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Latest revision as of 14:35, 8 June 2010
CALL FOR PAPERS: 5th IFIP International Workshop on Self-Organizing Systems (IWSOS 2011)
To be held at KIT, Karlsruhe, Germany, February 2011
Contents
Important dates
- Submission deadline: September 1st, 2010
- Notification: November 1st, 2010
- Camera-ready papers due: November 15th, 2010
- Conference: February ***, 2011
Keynote speakers
- Hermann Haken - Professor emeritus at the University of Stuttgart and founder of synergetics
Workshop Scope
IWSOS 2011 is the fifth workshop in a series of annual multidisciplinary events dedicated to self-organization in networks and networked systems.
The concept of self-organization is becoming increasingly popular in various branches of technology. A self-organizing system may be characterized by global, coordinated activity arising spontaneously from local interactions between the system's components. This activity is distributed over all components, without a central controller supervising or directing the behavior. Self-organization relates the behavior of the individual components (the microscopic level) to the resulting structure and functionality of the overall system (the macroscopic level). Simple interactions at the microscopic level may give rise to complex, adaptive, and robust behavior at the macroscopic level.
The necessity of self-organization in networks and networked systems is caused by the growing scale, complexity, and dynamics of future networked systems. This is because traditional methods tend to be reductionistic, i.e. they neglect the effect of interactions between components. However, in complex networked systems, interactions cannot be ignored, since they are relevant for the future state of the system. In this sense, self-organization becomes a useful approach for dealing with the complexity inherent in networked systems.
There are many areas where self-organization has been and can be applied. This workshop focusses on applications mainly on communication, computer, robotic, transportation, and energy networks, although research from related fields is also welcome.
Building on the success of its predecessors, this workshop aims at bringing together leading international researchers to create a visionary forum for discussing the future of self-organization in networked systems. Topics include, but are not limited to the following.
Key Topics
- Design and analysis of self-organizing and self-managing systems
- Techniques and tools for modeling self-organizing systems
- Robustness and adaptation in self-organizing systems, including self-protection, diagnosis, and healing
- Self-configuration and self-optimization
- Self-organizing group and pattern formation
- Self-organizing synchronization
- Self-organizing resource allocation
- Self-organizing mechanisms for task allocation and coordination
- Self-organizing information dissemination and content search
- Security and safety in self-organizing networked systems
- Structure and dynamics of self-organizing networks
- Risks and limits of self-organization
- The human in the loop of self-organizing networks
- User and operator-related aspects of human-made self-organizing systems
- Applications of self-organizing networks and networked systems
Furthermore:
- Use of game theory and evolutionary algorithms for self-organization
- Use of biologically or socially-inspired approaches for self-organization
- Use of control theory for self-organization
The workshop addresses self-organization different types of technological networks, for example, but not limited to:
- Communication and computer networks (e.g., peer-to-peer networks, vehicular networks, zeroconfiguration protocols)
- Transport networks (e.g. autonomous traffic lights, self-organized cruise control)
- Energy networks (e.g., decentralized power management in the smart grid)
- Robot networks (e.g., collaborative unmanned ground or aerial vehicles, mobile sensor networks)
Papers
IWSOS invites submission of manuscripts that present original research results or research ideas, and that have not been previously published or are currently under review by another conference or journal. Any previous or simultaneous publication of related material should be explicitly noted in the submission. All papers must be submitted in PDF format. Submissions will be peer reviewed by at least three members of the international program committee and judged on originality, significance, interest, clarity, relevance, and correctness.
The Springer "LNCS Proceedings" style should be used for submission. Templates are for LaTeX and Word available at http://tiny.cc/qiohy. Click http://iwsos2010.tm.kit.edu for detailed information for authors.
Full Papers
Full papers should describe original research results. Submissions should be full-length papers up to 12 pages using the LNCS style (including figures, references, and a short abstract). The submission deadline for full papers is __________.
Challenge Papers
Submissions should be position papers, challenging papers, and papers presenting first results. The papers must be up to 6 pages length (LNCS style, including all figures and references), and must include a short abstract. The submission deadline for full papers is ___________.
Proceedings
The proceedings will be published by Springer-Verlag in their Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series. At least one of the authors of each accepted paper must attend IWSOS to present the paper.
Keynote Speakers
Hermann Haken (confirmed)
Networks: Vespignani, Newman, Barabasi, Guido Caldarelli???