The formalization of system engineering models and approaches.
Event
WATERS 2017
8th International Workshop on Analysis Tools and Methodologies for Embedded and Real-time Systems (WATERS 2017)  June 27th, 2017  | Dubrovnik, Croatia | http://waters2017.inria.fr
Submitted by Anonymous on March 6th, 2017
Event
ICESS 2017
14th IEEE International Conference on Embedded Software and Systems  (ICESS 2017) Sydney, Australia | August 1-4, 2017 | http://www.stprp-activity.com/ICESS2017 Co-Located with IEEE TrustCom and IEEE BigDataSE IMPORTANT DATES Paper submission deadline:  April 15, 2017 Notification of acceptance:  May 15, 2017 Final paper submission: June 1, 2017 As the fastest growing industry, embedded systems have great societal and environmental impacts. 
Submitted by Anonymous on March 6th, 2017
Event
BDNT 2017
CALL FOR PAPERS International Workshop on Big Data and Networks Technologies (BDNT’2017) Held in parallel with The 12th International Conference on Future Networks and Communications
Submitted by Anonymous on March 6th, 2017
Event
FedCSIS 2017
CALL FOR PAPERS
Submitted by Anonymous on March 6th, 2017
Event
DSM-TP
8th Summer School on Domain Specific Modelling Theory and Practice (DSM-TP) at the University of Montreal
Submitted by Anonymous on February 21st, 2017
Event
TIME 2017
24th International Symposium on Temporal Representation and Reasoning (TIME 2017) Mons (Belgium) | 16-18 October 2017 | http://informatique.umons.ac.be/time2017/ Aims and scope
Submitted by Anonymous on February 20th, 2017
Event
WSC 2017
Winter Simulation Conference 2017 WSC Turns 50:  Simulation Everywhere! WSC 2017 is sponsored by:  ACM/SIGSIM, IISE, INFORMS-SIM and SCS, with Technical Co-Sponsorship from ASA, ASIM, IEEE/SMC and NIST.
Submitted by Anonymous on February 20th, 2017
CODES+ISSS: International Conference on Hardware/Software Codesign and System Synthesis The International Conference on Hardware/Software Codesign and System Synthesis (CODES+ISSS) is the premier event in system-level design, modeling, analysis, and implementation of modern embedded and cyber-physical systems, from system-level specification and optimization down to system synthesis of multi-processor hardware/software implementations.
Submitted by Anonymous on February 20th, 2017

CALL FOR TUTORIAL PROPOSALS

ACM/IEEE 20th International Conference on Model Driven Engineering Languages and Systems (MODELS 2017)

Austin, Texas | Sept 17-22, 2017 | http://www.modelsconference.org/

Following the tradition of previous conferences, MODELS 2017 will host tutorials as part of its satellite events on September 17-19, 2017.
Tutorials provide intensive courses on topics in the area of model-based software and systems engineering ranging from modeling methodologies and research methods through new modeling tools and technologies to thoughts on the past, current, and future development of the modeling discipline.

Important Dates

  • Submission: March 10, 2017
  • Notification: April 10, 2017
  • Tutorials: September 17-19, 2017

Audience

Tutorials target an audience of practitioners, researchers (academic and industrial), students, and developers familiar with and already working with modeling techniques. The target audience typically has a strong interest in Model-Driven Engineering (MDE), including work on improving and evolving modeling languages (such as UML or DSLs), developing sophisticated MDE tool support, and using MDE to develop/test/reverse/maintain complex systems. Potential attendees may also be interested in how modeling has been applied effectively in specialized domains (e.g., in the automotive industry), and in learning about successful uses of MDE methods in real-world applications.

