Complex computer systems are common in many sectors, such as manufacturing,
communications, defense, transportation, aerospace, hazardous environments,
energy, e-commerce, and health care. These systems are frequently distributed
over heterogeneous networks, and are driven by many diverse requirements
on performance, real-time behavior, fault tolerance, security, dependability,
adaptability, development time and cost, long life concerns, and other
areas. In addition, the emerging area of web-based software requires solutions
to complex problems of highly integrated and complex components. Such requirements
frequently conflict, and their satisfaction therefore requires managing
the trade-off among them during system development and throughout the entire
system life.
The goal of this conference is to bring together industrial, academic,
and government experts from a variety of user domains and software disciplines,
to discuss how the different disciplines’ problems and solution techniques
interact within the entire system. Researchers, practitioners, tool developers
and users, and technology transition experts are all welcome. The scope
of interest includes long-term research issues, near-term complex system
requirements and promising tools, existing complex systems, and commercially
available tools.
Topic areas
Papers are solicited in all areas related to complex computer systems,
including theories and technologies for developing complex systems and
identifying causes of their complexity, and means of avoiding, controlling,
or coping with complexity. Topic areas include, but are not limited to:
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Embedded real time complex systems
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Distributed and network based complex software systems
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Design and analysis of complex software systems
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Formal methods for complex systems
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Techniques for emerging web-based complex systems
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Techniques for component-based software development
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Testing and reliability modeling
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Software process management
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Software metrics
Session organization
Different kinds of contributions are sought, including research papers,
lessons learned, status reports, and discussion of practical problems faced
by industry and user domains. The ultimate goal is to build a rich and
comprehensive conference program that can fit the interests and needs of
different classes of attendees: professionals, researchers, managers, and
students. A program goal is to organize several sessions that include both
academic and industrial papers to a given topic and panels to discuss relationships
between industrial and academic research.
Keynote Speakers
Keynote speakers of ICECCS2002:
- Bev Littlewood, City University, London, UK
- Victor R. Basili, University of Maryland, US
- Jifeng He, The United Nations University, Macau
Registration
Submission information
We solicit regular research papers, industrial experience reports,
and extended abstracts. Awards will be given for the best paper and best
conference presentation. Selected papers will be considered for publication
in suitable journals, if possible as a special issue.
Submissions are divided into three categories: Technical Papers,
Industrial Experience Reports, and Extended Abstracts. Program
committee members will review submissions to each category, and
papers accepted in either category will be published in the
conference proceedings. Technical papers should describe original
research, and industrial experience reports should describe
practical projects carried out in industry, and reflect on the
lessons learned from them. Submitted manuscripts should be in
English and IEEE proceeding formation. Submissions should not exceed
11 pages for technical papers, 6
pages for industrial experience reports, and 1 page for abstracts.
Authors of accepted
papers must sign a copyright release form. IEEE Computer
Society Press will publish the proceedings and the IEEE proceedings format
is described at:
http://computer.org/cspress/instruct.htm.
Industrial exhibits
ICECCS 2002 provides industrial exhibitors an opportunity to present
their state-of-the-art systems, development tools, and applications. Exhibitors
are able to exchange ideas with leading researchers from all around the
world, and to make new contacts for future interactions.
Location
Hotel Home Page: Greenbelt Marriott Hotel, Maryland, USA (Special Rate for ICECCS'2002 Attendees, $109 per night. Please mention ICECCS2002 during the reservation.)
Hotel Driving Directions Page
- Baltimore-Washington Intl - BWI (20 mi N) Take Baltimore-Washington Parkway(I-295) South to I-495/I-95 North Exit. Take first exit#23 Kenilworth Ave. and bear right. Take 2nd left onto Ivy Lane.
- Washington, DC/National/ Reagan Airport - DCA (22 mi NE) Route 1 North, I-495/I-95 North, to Exit 23 Kenilworth Ave. Bear right and take 2nd left on Ivy Lane.
- Washington, DC/Dulles - IAD (33 mi E) Take Dulles Access Road to I-495 North, follow to I-95 South, to exit 23 Kenilworth Ave. Turn left on Kenilworth, take left onto Ivy Lane.
- South bound: Following I-95 South to Exit 23 Kenilworth Ave. Bear right and t
ake 2nd left on Ivy Lane.
- North bound:Following I-95 North to Exit 23 Kenilworth Ave. Bear right and t
ake 2nd left on Ivy Lane.
Public Transportation
There is no direct shuttle bus from the airports (BWI/IAD/DCA) to the hotel. However, Greenbelt Metro Station(Green Line)
is about 1 and half miles from the hotel. Call 301-441-3700 for complimentary shuttle service(7:00am - 10:00pm).
Important dates
| May 3, 2002 | Initial abstract due |
| May 10, 2002 | Deadline for submission of papers/extended abstracts |
| June 7, 2002 | Proposals for tutorials, panels and exhibits due |
| July 12, 2002 | Notification to authors of acceptance or rejection (Postponed to July 19) |
| Sept. 6, 2002 | Final camera-ready papers or extended abstracts due |
Organizing Committee
General Chair:
Shaoying Liu
Department of Computer Science
Hosei University, Tokyo, Japan
Email: sliu@k.hosei.ac.jp
Vice Chair:
Alexander D. Stoyen
University of Nebraska at Omaha and
21st Century Systems, Inc. USA
Email: a.stoyen@computer.org
Program Chairs:
Mei Hwa Chen
Computer Science Department, LI-67A
University at Albany
SUNY, Albany
NY 12222, U.S.A.
Email: mhc@cs.albany.edu
Mike Hinchey
NASA GSFC and
SVRC, University of Queensland, Australia
Email:mike@svrc.uq.edu.au
Luciano Baresi
Politecnico di Milano, Italy
Email: baresi@elet.polimi.it
Publicity Chair:
Ye Wu
Information and Software Engineering Department
George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia, USA
Email: wuye@ise.gmu.edu
Program Committee
- Paul Ammann, USA
- Sten Andler, Sweden
- Keijiro Araki, Japan
- Jan Bosch, Holland
- Jonathan Bowen,UK
- John Fitzgerald, UK
- Robert France, USA
- Hassan Gomaa, USA
- Jane Hayes, USA
- Kenji Ishida, Japan
- Huaikou Miao, China
- Paolo Nesi, Italy
- Jeff Offutt, USA
- Kenji Ohmori, Japan
- Paolo Paolini, Italy
- Mauro Pezze, Italy
- Peter Poon, USA
- Fuji Ren, Japan
- Gustavo Rossi, Argentina
- Bernhard Rumpe, Germany
- Andrea Savigni, UK
- Jin Song Dong, Singapore
- Frank Stomp,USA
- Ichiro Suzuki, USA
- Gabriele Taentzer, Germany
- Ye Wu, USA
- GuoLiang Zheng, China