[hpc-announce] PPoPP 2023: Call for Papers, Feb 25 - Mar 1, 2023, Montreal, Canada

Shigang Li shigangli.cs at gmail.com
Tue Jun 14 08:55:30 CDT 2022


PPoPP 2023: 28th ACM SIGPLAN Annual Symposium on Principles and Practice of
Parallel Programming

Montreal, Canada. (collocated with CC-2023, HPCA-2023 and CGO-2023) Dates:
25 February - 1 March, 2023.

Submission URL: https://ppopp23.hotcrp.com
Important dates:
<https://conf.researchr.org/track/PPoPP-2023/PPoPP-2023-papers#important-dates>

   - Full paper submission: August 17, 2022
   - Author response period: October 26–October 28, 2022
   - Author notification: November 7, 2022
   - Artifact submission to AE committee: November 16, 2022
   - Artifact notification by AE committee: December 30, 2022
   - Final paper due: January 6, 2023

All deadlines are at midnight anywhere on earth (AoE), and are firm.
Scope: <https://conf.researchr.org/track/PPoPP-2023/PPoPP-2023-papers#scope>

PPoPP is the premier forum for leading work on all aspects of parallel
programming, including theoretical foundations, techniques, languages,
compilers, runtime systems, tools, and practical experience. In the context
of the symposium, “parallel programming” encompasses work on concurrent and
parallel systems (multicore, multi-threaded, heterogeneous, clustered, and
distributed systems; grids; data centers; clouds; and large scale
machines). Given the rise of parallel architectures in the consumer market
(desktops, laptops, and mobile devices) and data centers, PPoPP is
particularly interested in work that addresses new parallel workloads and
issues that arise out of extreme-scale applications or cloud platforms, as
well as techniques and tools that improve the productivity of parallel
programming or work towards improved synergy with such emerging
architectures.

Specific topics of interest include (but are not limited to):

   - Compilers and runtime systems for parallel and heterogeneous systems
   - Concurrent data structures
   - Development, analysis, or management tools
   - Fault tolerance for parallel systems
   - Formal analysis and verification
   - High-performance / scientific computing
   - Libraries
   - Middleware for parallel systems
   - Parallel algorithms
   - Parallel applications and frameworks
   - Parallel programming for deep memory hierarchies including nonvolatile
   memory
   - Parallel programming languages
   - Parallel programming theory and models
   - Parallelism in non-scientific workloads: web, search, analytics,
   cloud, machine learning
   - Performance analysis, debugging and optimization
   - Programming tools for parallel and heterogeneous systems
   - Software engineering for parallel programs
   - Software for heterogeneous architectures
   - Software productivity for parallel programming
   - Synchronization and concurrency control

Papers should report on original research relevant to parallel programming
and should contain enough background materials to make them accessible to
the entire parallel programming research community. Papers describing
experience should indicate how they illustrate general principles or lead
to new insights; papers about parallel programming foundations should
indicate how they relate to practice. PPoPP submissions will be evaluated
based on their technical merit and accessibility. Submissions should
clearly motivate the importance of the problem being addressed, compare to
the existing body of work on the topic, and explicitly and precisely state
the paper’s key contributions and results towards addressing the problem.
Submissions should strive to be accessible both to a broad audience and to
experts in the area.
Paper Submission:
<https://conf.researchr.org/track/PPoPP-2023/PPoPP-2023-papers#paper-submission>

Conference submission site: https://ppopp23.hotcrp.com

All submissions must be made electronically through the conference web site
and include an abstract (100–400 words), author contact information, the
full list of authors and their affiliations. Full paper submissions must be
in PDF formatted printable on both A4 and US letter size paper.

All papers must be prepared in ACM Conference Format using the 2-column
acmart <http://www.sigplan.org/Resources/Author/> format: use the SIGPLAN
proceedings template acmart-sigplanproc-template.tex
<http://www.sigplan.org/sites/default/files/acmart/current/acmart-sigplanproc-template.tex>
for
Latex,and interim-layout.docx
<https://www.acm.org/binaries/content/assets/publications/word_style/interim-template-style/interim-layout.docx>
for
Word. You may also want to consult the official ACM information on the Master
Article Template <http://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template> and
related tools. Important note: The Word template (interim-layout.docx) on
the ACM website uses 9pt font; you need to increase it to 10pt.

Papers should contain a maximum of 10 pages of text (in a typeface no
smaller than 10 point) or figures, NOT INCLUDING references. There is no
page limit for references and they must include the name of all authors
(not {et al.}). Appendices are not allowed, but the authors may submit
supplementary material, such as proofs or source code; all supplementary
material must be in PDF or ZIP format. Looking at supplementary material is
at the discretion of the reviewers.

Submission is double blind and authors will need to identify any potential
conflicts of interest with PC and Extended Review Committee members, as
defined here: http://www.sigplan.org/Resources/Policies/Review/ (ACM
SIGPLAN policy).

PPoPP 2023 will employ a double-blind reviewing process. To facilitate this
process, submissions should not reveal the identity of the authors in any
way. Authors should leave out author names and affiliations from the body
of their submission. They should also ensure that any references to
authors’ own related work should be in the third person (e.g., not “We
build on our previous work …” but rather “We build on the work of …”). The
purpose of this process is to help the PC and external reviewers come to an
initial judgment about the paper without bias, not to make it impossible
for them to discover the authors if they were to try. Nothing should be
done in the name of anonymity that weakens the submission or makes the job
of reviewing the paper more difficult. In particular, important background
references should not be omitted or anonymized. In addition, authors should
feel free to disseminate their ideas or draft versions of their paper as
they normally would. For instance, authors may post drafts of their papers
on the web or give talks on their research ideas. Authors with further
questions on double-blind reviewing are encouraged to contact the Program
Chairs by email.

Submissions should be in PDF and printable on both US Letter and A4 paper.
Papers may be resubmitted to the submission site multiple times up until
the deadline, but the last version submitted before the deadline will be
the version reviewed. Papers that exceed the length requirement, that
deviate from the expected format, or that are submitted late will be
rejected.

All submissions that are not accepted for regular presentations will be
automatically considered for posters. Two-page summaries of accepted
posters will be included in the conference proceedings.

To allow reproducibility, we encourage authors of accepted papers to submit
their papers for Artifact Evaluation (AE). The AE process begins after the
acceptance notification, and is run by a separate committee whose task is
to assess how the artifacts support the work described in the papers.
Artifact evaluation is voluntary and will not affect paper acceptance, but
will be taken into consideration when selecting papers for awards. Papers
that go through the AE process successfully will receive one or several of
the ACM reproducibility badges, printed on the papers themselves. More
information will be posted on the AE website.

Deadlines expire at midnight anywhere on earth.
Publication Date:
<https://conf.researchr.org/track/PPoPP-2023/PPoPP-2023-papers#publication-date>

The titles of all accepted papers are typically announced shortly after the
author notification date (late November 2022). Note, however, that this is
not the official publication date. The official publication date is the
date the proceedings are made available in the ACM Digital Library. ACM
will make the proceedings available via the Digital Library for one month,
up to 2 weeks prior to the first day of the conference. The official
publication date affects the deadline for any patent filings related to
published work.


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