- From: Jinjun Chen <jchen@swin.edu.au>
- Date: Thu, 31 Jan 2008 19:34:03 +1100
- To: <agents-vic@cs.mu.OZ.AU>, <kaw@swi.psy.uva.nl>, <discussion@agentcities.org>, <public-owl-dev@w3.org>, <www-ws-desc@w3.org>, <daml-all@daml.org>, <semantic-web@w3.org>, <amlist@takilab.k.dendai.ac.jp>, <agents@cs.umbc.edu>, <dl@dl.kr.org>, <announce@sigart.acm.org>, <public-sws-ig@w3.org>, <calendar@computer.org>, <ogsa-wg@gridforum.org>
Call for papers- Special Issue in IEEE Trans. On Automation Science and Engineering about "Scientific Workflow Management and Applications" - http://www.swinflow.org/si/t-ase.htm. Deadline: March 31, 2008. Scientific workflow is a new special type of workflow that often underlies many large-scale complex e-science applications such as climate modeling, structural biology and chemistry, medical surgery or disaster recovery simulation. Compared with business workflows, scientific workflow has special features such as computation, data or transaction intensity, less human interaction, and a large number of activities. Some emerging computing infrastructures such as grid computing with powerful computing and resource sharing capabilities present the potential for accommodating those special features. Currently, many efforts are being on this new workflow area, and workshops such as WaGe07, WORKS07, and NSF funded workshop on challenges of scientific workflows have been or are being held to explore scientific workflow issues. Gradually, research results are published and several scientific workflow management systems such as Gridbus workflow, SwinDeW-G, Kepler and Taverna are developed or evolved from existing systems. However, in general, research and development in scientific workflow management are still in their infancy with obscure knowledge of scientific workflow specific features and techniques. This special issue aims to systematically investigate and shape the special features, challenges and new techniques of scientific workflows as well as corresponding applications and underlying computing infrastructures. Original and unpublished high-quality research results are solicited to explore and boost the new area. The topics for contributions include, but are not limited to: * Special features of scientific workflows and their hints on new techniques * Scientific workflow modeling, execution and scheduling * Formal representation, scientific workflow patterns * Control flows and data flows in scientific workflows * Web/grid services based scientific workflows * Application programming interface and Graphical user interface * Scientific workflow verification and validation * Exception handling, Quality of Service, performance and security issues in scientific workflows * Underlying infrastructures targeting scientific workflow support * Real-world scientific workflow applications Important Dates March 31, 2008 Paper submission deadline July 31, 2008 Completion of the first round review November 30, 2008 Completion of the second round review January 15, 2009 Final manuscript due July 2009 Tentative publication date Paper Submission All papers are to be submitted through the Manuscript Central for T-ASE at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/t-ase. Please select “Special Issue” under Manuscript Category of your submission. All manuscripts must be prepared according to the IEEE T-ASE publication guidelines http://www.engr.uconn.edu/~ieeetase/. Papers will be reviewed following the standard IEEE T-ASE review process. Please address inquiries to jchen@ict.swin.edu.au. Guest Editors Jinjun Chen Email: jchen@swin.edu.au Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Rajkumar Buyya The University of Melbourne, Australia Email: raj@csse.unimelb.edu.au W.M.P. van der Aalst Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands Email: w.m.p.v.d.aalst@tue.nl Michael Rosemann Queensland University of Technology, Australia Email: m.rosemann@qut.edu.au Bertram Ludäscher University of California at Davis, USA Email: ludaesch@ucdavis.edu Yun Yang Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Email: yyang@swin.edu.au Carole Goble University of Manchester, UK Email: carole.goble@manchester.ac.uk Best wishes, Jinjun ------ Dr. Jinjun Chen Lecturer in Information Technology CITR - Centre for Information Technology Research Faculty of Information and Communication Technologies Swinburne University of Technology, Hawthorn, Melbourne, Victoria 3122, Australia. Tel: +61 3 9214 8739 Fax: +61 3 9819 0823 Office: EN508a, Engineering Building, Hawthorn Campus Email: jchen@swin.edu.au URL: http://www.swinflow.org/~jchen/
Received on Thursday, 31 January 2008 13:39:36 UTC