[CfPaper] AOSD 2011: Perspectives on Modularity

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[CfPaper] AOSD 2011: Perspectives on Modularity

Marcus Denker-4


                AOSD 2011: Perspectives on Modularity

            10th International Conference on Aspect-Oriented
                          Software Development

                          http://aosd.net/2011
                      http://twitter.com/aosd2011


   March 21th - 25th, 2011, Porto de Galinhas, Pernambuco, Brazil


              Supported by ACM SIGSOFT & SIGPLAN (pending)



Second Call for Research Papers

-------------------------------------------------
Important Dates:

First Round:
   Research Paper submission : Jul. 1, 2010, 23:59 (Samoan)  
   Acceptance Notification   : Sep. 6, 2010, 23:59 (Samoan)

Second Round:
   Research Paper submission : Oct. 1, 2010, 23:59 (Samoan)  
   Acceptance Notification   : Dec. 10, 2010, 23:59 (Samoan)

Camera-ready copy            : Jan. 10, 2011, 23:59 (Samoan)
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Instructions for authors: http://www.aosd.net/2011/call_research.html

Email contact address: [hidden email]

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AOSD 2011 Keynote Speakers:

- Mary Shaw, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University

- David Notkin, Dept. of Computer Science & Engineering, University of Washington

-----------------------------------------------

The International Conference on Aspect-Oriented Software Development (AOSD) is the premier conference on software modularity that goes beyond traditional abstraction boundaries. The past series of the conferences have been mainly investigating "the aspects" for 10 years and explored their clear benefits. Furthermore, they have revealed that advanced modularity is the core notion for building modern software systems and hence other new modularization paradigms and techniques are also getting spotlighted today.

AOSD 2011 seeks to foster advanced modularization paradigms and techniques, which are not limited to aspects thus re-emphasizing the original intention to establish AOSD as a conference on advanced separation of concerns and software modularity for extensibility, flexibility, and adaptability.

AOSD 2011 invites high quality papers reporting documented research results emerging from work on new notions of modularity in computer systems, software engineering, programming languages, and other areas.  Here, the modularity is not only of code but also across lifecycle artifacts (e.g., from requirements to tests).

A novelty of AOSD 2011 is that authors can submit their papers at either 1st or 2nd round. The two rounds are independent but the accepted papers are presented together at the conference. If the paper is submitted at the 1st round and the review result is "resubmit after revision", the authors can resubmit the revised paper at the 2nd round with a letter to the reviewers. Then the same reviewers will review the revised paper again. AOSD 2011 adopts this procedure for motivating the acceptance of potentially good papers (but that need adjustments) rather than rejecting them straight away.

Submissions will be carried out electronically via CyberChair. All papers must be submitted in PDF format. Submissions must be no more than 12 pages (including bibliography and any appendices) in standard ACM SIG Proceedings format (http://www.acm.org/sigs/publications/proceedings-templates). More details can be found in http://www.aosd.net/2011/call_research.html

Research areas and topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following:

Software engineering

  * Requirements engineering
  * Analysis and design modeling
  * Domain engineering
  * Software architectures
  * Evaluation and metrics
  * Modular Reasoning
  * Testing and verification
  * Interference and composition
  * Traceability
  * Software development methods
  * Process and methodology definition
  * Patterns

Programming languages

  * Language design
  * Compilation and interpretation
  * Verification and static program analysis
  * Formal languages and calculi
  * Execution environments & dynamic weaving
  * Dynamic and scripting languages
  * Domain-specific languages

Related paradigms

* Context-orientation
* Feature-orientation
* Traits
  * Model-driven development
  * Generative programming
  * Software product lines
  * Meta-programming and reflection
  * Contracts and components
  * View-based development

Tool support

  * Aspect mining
  * Evolution and reverse engineering
  * Crosscutting program views
  * Refactoring

Applications

  * Distributed/concurrent systems
  * Middleware, services, and networking
  * Pervasive computing
  * Runtime verification
  * Performance improvement

Program committee
-----------------------------------------------
Sven Apel      University of Passau, Germany
Eric Bodden      Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany
Walter Cazzola University of Milano, Italy
Shigeru Chiba Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan (Chair)
Pascal Costanza Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium
Marcus Denker INRIA Lille, France
Elisa Baniassad The Australian National University, Australia
Erik Ernst      Aarhus University, Denmark
Jeff Gray      University of Alabama, USA
Robert Hirschfeld Hasso-Plattner-Institut, Germany
Atsushi Igarashi Kyoto University, Japan
Takashi Ishio Osaka University, Japan
David H. Lorenz Open University of Israel, Israel
Karl Lieberherr Northeastern University, USA
Hidehiko Masuhara University of Tokyo, Japan
Mira Mezini      Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany
Ana Moreira      Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal
Hridesh Rajan Iowa State University, USA
Awais Rashid Lancaster University, UK
Mario Südholt École des Mines de Nantes, France
Eric Tanter      Universidad de Chile, Chile
Jianjun Zhao Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China

--
Marcus Denker  -- http://www.marcusdenker.de
INRIA Lille -- Nord Europe. Team RMoD.