Topics

The following themes are examples of what is considered relevant for
tutorials:

  • Modeling techniques for specific domains
  • Modeling methodologies and model-oriented processes
  • Presentation of new tools or new versions of old tools (e.g., modeling tools, language workbenches, model transformation languages, model verification tools, model execution tools)
  • Dissemination of project results from industry-related projects
  • Teaching of model-driven software development
  • Research methods in MD* (Model-Driven Development (MDD), Model Driven Engineering (MDE), Model Driven Software Development (MDSD), etc.)
  • Modeling for re-engineering and legacy evolution
  • Empirical studies in the context of modeling
  • User experience in model-based software engineering
  • Practical experiences of general interest
  • General topics of interest to young researchers, like presentation skills or research methodologies

For more details please visit:
http://www.modelexecution.org/models2017tutorials/

Proposal Contents

All submissions must be in English and adhere to the IEEE formatting instructions (https://goo.gl/UAQ5Ci). The submission must include the following information in the indicated order:

  • Title
  • Presenters: Name, affiliation, contact information, and short bio. 
    • Authors of the proposal or tutorial material, who are not going to be presenting, may be listed, but must be listed last with a footnote "Author only; will not be presenting".
  • Abstract (maximum of 200 words) 
    • If accepted, the abstract will be used to advertise the tutorial. Thus, the abstract should clearly highlight the goals of the tutorial and the skills that participants will acquire.
  • Keywords (at least 3 keywords)
  • Proposed length: half-day (3 hours) or full-day (6 hours) 
    • Regular tutorials should be setup as half-day tutorials (3 hours). A proposal for a full-day tutorial (6 hours) must be accompanied by a clear justification of why 6 hours are necessary.
  • Level of the tutorial: beginner/introduction or advanced
  • Target audience and any prerequisite background required by attendees to be able to follow the tutorial (beyond average modeling skills)
  • Description of the tutorial and intended outline (maximum of 4 pages)
  • Novelty of the tutorial 
    • List offerings of similar tutorials at previous editions of the MODELS conference or other conferences, and discuss the differences  with respect to the current proposal.
  • Required infrastructure 
    • Declare any infrastructure that you would need for your tutorial  besides a data projector (e.g., flip charts, white boards). We will do our best together with the local organizers to provide you with the needed infrastructure.
  • Sample slides (minimum of 6 slides, maximum of 40 slides)
  • Supplementary material (optional)

Submission Instructions

Proposals must be submitted electronically in PDF format through the MODELS 2017 Tutorials EasyChair submission page (https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=tmodels2017) by March 10, 2017 anywhere on earth (local times).

This is a hard deadline. No extensions will be allowed.

Review Process

The Tutorials Selection Committee will review each submitted proposal to ensure high quality, and select tutorials based on their anticipated benefit for prospective participants and their fit within the tutorial program as a whole. Factors to be considered also include: relevance, timeliness, importance, and audience appeal; effectiveness of teaching methods; and past experience and qualifications of the instructors. The goal will be to provide a diverse set of tutorials that attracts a high level of interest among broad segments of the MODELS participants.

Compensation

As in previous years, participants will pay a single satellite fee, which will cover both tutorials and workshops. This permits unifying the treatment of workshops and tutorials, and it makes tutorials more attractive to attendees. Under this schema, tutorial presenters will not receive monetary compensation, and will have to pay their own registration to the satellite events. By submitting a tutorial proposal, the presenter accepts that there will be no compensation for giving the tutorial if accepted and that the registration fees for the instructors have to be funded by the instructors themselves. The benefit to the presenter is the opportunity to extend their sphere of influence to the MODELS community.


Tutorial Chairs

Silvia Abrahão, Universitat Politècnica de València, Spain Tanja Mayerhofer, TU Wien, Austria


Selection Committee

- Colin Atkinson, University of Mannheim, Germany
- Loli Burgueño, University of Málaga, Spain
- Juergen Dingel, Queen's University, Canada
- Geri Georg, Colorado State University, USA
- Esther Guerra, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain
- Emilio Insfran, Universitat Politecnica de Valencia, Spain
- Richard Paige, University of York, UK
- Ernesto Posse, Zeligsoft, Canada
- Bran Selic, Malina Software Corp., Canada
- Arnor Solberg, SINTEF, Norway
- Tao Yue, Simula Research Laboratory, Norway

For further information, please contact the tutorial chairs at models-tutorials@cs.utexas.edu.
 

General Announcement
Not in Slideshow
Submitted by Anonymous on February 20th, 2017
Event
MODELS 2017
ACM/IEEE 20th International Conference on Model Driven Engineering Languages and Systems. MODELS is the premier conference series for model-based software and systems engineering which since 1998 has been covering all aspects of modeling, from languages and methods to tools and applications.
Submitted by Anonymous on February 20th, 2017
Subscribe to Modeling