call for papers, previous message From: dags@wildcat.dartmouth.edu (Fillia Makedon) Subject: CFP: Symposium on Parallel Computing and Problem Solving Environments Date: 11 Apr 1994 12:11:59 -0500 *** Please note extended paper-submission deadline (April 25) *** THE DARTMOUTH INSTITUTE FOR ADVANCED GRADUATE STUDIES IN PARALLEL COMPUTATION JULY 5-7 1994: SYMPOSIUM ON PARALLEL COMPUTING AND PROBLEM SOLVING ENVIRONMENTS: Providing Massively Parallel Computing to Problem Solvers The DAGS'94 symposium focuses on providing massively parallel computing to problem solving environments. A Problem Solving Environment (PSE) is a computer system that provides all necessary computational facilities to solve a specified class of problems. These facilities are specialized for the domain of the specified class of problems and can be used without specialized knowledge of the underlying computer hardware or software. Important characteristics for PSEs are: solving power, problem orientation, state-of-the-art solution methods, automatic/semi-automatic selection of solution methods, facilities for easy incorporation of novel solution methods, computing facilities (such as interactive color graphics, networks of specialized services, and powerful processors), monitoring the problem solving task, rapid prototyping support, and management of the computing resources for the user. SYMPOSIUM TOPICS: Papers representing original results will be accepted. Topics that will be considered include Symbolic Computations in Parallel Network access for parallel I/O and databases Algorithms and Computational Models for Parallel and Distributed Computing Programming Models for Parallel and Distributed computing New results in applications/tools/transformations for PSEs: scientific visualization, 3D modeling, computational fluid dynamics, weather prediction, digital libraries, aerodynamics, market anaylsis, CAD/CAM, climate change, transaction processing Tools for application development on massively parallel systems How parallel complexity and approximation relates to PSEs Numerical stability and parallel performance Lower bounds on Parallel Complexity Models vs. Real Parallel Machines SUBMISSION AND IMPORTANT DATES Please submit: (a) an electronic copy of an extended abstract (up to 12 pages) to djohnson@cs.dartmouth.edu (b) 5 hard copies of the extended abstract to the following address: Deadline for submission: April 25, 1994 Notification of acceptance: May 25, 1994 Final version: June 20,1994 PROGRAM COMMITTEE Co-chairs: Bruno Codenotti (Institute of Applied Mathematics, Pisa) and Donald B. Johnson (Dartmouth); Gianfranco Bilardi (Padova, Italy); Iain Duff (Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Oxon, UK); Stratis Gallopoulos (Univ. of Illinois, Urbana); Elias Houstis (Purdue Univ.); Richard Karp (Univ. of California, Berkeley); Fillia Makedon (Dartmouth); Panagiotis Metaxas (Wellesley), James Storer (Brandeis Univ.). JULY 8-12: SCHOOL ON PARALLEL PROGRAMMING ENVIRONMENTS Andrea Califano (IBM, Yorktown Heights), (Bruno Codenotti (Institute for Information Processing, Pisa), Thomas Cormen (Dartmouth), Stratis Gallopoulos (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign), David Kotz (Dartmouth), Fillia Makedon (Dartmouth), Panagiotis Metaxas (Wellesley), Grammati Pantziou (Dartmouth), Michael Quinn (Oregon State University), Isidore Rigoutsos (IBM, Yorktown Heights), Gary Sabot (Thinking Machines), Alberto Segre (Cornell), Clifford Stein (Dartmouth). Inquiries: Fillia Makedon, Dags Institute Director, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755 USA; Phone: (603) 646-3048, Fax: (603) 646-1312, Email: makedon@dartmouth.edu