GPCE 2018 2nd Call for Papers: Boston, MA, USA, Nov 5,6 2018

Eric Van Wyk <evw@umn.edu>
Sun, 27 May 2018 16:50:45 -0500

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GPCE 2018 2nd Call for Papers: Boston, MA, USA, Nov 5,6 2018 evw@umn.edu (Eric Van Wyk) (2018-05-27)
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From: Eric Van Wyk <evw@umn.edu>
Newsgroups: comp.compilers
Date: Sun, 27 May 2018 16:50:45 -0500
Organization: Compilers Central
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Keywords: conference, CFP
Posted-Date: 27 May 2018 22:20:46 EDT

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CALL FOR PAPERS


17th International Conference on
Generative Programming: Concepts & Experiences (GPCE 2018)


November 5-6, 2018
Boston, MA, USA
(co-located with SPLASH 2018)
http://2018.splashcon.org/track/gpce-2018


http://twitter.com/GPCECONF
http://www.facebook.com/GPCEConference


IMPORTANT DATES


* Submission of abstracts: June 29, 2018
* Submission of papers: July 6, 2018
* Paper notification: August 24, 2018


Submission site: https://gpce18.hotcrp.com/


KEYNOTE SPEAKER


* Saman Amarasinghe, MIT, https://people.csail.mit.edu/saman/


Saman Amaraasinghe and his group at MIT have developed several
domain-specific languages, including Halide, TACO, Simit, StreamIt,
StreamJIT, PetaBricks, MILK, Cimple, and GraphIt, that target diverse
areas such as image processing, stream computations, and graph
analytics. In each, the innovative language abstractions are
leveraged by sophisticated compilation techniques to generate
exceptionally high performance. Dr. Amarasinghe has also pioneered
the application of techniques from machine learning to compiler
optimizations in systems such as Meta and the OpenTuner extensible
autotuner.


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SCOPE


GPCE is a venue for researchers and practitioners interested in techniques
and tools for code generation, language implementation, and metaprogramming.
GPCE seeks conceptual, theoretical, empirical, and technical contributions
to its topics of interest, which include but are not limited to:


* program transformation, staging, macro systems, preprocessors, program
    synthesis, and code-recommendation systems,
* domain-specific languages, language embedding, language design, and
    language workbenches,
* feature-oriented programming, domain engineering, and feature
    interactions,
* applications and properties of code generation, language
    implementation, and product-line development.


Authors are welcome to check with the PC chair whether their planned
papers are in scope.


PAPER SELECTION


The GPCE program committee will evaluate each submission according to the
following selection criteria:


* Novelty. Papers must present new ideas or evidence and place them
    appropriately within the context established by previous research in
    the field.
* Significance. The results in the paper must have the potential to add
    to the state of the art or practice in significant ways.
* Evidence. The paper must present evidence supporting its claims.
    Examples of evidence include formalizations and proofs, implemented
    systems, experimental results, statistical analyses, and case studies.
* Clarity. The paper must present its contributions and results clearly.


PAPER CATEGORIES


GPCE solicits three kinds of submissions.


* Full Papers reporting original and unpublished results of research that
contribute to scientific knowledge in any GPCE topic listed above. Full
paper submissions must not exceed 12 pages excluding bibliography.


* Short Papers presenting unconventional ideas or visions about any GPCE
topic listed above. Short papers do not always require complete results
as in the case of a full paper. In this way, authors can introduce new
ideas to the community and get early feedback. Please note that short
papers are not intended to be position statements. Short papers are
included in the proceedings and will be presented at the conference.
Short paper submissions must not exceed 6 pages excluding bibliography.


* Tool Demonstrations presenting tools for any GPCE topic listed above.
Tools must be available for use and must not be purely commercial.
Submissions must provide a tool description not exceeding 6 pages
excluding bibliography and a separate demonstration outline including
screenshots also not exceeding 6 pages. Tool demonstrations must have
the keywords "Tool Demo" or "Tool Demonstration" in their title. If the
submission is accepted, the tool description will be published in the
proceedings. The demonstration outline will only be used by the program
committee for evaluating the submission.


PAPER SUBMISSION


All submissions must use the ACM SIGPLAN Conference Format "acmart",
using the "sigplan" sub-format, and 10 point font. Additional details
and links to templates and the LaTeX class file can be found on the
conference web site: http://2018.splashcon.org/track/gpce-2018.


To increase fairness in reviewing, a double-blind review process has
become standard across SIGPLAN conferences. GPCE will follow a very
lightweight model, where author identities are revealed to reviewers
after submitting their initial reviews. Hence, the purpose is not to
conceal author identities at all cost, but merely to provide reviewers
with an unbiased first look at a submission. Author names and
institutions should be omitted from submitted papers, and references
to the authors' own related work should be in the third person.
No other changes are necessary, and authors will not be penalized
if reviewers are able to infer their identities in implicit ways.


To understand the motivation for using a double-blind review process
please see "Effectiveness of anonymization in double-blind review" by
C. Le Goues, Y. Brun, S. Apel, E. Berger, S. Khurshid, Y. Smaragdakis
at https://doi.org/10.1145/3208157.


Papers must be submitted using HotCRP: https://gpce18.hotcrp.com/


For additional information, clarification, or answers to questions
please contact the program chair.


ORGANIZATION


General Chair: Eric Van Wyk (University of Minnesota, USA, evw@umn.edu)
Program Chair: Tiark Rompf (Purdue University, USA, tiark@purdue.edu)


Program Committee


Vander Alves, University of Brasilia
Kenichi Asai, Ochanomizu University
Martin Berger, University of Sussex
Aggelos Biboudis, EPFL
Eugene Burmako, Twitter
Charisee Chiw, University of Chicago
Dana Drachsler Cohen, ETH Zürich
Sebastian Erdweg, TU Delft
Robert Glück, DIKU
Vinod Grover, NVIDIA
Shoaib Kamil, Adobe
Andrei Klimov, Keldysh Institute
Oleg Kiselyov, Tohoku University
Stefan Marr, University of Kent
Sarah Nadi, University of Alberta
Klaus Ostermann, University of Tübingen
Oleksandr Polozov, Microsoft Research
Ina Schaefer, TU Braunschweig
Ulrik Pagh Schultz, University of Southern Denmark
Chung-chieh Shan, Indiana University
Jeremy Siek, Indiana University
Alexander Slesarenko, Huawei
Anthony Sloane, Macquarie University
Tijs van der Storm, CWI
Walid Taha, Halmstad University
Kanae Tsushima, NII
Jeremy Yallopp, University of Cambridge


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