Bx 2019: 8th International Workshop on Bidirectional Transformations
====================================================================

Highlights:

- workshop date set on June 4, 2019
- Zachary Ives confirmed as invited speaker
- abstract submission Tuesday, Feb 12, AoE
- links to CEUR-WS.org style and template files updated

* http://bx-community.wikidot.com/bx2019:home

* June 4, 2019, Saint Joseph’s University, Philadelphia, PA, USA

* as part of Philadelphia Logic Week (PLW) 2019: https://sites.sju.edu/plw/

* Invited speaker: Zachary Ives (University of Pennsylvania)

Bidirectional transformations (bx) are a mechanism for maintaining the
consistency of at least two related sources of information. Such sources
can be relational databases, software models and code, or any other
document following standard or ad-hoc formats. Bx are an emerging topic in
a wide range of research areas, with prominent presence at top conferences
in several different fields (namely databases, programming languages,
software engineering, and graph transformation), but with results in one
field often getting limited exposure in the others. Bx 2019 is a dedicated
venue for bx in all relevant fields, and is part of a workshop series that
was created in order to promote cross-disciplinary research and awareness
in the area. As such, since its beginning in 2012, the workshop has rotated
between venues in different fields.

Bx 2019 will be a part of Philadelphia Logic Week (PLW) 2019, which also
includes conference and workshops on logic, provenance, and databases,
topics that we hope will complement Bx and help build engagement with these
communities.


Important Dates
===============

- Abstract submission: Feb 12 (AoE)
- Paper submission:    Feb 19 (AoE)
- Author notification: Apr  8
- Camera-ready: around May  1
- Workshop:            Jun  4, 2019


Aims and Topics
===============

The aim of the workshop is to bring together researchers and practitioners,
established and new, interested in bx from different perspectives,
including but not limited to:

- bidirectional programming languages and frameworks
- data and model synchronization
- view updating
- inter-model consistency analysis and repair
- data/schema (or model/metamodel) co-evolution
- coupled software/model transformations
- inversion of transformations and data exchange mappings
- domain-specific languages for bx
- analysis and classification of requirements for bx
- bridging the gap between formal concepts and application scenarios
- analysis of efficiency of transformation algorithms and benchmarks
- survey and comparison of bx technologies
- case studies and tool support


Submission Guidelines
=====================

Papers must follow the CEUR-WS.org one-column style (with page numbers)
available at

- http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-XXX/samplestyles/onecolpceurws.sty

and must be submitted via EasyChair:

- https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=bx2019

A sample LaTeX file using the above style (along with an included sample
image) can be downloaded at

- http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-XXX/samplestyles/paper1p.tex
- http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-XXX/samplestyles/fig1.eps

Five categories of submissions are considered:

* Full Research Papers (up to 15 pages)
- in-depth presentations of novel concepts and results
- applications of bx to new domains
- survey papers providing novel comparisons between existing bx
technologies and approaches case studies

* Tool Papers (up to 8 pages)
- guideline papers presenting best practices for employing a specific bx
approach (with a specific tool)
- presentation of new tools or substantial improvements to existing ones
- qualitative and/or quantitative comparisons of applying different bx
approaches and tools

* Experience Report (up to 8 pages)
- sharing experiences and lessons learned with bx tools/frameworks/languages
- how bx is used in (research/industrial/educational) projects

* Extended Abstracts and Short Papers (up to 4 pages)
- work in progress
- small focused contributions
- position papers and research perspectives
- critical questions and challenges for bx

* Talk Proposals (up to 2 pages)
- proposed lectures about topics of interest for bx
- existing work representing relevant contributions for bx
- promising contributions that are not mature enough to be proposed as
papers of the other categories

If your submission is not a Full Research Paper, please include the
intended submission category in the Title field of EasyChair’s submission
form.

The bibliography is excluded from the page limits. All papers are expected
to be self-contained and well-written. Tool papers are not expected to
present novel scientific results, but to document artifacts of interest and
share bx experience/best practices with the community. Experience papers
are expected to report on lessons learnt from applying bx approaches,
languages, tools, and theories to practical application case studies.
Extended abstracts should primarily provoke interesting discussion at the
workshop and will not be held to the same standard of maturity as regular
papers; short papers contain focused results, positions or perspectives
that can be presented in full in just a few pages, and that correspondingly
contain fewer results and that therefore might not be competitive in the
full paper category. Talk proposals are expected to present work that is of
particular interest to the community and worth a talk slot at the workshop.

We strongly encourage authors to ensure that any (variants of) examples are
present in the bx example repository at the time of submission, and for
tool papers, to allow for reproducibility with minimal effort, either via a
virtual machine (e.g., via Share - http://share20.eu) or a dedicated
website with relevant artifacts and tool access.

All papers will be peer-reviewed by at least three members of the program
committee.

If a paper is accepted, one author of the paper is expected to participate
in the workshop to present it. Authors of accepted tool papers are also
expected to be available to demonstrate their tool at the event.


Proceedings and Special Issue
=============================

The workshop proceedings, including all accepted papers (except talk
proposals), will be published electronically by CEUR-WS.org. A special
issue open to all authors of papers in BX workshops over the past few years
is planned.


Program committee
=================

* Co-chairs

- James Cheney, University of Edinburgh, UK
- Hsiang-Shang ‘Josh’ Ko, National Institute of Informatics, Japan

* Members

- Leopoldo Bertossi, Carleton University, Canada
- Ravi Chugh, University of Chicago, US
- Zinovy Diskin, McMaster University, Canada
- Paolo Guagliardo, University of Edinburgh, UK
- Jules Hedges, University of Oxford, UK
- Michael Johnson, Macquarie University, Australia
- Leen Lambers, Hasso Plattner Institute, University of Potsdam, Germany
- Kazutaka Matsuda, Tohoku University, Japan
- Anders Miltner, Princeton University, US
- Alfonso Pierantonio, University of L'Aquila, Italy
- Perdita Stevens, University of Edinburgh, UK
- Daniel Strüber, University of Koblenz and Landau, Germany
- Manuel Wimmer, Vienna University of Technology, Austria
- Nicolas Wu, University of Bristol, UK
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