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CFP : ACM SIGPLAN ASIA-PEPM 2002
CALL FOR PAPERS : ASIA-PEPM 2002
ACM SIGPLAN ASIAN Symposium on
Partial Evaluation and Semantics-Based Program Manipulation
Aizu, JAPAN, September 12-14 2002
http://www.comp.nus.edu.sg/asia-pepm02
(co-located with 6th Intl. Symp. on Functional and Logic Programming)
Submission deadline: 1st March 2002
The ASIA-PEPM'02 symposium will bring together researchers working in the
areas of semantics-based program manipulation, partial evaluation, and
program analysis. The symposium focuses on techniques, supporting
theory, and applications for the analysis and manipulation of programs.
Technical topics include, but are not limited to:
* Program manipulation techniques: transformation, specialization,
normalization, reflection, rewriting, run-time code generation,
multi-level programming.
* Program analysis techniques: abstract interpretation, static
analysis, binding-time analysis, type-based analysis.
* Related issues in language design and models of computation:
imperative, functional, logical, constraint-based, object-oriented,
parallel, concurrent, secure, domain-specific.
* Programs as data objects: staging, meta-programming, incremental
computation, mobility, tools and techniques, prototyping and
debugging.
* Applications: systems programming, scientific computing, embedded
systems, graphics, security, model checking, compiler
generation, compiler optimization, decompilation.
Original results that bear on these and related topics are solicited.
Papers investigating novel uses and applications of program
manipulation are especially encouraged. Authors
concerned about the appropriateness of a topic are welcome to consult
with the program chair prior to submission.
SUBMISSION INFORMATION
Papers should be submitted electronically via the workshop's Web
page. Exceptionally, submissions may be emailed to the program
chair: asiapepm@comp.nus.edu.sg. Acceptable formats are PostScript
or PDF, viewable by gv. Submissions should not exceed 5000 words,
excluding bibliography and figures.
Submitted papers will be judged on the basis of significance,
relevance, correctness, originality, and clarity. They should clearly
identify what has been accomplished and why it is significant.
The work described should not have been previously published in
a major forum. Authors must indicate if a closely related paper
is also being considered for another conference or journal.
The proceeding of the symposium will be published by ACM Press.
A special issue of Higher-Order Symbolic Computation is also
planned.
LOCAL ARRANGEMENT
Mizuhito Ogawa (JST, Japan)
GENERAL CHAIR
Kenichi Asai (Ochanomizu University, Japan)
PROGRAM CHAIR
Wei-Ngan Chin (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Manuel Chakravarty (University of New South Wales, Australia)
Tyng-Ruey Chuang (Academia Sinica, Taiwan)
Charles Consel (ENSEIRB, France)
Oege de Moor (University of Oxford, UK)
Masami Hagiya (University of Tokyo, Japan)
Nevin Heintze (Agere Systems, USA)
Neil Jones (Univ of Copenhagen, Denmark)
Yanhong Annie Liu (SUNY at Stony Brook, USA)
Atsushi Ohori (JAIST, Japan)
Alberto Pettorossi (University of Roma, Italy)
Simon Peyton Jones (Microsoft, UK)
Carolyn Talcott (SRI International, USA)
Zhe Yang (University of Pennsylvania, USA)