[hpc-announce] LCPC 2023 deadline extended to Sept. 4, 2023

Henry Dietz henry.dietz at uky.edu
Mon Aug 28 11:59:38 CDT 2023


LCPC 2023: Languages and Compilers for Parallel Computing

http://www.lcpcworkshop.org/LCPC23

October 11-13, 2023 in Lexington, KY USA

Submission Deadline: EXTENDED TO September 4, 2023

Since its founding in 1988, LCPC has been a leading venue for 
presentation of research and discussions related to languages and 
compilers for parallel computing. The scope continues to include various 
topics related to parallel computing, such as programming models, 
program analysis and transformations, runtime systems and execution 
models, and application-oriented software tools and libraries. Although 
LCPC originally centered on scientific computing, the domain of interest 
has long been any system in which parallel processing plays a key role, 
from mobile computing to big data. In addition, this year we are 
acknowledging a now clear trend by explicitly encouraging contributions 
involving the use of trained AI methods -- for example, use of GPT for 
code generation.

Specific topics of interest for LCPC 2023 include:
Use of AI in code generation, program optimization, and parallel programming
Compilers for parallel computing
Static, dynamic, and adaptive optimization of parallel programs
Parallel programming models and languages
Formal analysis and verification of parallel programs
Parallel runtime systems and libraries
Support for fine-grain parallel processing and Quantum Computing
Performance and analysis and debugging tools for concurrency
Parallel algorithms and concurrent data structures
Parallel applications in Big Data, Machine Learning, Graphs, Embedded
Systems, Bio, IoT
Software engineering for parallel programs
Fault tolerance for parallel systems
Strong scaling and issues involving extreme-scale computing systems
Parallel programming and compiling for heterogeneous systems

LCPC strongly encourages personal interaction and technical discussions 
driven by the material presented live and in-person at the workshop; at 
least one of the authors of each paper is expected to attend the 
workshop to present and discuss the work. Submitted Regular papers 
should be previously unpublished work no longer than 15 pages (excluding 
bibliography) in a form compliant with the LNCS author guidelines. Short 
papers may represent "work in progress" or can be Panel overviews with 
the panel moderator and proposed panelists as authors; these must follow 
the same LNCS rules but with a maximum of 11 pages. As in past years, 
accepted papers will be made available online as an informal 
proceedings. After the meeting, authors of accepted papers are given the 
opportunity to submit revised versions for publication in a formal LNCS 
(Springer-Verlag Lecture Notes in Computer Science) volume.

See the workshop website for details:

http://www.lcpcworkshop.org/LCPC23

-- 

Hank Dietz, Professor & James F. Hardymon Chair in Networking
University of Kentucky, Electrical & Computer Engineering Dept.
329 Rose Street, Lexington, KY 40506-0633
URL: aggregate.org/hankd/



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