ACM SIGPLAN Workshop on Data-Centric Programming 2014
-----------------------------------------------------

DEADLINE EXTENDED TO FRIDAY NOVEMBER 22 - CONTRIBUTIONS ARE 2 PAGES
Please consider submitting to this great workshop

Colocated with POPL, January 25, 2014 | San Diego, USA
http://research.microsoft.com/DCP2014
Submission: November 22, 2013
Notification: December 4, 2013

We're very pleased to announce DCP 2014, an exciting workshop which builds on 
the success of the Data-Driven Functional Programming (DDFP) workshop at POPL 
2013. This workshop is for anyone who loves the application of functional 
programming (and indeed other programming paradigms as well) to data-rich 
domains. Please consider submitting to the workshop - whatever your flavor of 
data, whatever your flavor of data-centric programming. We want this to be a 
great event that opens up opportunities at the intersection of data and 
programming.

Functional programming techniques are increasingly important in data-centric 
programming: languages like Haskell, Scala, and C# draw heavily on a range of 
functional techniques and find application in numerous data-driven domains; 
paradigms like map/reduce and its extensions lie at the core of modern scalable 
data processing; and "information-rich" languages like Ur, F#, and Gosu use 
meta-programming to integrate type-safe queries, web-based APIs, and scalable 
data sources - along with associated semantically-rich metadata - into the 
programming language. In principle, the expressiveness, strong typing, and core 
functional paradigm of these languages make them an ideal choice for expressing 
robust and scalable data-centric programming. 

On the other end, the web of data is growing at an enormous pace, with few 
dedicated software applications capable of dealing efficiently in 
information-rich spaces. Reasons for that include one (or more) of the 
following research issues: lack of integrated development environments (IDEs, 
such as Visual Studio and Eclipse), poor programming language support, lack of 
standard testbeds and/or benchmarks, inadequate training, and perhaps the need 
for curriculum revision. Properly addressing these issues requires 
interdisciplinary skills, and the collaboration between academia and industry. 

Many challenges remain.


Workshop Goals
--------------

This workshop invites submissions that explore the gap between today's data 
management challenges, particularly the ones related to dealing with large 
amounts of semantically rich data, and the lack of adequate tools. We are 
looking for contributions that discuss, promote and further advance the 
programming of semantically-rich data including the development of new 
languages, extension of existing ones, and the inclusion of semantic-enabled 
capabilities into existing IDEs. 

In this forum, we will discuss, promote, and advance the use of data-centric 
programming in information-rich data spaces - including the development of new 
programming and data-manipulation systems as well as the extension of existing 
ones.

By devising methods for handling data from the programming level, we can 
promote the research and development of better data-centric programming 
technologies as a whole, as well as facilitate the shift towards both 
principled and effective data-centric computing.


Talk Proposals
--------------

We want DCP to be as informal and interactive as possible. The program will 
thus involve a combination of invited talks, contributed talks about work in 
progress, and open-ended discussion sessions. There will be no published 
proceedings, but participants will be invited to submit working documents, talk 
slides, etc. to be posted on the workshop website.

We invite proposals for talks in any area related to the connection between 
programming and data, including, but not limited to:

* Formal systems that capture the essential theoretical elements of 
data-centric programming

* Experimental systems that demonstrate novel data-centric programming 
techniques

* Technology that demonstrates correctness, scalability, productivity, 
robustness, or maintainability of data-centric programs

* Schema evolution, schema-type mapping, query languages, probabilistic 
programming, network-connected programming, or semi-structured data

* Programming-related aspects of knowledge representation techniques including 
database theory, ontology techniques, and linked data

* Impact of specific application areas (e.g. e-science, e-gov, sensors) on 
information-rich application design

* Data exploration and visualization

* Evaluation of data quality

* Plugins and IDEs for information-rich application development

* Cleaning and provenance of data, services, and processes

Talks about work in progress are particularly encouraged. If you have any 
questions about the relevance of a particular topic, please contact the PC 
chairs at the address dcp.2...@lambda-calcul.us .

We solicit proposals for contributed talks. Proposals should be at most 2 
pages, in either plain text or PDF format. We plan to allocate 30-minute talk 
slots; but proposals for shorter or longer talks will also be considered. 
Speakers may also submit supplementary material (e.g. a full paper, talk 
slides) if they desire, which PC members are free (but not expected) to read.


Organization
------------

Program Chairs

Jeremy Gibbons, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
Evelyne Viegas, Microsoft Research, United States

Program Committee

Soren Auer, University of Bonn, Germany 
Nate Foster, Cornell University, United States
Juliana Freire, Polytechnic Institute of New York University, United States
Erik Meijer, Applied Duality, United States
Steffen Staab, University of Koblenz, Germany
Don Syme, Microsoft Research Cambridge, United Kingdom
Hadley Wickham, Rice University, United States

_______________________________________________
Haskell mailing list
Haskell@haskell.org
http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell

Reply via email to