CfP: 2nd Workshop on Software Research and Climate Change (at ICSE'2010)
Call for Participation
The Second International Workshop on Software Research and Climate
Change (WSRCC-2)
In conjunction with:
The International Conference on Software Engineering (ICSE 2010)
Workshop website: http://www.cs.toronto.edu/wsrcc
== ABSTRACT ==
This workshop will explore the contributions that software research
can make to the challenge of climate change. Climate change is likely
to be the defining issue of the 21st Century. Recent studies
indicate that climate change is accelerating, confirming the most
pessimistic of scenarios identified by climate scientists. Our current
use of fossil fuels commit the world to around 2C average
temperature rise during this century, and, unless urgent and drastic
cuts are made, further heating is likely to trigger any of a number
of climate change tipping points. The results will be a dramatic
reduction of food production and water supplies, more extreme weather
events, the spread of disease, sea level rise, ocean acidification,
and mass extinctions. We are faced with the twin challenges of
mitigation (avoiding the worst climate change effects by rapidly
transitioning the world to a low-carbon economy) and adaptation (re-
engineering the infrastructure of modern society so that we can
survive and flourish on a hotter planet).
These challenges are global in nature, and pervade all aspects of
society. To address them, we will need researchers, engineers,
policymakers, and educators from many different disciplines to come
the the table and ask what they can contribute. There are both short
term challenges (such as how to deploy, as rapidly as possible,
existing technology to produce renewable energy; how to design
government policies and international treaties to bring greenhouse
gas emissions under control) and long term challenges (such as how to
complete the transition to a global carbon-neutral society by the
latter half of this century). In nearly all these challenges,
software has a major role to play as a critical enabling technology.
So, for the software research community, we can frame the challenge
as follows: How can we, as experts in software technology, and as the
creators of future software tools and techniques, apply our
particular knowledge and experience to the challenge of climate
change? How can we leverage the particular intellectual assets of our
community -- our ability to:
+ think computationally;
+ understand and model complex inter-related systems;
+ build useful abstractions and problem decompositions;
+ manage and evolve large-scale socio-technical design efforts;
+ build the information systems and knowledge management tools that
empower effective decision-making;
+ develop and verify complex control systems on which we now depend;
+ create user-friendly and task-appropriate interfaces to complex
information and communication infrastructures.
In short, how can we apply our research strengths to make significant
contributions to the problems of mitigation and adaptation of climate
change?
This workshop will be the second in a series, following on from
WSRCC-1 held at Oopsla/Onward! in October 2009. Our goal is to develop
a community of researchers actively engaged in this challenge, and to
flesh out a detailed research agenda that leverages existing research
ideas and capabilities. Therefore we welcome any kind of response to
this challenge statement.
== WORKSHOP TOPICS ==
We welcome the active participation of software researchers and
practitioners interested in any aspect of this challenge. The
participants will themselves determine the scope and thrusts of this
workshop, so this list of suggested topics is intended to act only as
a starting point:
+ requirements analysis for complex global change problems;
+ integrating sustainability into software system design;
+ green IT, including power-aware computing and automated energy
management;
+ developing control systems to create smart energy grids and improve
energy conservation;
+ developing information systems to support urban planning,
transport policies, green buildings, etc;
+ software tools for open collaborative science, especially across
scientific disciplines;
+ design patterns for successful emissions reduction strategies;
+ social networking tools to support rapid action and knowledge
sharing among communities;
+ educational software for hands-on computational science;
+ knowledge management and decision support tools for designing and
implementing climate change policies;
+ tools and techniques to accelerate the development and validation
of earth system models by climate scientists;
+ data sharing and data management of large scientific datasets;
+ tools for creating and sharing visualizations of climate change
data;
== SUBMISSIONS AND PARTICIPATION ==
Our intent is to create a lively, interactive discussion, to foster
brainstorming and community building. Registration will be open to
all. However, we strongly encourage participants to submit (one or
more) brief (1-page) responses to the challenge statement, either as:
+ Descriptions of existing research projects relevant to the
challenge statement (preferably with pointers to published papers and/
or online resources);
+ Position papers outlining potential research projects.
Be creative and forward-thinking in these proposals: think of the
future, and think big!
There will be no formal publication of proceedings. Instead we will
circulate all submitted papers to participants in advance of the
workshop, via the workshop website, and invite participants to revise/
update/embellish their contributions in response to everyone else's
contributions. Our plan is to write a post-workshop report, which will
draw on both the submitted papers and the discussions during the
workshop. This report will lay out a suggested agenda for both short-
term and long-term research in response to the challenge, and act as a
roadmap for subsequent workshops and funding proposals.
== IMPORTANT DATES ==
Position paper submission deadline: 2 April 2010
Workshop on Software Research and Climate Change: May 3, 2010.
== WORKSHOP ORGANIZERS ==
Workshop Co-Chairs:
Steve Easterbrook, University of Toronto, Canada
Kim Mens, Universite Catholique de Louvain, Belgium
Steffen Zschaler, Lancaster University, UK
Organising Committee:
Jorge Aranda, University of Toronto, Canada
Bernd Bruegge, Technische Universität München, Germany
Ruzanna Chitchyan, Lancaster University, UK
Sophia Drossopoulou, Imperial College, UK
Luís Lamb, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
Lin Liu, Tsinghua University, China
Jon Pipitone, University of Toronto, Canada
Spencer Rugaber, Georgia Tech, United States
Adrian Schroeter, University of Victoria, Canada
Carla Silva, Universidade Federal da Paraíba, Brazil
Davor Svetinovic, Masdar Institute of Science and Technology, UAE
J Barrie Thompson, University of Sunderland, UK
Labels: call for papers, cfp, conf, conference, conferences, research

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