* Call for Papers: IEEE RTAS '03
@ 2002-11-11 19:15 Douglas C. Schmidt
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From: Douglas C. Schmidt @ 2002-11-11 19:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
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**********************************************************************
* *
* CALL FOR PAPERS *
* *
* RTAS 2003 *
* *
* 9TH IEEE REAL-TIME/EMBEDDED TECHNOLOGY AND APPLICATIONS SYMPOSIUM *
* *
* http://deuce.doc.wustl.edu/RTAS03.html *
* *
* May 27-30, 2003 *
* Toronto, Canada *
* *
* Sponsored by IEEE Computer Society TC on Real-Time Systems *
* *
**********************************************************************
PURPOSE AND SCOPE
=================
Well over 95 percent of all microprocessors are now used for real-time
and embedded systems. Increasingly, these systems are being networked
together to form distributed real-time and embedded (DRE) systems.
Many of these systems are mission-critical and are constrained by the
physical world. We therefore need principled methods for specifying,
programming, composing, integrating, and validating software for
systems that can enforce the physical constraints and satisfy both
quality of service (QoS) and functional requirements. Key research
challenges include:
. Determining how a myriad of real-world physical constraints can be
integrated and satisfied simultaneously with multi-dimensional QoS and
functional constraints when designing software,
. Identifying how hardware/software co-design can contribute to a
solution,
. Examining the current levels of abstraction used in the development
of real-time applications with a critical eye toward improving the
usefulness of metrics and validation techniques, and
. Elevating the levels of abstraction at which software for real-time
and embedded systems are developed and validated, including
model-based software techniques, aspect-oriented programming, software
component models, and QoS-enabled DRE middleware.
The IEEE Real-Time/Embedded Technology and Application Symposium
(RTAS) brings together real-time and embedded systems technology
researchers and application developers from academia, industry, and
government for discussions and technical exchanges. This program will
consist of an exciting mix of invited addresses, tutorials, technical
papers, and panels. We therefore invite papers and tutorial proposals
in areas that are relevant to next-generation distributed, real-time,
and/or embedded systems, including but not limited to the following
topics:
. Real-time Linux and applications
. Real-time Java support and applications
. DRE middleware, e.g., Real-time CORBA and Distributed Real-time Java
. Secure real-time systems
. OS support for mixed response requirements
. Novel kernel-level mechanisms
. Open architectures for resource control
. Power-aware resource management
. Real-time software component models
. QoS-aware application design and patterns
. Real-time system modeling and analysis
. Embedded control applications
We welcome papers in all application areas (industrial automation,
automotive, telecommunications, aerospace, multimedia, consumer
electronics, etc.) including both research results and submissions
presenting experiments, implementations, test beds, prototypes, novel
mechanisms, and insightful experience reports. We plan a first-class
venue for both academic and practitioners communities, with
complementary tracks on enabling technologies and R&D experiences.
PAPER SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
===========================
Submissions should be clearly marked as one of two categories:
1. Research Papers that describe original and relevant work on
enabling technologies or
2. Experience Papers that report on lessons learned from prototypes of
novel concepts, experiences with test beds and test cases, or
reports gleaned from implementing particularly interesting
real-time applications.
Experience papers may be less formal than traditional research papers,
and will be given special consideration by the Program Committee.
We seek reports that contain well-supported claims and provide new
insights to the readership at large. Papers are limited to 12
single-spaced pages (~5000 words) or less in length and should clearly
identify the submission category. The best papers from the symposium
may be considered for fast-track publication in IEEE Transactions. A
best student paper award is planned for work conducted mainly by
student(s) (a student must be first author).
Submissions should be made electronically in PDF format suitable for
Acrobat Reader. Postscript with US Letter size pages will also be
accepted. The detailed submission instructions are available on the
RTAS '03 website at http://deuce.doc.wustl.edu/RTAS03.html.
For more information about the Symposium, please contact the General
Chairs: Riccardo Bettati <bettati@cs.tamu.edu> or Doug Locke
<doug.locke@timesys.com>. For information regarding conference
submissions, please contact the Program Chairs: Greg Bollella
<greg.bollella@sun.com> or Doug Schmidt <schmidt@cs.wustl.edu>.
IMPORTANT DATES
===============
PAPER SUBMISSION.................January 15, 2003
Tutorial proposal deadline.......January 15, 2003
Notification of acceptance.......March 15, 2003
Camera ready paper due...........April 7, 2003
ORGANIZING AND PROGRAM COMMITTEES
=================================
General Chairs
Riccardo Bettati, Texas A&M, USA
Doug Locke, TimeSys, USA
Program Chairs
Greg Bollella, Sun Microsystems, USA
Doug Schmidt, DARPA, USA
Finance Chair
Wei Zhao, Texas A&M, USA
Ex-Officio (IEEE RTS-TC Chair)
Alan Burns, University of York, U.K.
Program Committee
Tarek Abdelzaher, U. of Virginia, USA
Hakan Aydin, George Mason U., USA
John Bay, DARPA, USA
Giorgio Butazzo, U. of Pavia, Italy
Peter Dibble, TimeSys, USA
Chris Gill, Washington U., St. Louis, USA
Joseph Cross, Lockheed Martin, USA
Gerhard Fohler, Malardalen U., Sweden
Michael Gonzales-Harbour U. of Cantabria, Spain
Kevin Jeffay, U. of North Carolina, USA
David Holmes, DLTech, Australia
Seongsoo Hong, Seoul National U., Korea
Tei-Wei Kuo, National Taiwan U., Taiwan
Doug Lea, SUNY Oswego, USA
Jane W.-S. Liu, Microsoft, USA
Joe Loyall, BBN Technologies, USA
Chenyang Lu, Washington University, STL, USA
Al Mok, University of Texas, USA
Daniel Mosse, U. of Pittsburgh, USA
Marco di Natale, Scuola Superiore Sant Anna, Italy
Doug Niehaus, U. of Kansas, USA
Vijay Raghavan, DARPA, USA
Raj Rajkumar, CMU, USA
John Regehr, U. of Utah, USA
Albert Reuther, MIT Lincoln Labs, USA
Rick Schantz, BBN Technologies, USA
Karsten Schwan, Georgia Tech, USA
Bran Selic, Rational Software, USA
Dave Sharp, The Boeing Company, USA
Kang Shin, U. of Michigan, USA
Joseph Sifakis, Verimag, France
John Stankovic, U. of Virginia, USA
Janos Sztipanotivs, Vanderbilt U., USA
Steve Vestal, Honeywell, USA
Lonnie Welch, Ohio University, USA
Andy Wellings, University of York, UK
Victor Faye-Wolfe, U. of Rhode Is., USA
--
Dr. Douglas C. Schmidt, Associate Professor TEL: (949) 824-1901
Dept of Electrical & Computer Engineering FAX: (949) 824-2321
616E Engineering Tower WEB: www.ece.uci.edu/~schmidt/
University of California, Irvine, 92697-2625 NET: schmidt@uci.edu
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