  sensor data
  MOLAP
  applications and standardization, such as in Earth, Space, and Life Sciences
  beyond arrays: meshes and other space-time varying data 
  system demonstrations

This one-day workshop on March 25, 2011 will be co-located with EDBT/ICDT 2011 
at Uppsala, Sweden. Workshop participants will have to register for EDBT/ICDT; 
attendance to all workshops will be included in the overall registration fee.

Important dates
  submission deadline:          December 31, 2011
  notification to authors:      January 15, 2011
  camera ready paper due:       February 01, 2011
  workshop:                     March 25, 2011


Submission guidelines

Research and demo papers should all be formatted using the ACM double-column 
format (templates available at:
http://www.acm.org/sigs/publications/proceedings-templates.
The maximal length is:
  12 pages for research papers
  5 pages for demo papers
All papers must be submitted in PDF format to the workshop chairs.


Workshop chairs

  Peter Baumann, Jacobs University Bremen, Germany
  Bill Howe, Washington University, USA


Workshop program committee (to be completed)

  Peter Baumann
  Bill Howe
  Martin Kersten
  Malcolm Atkinson

Publication and IP issues

Papers will be made available in online conference proceedings, possibly hosted 
within the ACM Digital Library (subject to approval). 
*** To enable conference attendees and the general community to
*** glimpse at the content a bit ahead of the conference, we plan
*** to make the papers electronically available before the
*** conference, on March 10, 2011. 
*** Authors are thus encouraged to make sure the necessary 
*** patent issues are solved and enable publication by this date.
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