Description
Parallelism permeates all levels of current computing systems, from single CPU machines to large server farms. Effective use of parallelism relies crucially on the availability of suitable models of computation for algorithm design and analysis, and of efficient strategies for the solution of key computational problems on prominent classes of platforms, as well as of good models of the way the different components are interconnected. With the advent of multicore parallel machines, new models and paradigms are needed to allow parallel programming to advance into mainstream computing. High quality papers are solicited, contributing new results on foundational issues of parallelism in computing and/or proposing improved approaches for the solution of specific algorithmic problems. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following:
Focus
* Foundations of parallel, distributed, multiprocessor and network computation
* Models of parallel, distributed, multiprocessor and network computation
* Emerging paradigms of parallel, distributed, multiprocessor and network
computation
* Models and algorithms for parallelism in memory hierarchies
* Models and algorithms for real networks (scale-free, small world, wireless
networks)
* Theoretical aspects of routing
* Deterministic and randomized parallel algorithms
* Lower bounds for key computational problems
Topic Committee
Global Chair
Thomas Rauber University of Bayreuth , Germany
Local Chair
Vittorio Scarano University of Salerno, Italy
Members
Christoph Kessler Linköping University, Sweden
Yves Robert Normal Superior School of Lyon, France