April 20 — To accomodate additional submissions, the Technical Paper track deadline is extended to Friday, April 29. We are accepting paper submissions, even if an abstract has not been submitted.
Full papers will be included in the Conference Proceedings and submitted to the ACM Digital Library. In addition, selected papers from all the tracks will be invited to extend the manuscripts to be considered for publication in a special issue of the journal of Concurrency and Computation Practice and Experience. Papers accepted for the “Workforce Development and Diversity” track will be invited to extend the manuscripts for publication in the Journal of Computational Science Education.
If you would like to review for a paper track, please contact the track chair directly:
Accelerating Discovery Track | Nitin Sukhija | [email protected] |
Technology Track | Dave Hart | [email protected] |
Software Track | Maytal Dahan | [email protected] |
Workforce Development &
Diversity Track |
Alana Romanella | [email protected] |
Poster | Amy Schuele | [email protected] |
Poster | Peter Enstrom | [email protected] |
BoF | Sergiu Sanielevici | [email protected] |
Tutorials | Marcela Madrid | [email protected] |
Visualization Showcase | Rob Sisneros | [email protected] |
The EasyChair submission site is open: http://bit.ly/
Abstracts and papers should be submitted using the ACM proceedings format: http://www.acm.org/
For full conference details, please see xsede.org/xsede16
About XSEDE
The Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment (XSEDE) is the most advanced, powerful, and robust collection of integrated advanced digital resources and services in the world. It is a single virtual system that scientists can use to interactively share computing resources, data, and expertise. XSEDE accelerates scientific discovery by enhancing the productivity of researchers, engineers, and scholars by deepening and extending the use of XSEDE’s ecosystem of advanced digital services and by advancing and sustaining the XSEDE advanced digital infrastructure. XSEDE is a five-year, $121-million project and is supported by the National Science Foundation.
Source: XSEDE