Please wait, while we are loading the content...
Please wait, while we are loading the content...
| Content Provider | ACM Digital Library |
|---|---|
| Editor | Rauchwerger, Lawrence Sarkar, Vivek |
| Copyright Year | 2017 |
| Abstract | It is our great pleasure to welcome you to PPoPP 2017, the 22nd ACM SIGPLAN Symposium on Principles and Practice of Parallel Programming held in Austin, Texas during February 4-8, 2017, and co-located with the CGO 2017 and HPCA 2017 conferences. This year's symposium continues and reinforces the PPoPP tradition of publishing leading work on all aspects of parallel programming, including foundational and theoretical aspects, techniques, languages, compilers, runtime systems, tools, and practical experiences. Given the pervasiveness of parallel architectures in the general consumer market, PPoPP, with its interest in new parallel workloads, techniques and productivity tools for parallel programming, is becoming more relevant than ever to the computer science community. PPoPP 2017 received 132 submissions from countries all over the world. The submitted papers underwent a rigorous two-phase review process. To maintain fairness and uniform standards, the review process was double-blind, throughout. Almost all of the 132 submissions were reviewed in the first phase by four members of the combined PC and ERC. (A very small fraction received three reviews in the first phase.) All papers were assigned a discussion lead from the PC. After the first rebuttal phase and ongoing online discussions, reviewers reached a consensus to relegate half of the submissions. Their authors were subsequently notified and given the choice of withdrawing their papers. The submissions for which there was no clear consensus or that had only three reviews (very few) were retained for the second evaluation stage. In the second phase, the remaining papers received at least two additional reviews exclusively from PC members and some external specialists. After a second rebuttal period, PC and ERC members continued their online discussions and grouped papers in top, bottom and discuss categories. Finally, 35 PC members met in person over two half days from noon, November 5th through the afternoon of November 6th at the Department of Computer Science in Rice University, Houston, TX, and concluded the meeting by accepting (or conditionally accepting) a total of 29 papers. The 14 conditionally accepted papers were shepherded by volunteer PC members, and the final version was made available to all original reviewers for their approval. All in all, this process resulted in a manageable average load of 12 papers for PC members, 6 papers for ERC members, offered all authors the possibility to respond to all reviews, and helped ensure that reviewing efforts were focused on where they were needed the most. Because many quality papers could not be accommodated as regular contributions, all papers retained for the second review phase were invited to be presented as posters at the conference. As a result, 17 posters were included in the proceedings as 2 page abstracts. The posters were presented during a special two-hour late afternoon session. All authors of accepted papers were given the option of participating in a joint CGO-PPoPP Artifact Evaluation (AE) process. The AE process is intended to encourage researchers to conduct experiments in a reproducible way, to package experimental work-flows and all related materials for broad availability, and ultimately, to enable fair comparison of published techniques. This year saw a considerable increase in the amount of submitted artifacts: 27 versus 18 two years ago, almost equally split between CGO and PPoPP. The Artifact Evaluation Committee of 41 researchers and engineers spent two weeks validating and evaluating the artifacts. Each submission received at least three reviews and only eight of them fell below acceptance criteria. To help educate authors about result reproducibility, these papers were shepherded during a week's time by the AE Committee. Concurrently, the AE committee successfully tried an "open reviewing model", i.e., asked the community to publicly evaluate several artifacts already available at Github, Gila and other project hosting services. This enabled us to find additional external reviewers with access to HPC servers or proprietary benchmarks and tools. At the end of this process all submissions qualified to receive the AE seal and their authors were encouraged to submit a two page Artifact Appendix to document the process. The success of a major conference like PPoPP very much depends on the hard work of all members of the organizing committee who volunteer their time in this service. We thank all PC and ERC members for their thoughtful reviews and extensive online discussions, with special thanks to the PC members who came from all over the world to the meeting in Houston and deliberated for two half days and read additional papers overnight to produce the PPoPP 2017 program. Several of the PC members volunteered to shepherd papers, and deserve special thanks for their efforts. The AE process was lengthy and demanding, and the AE Chairs, Wonsun Ahn (for PPoPP) and Joe Devietti (for CGO) and their team did an amazing job on that Herculean task. |
| ISBN | 9781450344937 |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) |
| Publisher Date | 2017-01-26 |
| Access Restriction | Subscribed |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Conference Proceedings |
National Digital Library of India (NDLI) is a virtual repository of learning resources which is not just a repository with search/browse facilities but provides a host of services for the learner community. It is sponsored and mentored by Ministry of Education, Government of India, through its National Mission on Education through Information and Communication Technology (NMEICT). Filtered and federated searching is employed to facilitate focused searching so that learners can find the right resource with least effort and in minimum time. NDLI provides user group-specific services such as Examination Preparatory for School and College students and job aspirants. Services for Researchers and general learners are also provided. NDLI is designed to hold content of any language and provides interface support for 10 most widely used Indian languages. It is built to provide support for all academic levels including researchers and life-long learners, all disciplines, all popular forms of access devices and differently-abled learners. It is designed to enable people to learn and prepare from best practices from all over the world and to facilitate researchers to perform inter-linked exploration from multiple sources. It is developed, operated and maintained from Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur.
Learn more about this project from here.
NDLI is a conglomeration of freely available or institutionally contributed or donated or publisher managed contents. Almost all these contents are hosted and accessed from respective sources. The responsibility for authenticity, relevance, completeness, accuracy, reliability and suitability of these contents rests with the respective organization and NDLI has no responsibility or liability for these. Every effort is made to keep the NDLI portal up and running smoothly unless there are some unavoidable technical issues.
Ministry of Education, through its National Mission on Education through Information and Communication Technology (NMEICT), has sponsored and funded the National Digital Library of India (NDLI) project.
| Sl. | Authority | Responsibilities | Communication Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ministry of Education (GoI), Department of Higher Education |
Sanctioning Authority | https://www.education.gov.in/ict-initiatives |
| 2 | Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur | Host Institute of the Project: The host institute of the project is responsible for providing infrastructure support and hosting the project | https://www.iitkgp.ac.in |
| 3 | National Digital Library of India Office, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur | The administrative and infrastructural headquarters of the project | Dr. B. Sutradhar bsutra@ndl.gov.in |
| 4 | Project PI / Joint PI | Principal Investigator and Joint Principal Investigators of the project |
Dr. B. Sutradhar bsutra@ndl.gov.in Prof. Saswat Chakrabarti will be added soon |
| 5 | Website/Portal (Helpdesk) | Queries regarding NDLI and its services | support@ndl.gov.in |
| 6 | Contents and Copyright Issues | Queries related to content curation and copyright issues | content@ndl.gov.in |
| 7 | National Digital Library of India Club (NDLI Club) | Queries related to NDLI Club formation, support, user awareness program, seminar/symposium, collaboration, social media, promotion, and outreach | clubsupport@ndl.gov.in |
| 8 | Digital Preservation Centre (DPC) | Assistance with digitizing and archiving copyright-free printed books | dpc@ndl.gov.in |
| 9 | IDR Setup or Support | Queries related to establishment and support of Institutional Digital Repository (IDR) and IDR workshops | idr@ndl.gov.in |
|
Loading...
|