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CALL FOR PAPERS

24th ACM International Conference on Architectural Support for Programming Languages and Operating Systems (ASPLOS2019)

Providence, RI, U.S.A | April 13-17, 2019 | https://asplos-conference.org

ASPLOS is the premier forum for multidisciplinary systems research spanning computer architecture and hardware, programming languages and compilers, operating systems and networking. The ASPLOS 2019 will be held in Providence, Rhode Island, a city rich in colonial history and interesting architecture, and home to Brown University and the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD).

The goal of this workshop is to provide a forum to discuss new and emerging general-purpose programming architectures, environments, and platforms, as well as evaluate applications that have been able to harness the horsepower provided by these platforms. This year's workshop is particularly interested in security, new heterogeneous architecture or platforms, new forms of concurrency, and novel or irregular applications that can leverage these platforms. Papers are being sought on many aspects of GPUs or accelerators, including (but not limited to):

  • GPU applications
  • GPU programming environments
  • GPU runtime systems
  • GPU compilation
  • GPU architectures
  • Multi-GPU systems
  • GPU power/efficiency
  • GPU reliability
  • GPU benchmarking/measurements
  • Heterogeneous architectures/platforms
  • GPU security (NEW)
  • Non-von Neumann architectures (NEW)
  • Domain-specific architectures (NEW)

Important Dates

  • Papers due: January 21, 2019
  • Notification: February 18, 2019
  • Final paper due: March 1, 2019
  • Workshop Date: April 13, 2019

Submission

Full paper submissions must be in PDF format for US letter-size paper.
They must not exceed 10 pages (all inclusive) in standard ACM
two-column conference format (preprint mode, with page number).
Templates for ACM format are available for Microsoft Word, and LaTeX
can be found here. The submission site will be up soon.

Proceedings

More information to come soon

Program Committee

More information to come soon

Questions?

Please contact the organizers if you have any questions.

History and Impact

David Kaeli (Northeastern) and John Cavazos (Delaware) very
successfully organized the previous versions of the GPGPU workshop.
GPGPU workshop was first held in 2007 at Northeastern University. In
2008, the meeting was held with ASPLOS 2008. This trend continued and
the GPGPU workshop was held with ASPLOS for the next 6 years. From
2015 and 2018, GPGPU workshop was co-located with PPoPP. GPGPU 2019
workshop returns to ASPLOS. The average citation count (as per Google
Scholar), for a GPGPU workshop paper, is currently 37.5, where there
have been 8 influential papers with 100+ citations.