TaPP '09 Call for Papers
1st Workshop on the Theory and Practice of Provenance (TaPP '09)
February 23, 2009
San Francisco, CA
Sponsored by USENIX, the Advanced Computing Systems Association
Important
Dates
- Paper submissions deadline extended! December 9, 2008, 11:59 p.m. PST
- Notification of acceptance: January 22, 2009
- Electronic files due: February 11, 2009
Workshop Organizers
Program Chair
James Cheney, University of Edinburgh
Program Committee
Juliana Freire, University of Utah
Jim Frew, University of California, Santa Barbara
Michael Lesk, Rutgers University
Gerome Miklau, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Vladimiro Sassone, University of Southampton
Perdita Stevens, University of Edinburgh
Erez Zadok, Stony Brook University
Steve Zdancewic, University of Pennsylvania
Steering Committee
Michael Hicks, University of Maryland
Bertram Ludaescher, University of California, Davis
Craig Soules, HP Labs
Val Tannen, University of Pennsylvania
Overview
Provenance, or meta-information about computations, computer systems, database queries, scientific workflows, and so on, is emerging as a central issue in a number of disciplines. The TaPP workshop continues an informal series of workshops on Principles of Provenance organized in 2007–2008, which helped raise the profile of this area within diverse research communities, such as databases, security, and programming languages. We hope both to attract serious cross-disciplinary, foundational, and highly speculative research and to facilitate needed interaction with the broader systems community and with industry.
Topics
We invite submissions addressing research problems involving provenance in any area of computer science, including but not limited to:
- Databases
- Data provenance and lineage
- Uncertainty/probabilistic databases
- Curated databases
- Data quality/integration/cleaning
- Privacy/anonymity
- Data forensics
- Programming languages and software engineering
- Bi-directional, adaptive, and self-adjusting computation
- Traceability
- Source code management/version control/configuration management
- Model-driven design and analysis
- Systems and security
- Provenance aware/versioned file systems
- Provenance and audit/integrity/information flow security
- Trusted computing
- Traces and reflective/adaptive/self-adjusting systems
- Digital libraries
- Workflows/scientific computation
- Efficient/incremental recomputation
- Scientific data exploration and visualization
- Workflow provenance querying
- User interfaces
Deadline and Submission Instructions
We invite submissions of either full papers describing relatively mature work or short papers on ongoing work. Short papers are meant to allow authors to talk about ongoing work that is not yet suitable for publication. Short papers may be included in the online proceedings at the authors' discretion.
Submissions will be received electronically via the Web form. The Web form asks for contact information for the paper and allows for the submission of your full paper file in PDF format. Please do not email submissions.
Papers should be formatted in two columns to fit in either four [4] or ten [10] pages, using 10 point Times Roman type on 12 point leading, in a text block of 6.5" by 9". If you wish, you may use this LaTeX template and style file or this Word template.
Simultaneous submission of the same work to multiple venues,
submission of previously published work, or plagiarism constitutes
dishonesty or fraud. USENIX, like other scientific and technical
conferences and journals, prohibits these practices and may, on the
recommendation of a program chair, take action against authors who
have committed them. In some cases, program committees may share
information about submitted papers with other conference chairs and
journal editors to ensure the integrity of papers under consideration.
If a violation of these principles is found, sanctions may include,
but are not limited to, barring the authors from submitting to or
participating in USENIX conferences for a set period, contacting
the authors' institutions, and publicizing the details of the case.
Authors uncertain whether their submission meets USENIX's guidelines
should contact the program chair, tapp09chair@usenix.org, or the
USENIX office, submissionspolicy@usenix.org.
Papers accompanied by nondisclosure agreement forms will not be considered. Accepted submissions will be treated as confidential prior to publication on the USENIX Web site; rejected submissions will be permanently treated as confidential.
All papers will be available online to registered attendees prior to the workshop and will be available online to everyone starting on February 23, 2009. If your accepted paper should not be published prior to the event, please notify production@usenix.org.
Registration Materials
Complete program and registration information will be available in
late January 2009 on the workshop Web site. If you would like to receive the
latest USENIX conference information, please join our mailing list.
|